Still More Good Advice - by Debbie Bennett
So the questions
have been pouring in to my Agony Aunt mailbox since my last
post. People just can’t get enough of my helpful advice, can they? So in
the spirit of spreading the love and knowledge, here are some more tidbits for
your delectation.
Dear Aunty Debbie: Why are some ebooks so expensive?
So many people give them away for free, so why doesn’t everybody? Why should I
pay for something that isn’t even physical? It’s not like there’s a printing
cost, is it? A Broke Reader
Dear Broke Reader: You and me both. Broke, that is.
But we both have to eat and pay our bills, don’t we? I’m assuming you have some
kind of a job to pay yours? And as a writer, my job is – well – writing! So I
need to be able to pay my bills too, and it takes an awful lot of book sales at
FREE to pay any bills at all, if you get my drift? And while an ebook may incur
no print or storage charges, it still requires the same bum-on-seat writing
time, the same editing costs and the same design costs. So please stop
expecting to pay less for a whole book than you’d pay for a drink in your
favourite coffee-shop!
But
if I wait long enough, you’ll make your books free anyway, won’t you?
Er,
no. Not me. Maybe the first in the series occasionally, but never the rest of
them. Guess you’ll just have to give up the coffee.
Dear
Aunty Debbie: All these places are selling my book without my permission! They’re
all pirates, aren’t they? Help – what do I do? A Panicked Writer
Dear
Panicked Writer: Stop panicking. The truth is there aren’t many genuine
pirates out there – and you can’t do much about the real thing. People who
download from real pirate sites are never going to pay for your books anyway,
so you haven’t actually lost much. You can try a DMCA takedown notice,
but even if you are successful, it’s like playing whack-a-mole. It isn’t worth
the energy you could be putting into writing your next book.
And
the fake pirates? They’re the ones playing at dress-up – the ones who clothe
their site with pretty pictures of your books and information scraped off
Amazon and elsewhere – in reality, they don’t have your book at all and are
simply phishing for your personal information. Chances are you’ll have to “register”
to get a free download and somewhere along the way they’ll steal your identity
and/or credit card details …
But
what about the online bookshops that are selling my print books at £500? How can
they do that? I didn’t authorise them to sell my books!
What
makes you think you have to authorise every reseller? Does WH Smith ask every
author if it can sell their books? These booksellers don’t actually have any
stock of your book at all – they simply “list” it with hundreds of others – if anybody
is stupid enough to order one at £500, the bookseller will have to buy it from
you first before they can sell it on, so you’ll still get your sale. And as for
second-hand book sales – welcome to real life. Even Stephen King doesn’t get
money from second-hand sales of his books.
Dear
Aunty Debbie: Why should I bother editing my book at all? It’s the story that
counts. And everybody has typos – even the books published by the big guys. A
Lazy Author.
Dear
Lazy Author: Really? Of course it’s the story that counts – but how are you going
to entice your readers to buy your book if your blurb rambles on endlessly and
is full of errors? Yes, there are books out there that are full of mistakes,
but why does that mean you can be sloppy too? Don’t you owe it to your readers,
your characters and most importantly yourself to put out the best possible
product that you can? You’re expecting people to pay for it, after all.
Comments
Would you please keep publishing these simple but so often misunderstood or misinterpreted truths about the basics of writing, publishing and selling books. I for one am grateful for the wisdom and entertainment they offer.
Yours,
Penniless of Aberdeen
Thank you for responding and being so nice to our readers. I am sure they will benefit from the enlightenment you provide for them,
Yours,
Starving Writer
Seriously tho - thanks!
Thank you for your kind comments. I'm so pleased you are enjoying my occasional (and often irreverent) look at the world of independent publishing.
Love from Aunty Debbie
Your wisdom is much appreciated and more blogs eagerly awaited.