Don't Accept Another Rejection: Become An E-published Author
If you have a book, you should have a website. If you have a
website, you're just a few steps away from becoming an
e-published author. Don't accept another rejection from a
literary agent. Publish yourself electronically and find your
readers. Here's why you should do it:
E-books are cheaper. They're also easier to distribute and can
be just as engrossing as paper and ink. You'll still need to set
a budget, especially for advertising and marketing. But it won't
be nearly as expensive as printing hard-copy versions of your
book.
E-books can reach a wider audience. One book, usually not more
than 500kb can be downloaded endlessly. You won't need a garage
to store the unread remnants. Or, more depressingly, a piecemeal
promise with a POD (Print on Demand) publisher.
Crafting your book was the hard part. You wrote a book!
Publishing it certainly should be manageable. Nobody says you
can't write a book. There are conferences, workshops, seminars,
programs, and faculty to help you do it. What they may say is
oh, don't expect to get published. But they encourage you to
keep trying anyway ... and to keep signing up for conferences,
workshops, seminars, and programs. The "they" are literary
agents, editors, editorial services, and publishers. Explore the
publishing industry, but listen to yourself. If you've written,
revised, edited and refined your book - and you're satisfied
with the result - then you're ready to publish, and don't let
anyone tell you different.
Skip the agent. Unless you enjoy the administrivia of rummaging
through agent names, categories, and submission requirements,
you're being kept from writing the next book. If you really
believe you need an agent to get published, then query, copy,
and stamp away. Just be sure the agents you approach at least
belong to a professional organization like the Association of
Authors Representatives. Visit anotherealm.com for a
comprehensive listing of literary agents, their contact
information and genre preferences, as well as those that are
recommended with a dollar. Be sure you don't send queries to any of
the agents on the sfwa.org list of the 20 worst agents.
Build your e-book. Anyone can publish and be read. You just
have to package, message, and market. The package is your
website about the book and your cover art, which you will use
over and over again for online marketing. The package is also
how your book appears online. Amazon has Digital Platform
which will convert your Word document for free into an
electronic book that is available for download to their Kindle,
the new electronic reader that accesses the Amazon marketplace.
Stop there and, voila,you're a published author. MobiPocket
(which is owned by Amazon) will do a similar conversion that
will put you in their store. Microsoft Reader is another
software that can be used to convert and upload books to
websites that can then be downloaded to laptops, desktops, and
PDAs.
Convert your book into an Adobe Acrobat (pdf) format and you
can upload it to your own website. If you have Adobe software
already, do it yourself for free. Available to Windows PCs,
desktops, laptops and Macintosh, Adobe offers free reader
software the customer can download and install. The software is
small and easy to use.
MobiPocket, MS Reader and Palm Digital Media have dictionaries
in those formats that integrate easily with the reader software.
If you don't own the software, there are services, such as
CyberRead and OverDrive, that will do it for you. The typical
fee is around $200 for one converted text-only book. You will
also have to consider the issue of Digital Rights Management and
how secure your book is when sold online. Amazon and MobiPocket
take care of that. But if you're selling your book, you will
typically get less than one-third of the retail price if you use
a vendor other than yourself. Offering your book in an encrypted
version helps to protect it against piracy, but is a more
complicated and expensive process.
Find your readers. That's really the point isn't it? So, you
have an e-book. How do you get people to read your book or, at
least, find out about it? That's where the message and market
come into play. The message is ad copy you use to promote your
book online. Try variations on three or four sentences, each no
longer than six words, that describe your book. Test them on
friends. Once you have catchy copy, move into the market. Join
networking groups, such as Yahoo, LiveJournal, MSN. You can post
a blurb about your book and yourself and target it to groups
with coordinating interests. When you begin all this, you should
sign up with a web analytics service that will chart traffic to
your website. If you use Google for that, you can also sign up
for their AdWords service, which offers a pay-per-click feature
that lets you target your ad according to particular keywords
and locations.
You can also select topics that fall within the spectrum of
your expertise (remember, you're a published author now) and
write articles about them. For instance, if you've written a
book about organic gardening, write an article on natural
fertilizer. You can distribute your articles, which are meant to
inform rather than perform (the article is not meant to be a
plug for your particular book) through such services as iSnare
and Phantom Writers. You won't get paid for each article, but
you will get exposure through your byline.
You also have all the traditional avenues of advertising and
marketing, such as newspaper and magazine print ads, billboards,
circulars and direct mailers. Keep in mind, however, that you
have an electronic product - your e-book. Your readers are, more
than likely, already online. You just need to find them.
About the Author: K. F. Zuzulo is the e-published author of A
Genie in the House of Saud: Zubis Rises. The book is offered
electronically through Mystical Publishing at
http://www.zubisrises.com, where K. F. Zuzulo also blogs about
e-publishing, supernatural fiction, and djinn.