Category Archives: Indie Publishing

Russell Blake weighs in on the state of indie publishing

Yesterday, I posted a link to an article by Smashwords creator Mark Coker (scroll down a little). In it, he talks about how sales are down for indies, and partially dings Kindle Unlimited for that. Now Russell Blake weighs in, though he doesn’t appear to be “replying” to Coker’s article. Perhaps great minds think alike?  I should write something like that and up my greatness!

But you know…whatever.  Here’s the link:

Three and a Half Years

Money Quote:

So what’s an author to do? My strategy is to continue writing books I’d want to read, and hope that my readership grows over time, and feels that my stories and prose are a fair value at their $5 or so price point.

One of my favorite indie-publishing posts by Russell is his “Author Myths” series. If you want a little more curated Blake to sift, have a look at these:

Author Myths – 1

Author Myths – 2

Author Myths – 3

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Filed under Indie Publishing, Writing Market

Brand New: Science Fiction & Fantasy Marketing Podcast

Can’t wait to check it out.

http://www.marketingsff.com/

*Update: looks like their first episode was Oct 1, 2014*

Listening now…very well done show. Listening to the one about a bundling a site/company that invites authors into book bundles and sells them on their site: StoryBundle.com. Imagine if the Awesome Indies Project had the ability to take the indies, bundle their books, sell them on john-l-monk.com, and make money for all involved. And stuff.

** Update #2 **

I signed up for StoryBundle and got a free book using their “send to kindle” feature.  All you have to do is add their email address to your “approved” list on Amazon (they give instructions). It worked perfectly. I do this all the time with my own .mobi files so I can edit my books.  Pretty cool.

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Will Marck’s author & indie review blog

I was browsing kboards today when I came across this post. I was impressed. He’s sort of doing what I’m doing here with the Awesome Indies Project, except he’s more prolific 🙂  Go Will!

Kboards post:

I have decided to start reviewing books as the main source of blogging on my site.  http://www.willmarck.com.  It’s almost exclusive to indie books with few reviews.  The goal is to find hidden gems and hopefully help some unknowns get discovered.  I figure I should pay it forward.  I love to read, and love to discover new unknown authors, so why not?  Right?  I know from experience that it’s difficult to get the ball rolling when you’re new and barely have any reviews.  I do have some rules and information that can be found in more detail on the site.  Basically, I only read fiction, specifically humor, sci-fi, dystopian, horror, and technothrillers.  I am currently taking submissions for reviews.  If you are interested, check out the site, read the rules, and submit your book via email in the format I lay out on my review policies page.  Please only look into it if you’re an indie, that has under 100 Amazon reviews (not combined, just one title), is available on Amazon in Kindle format for under $2.99, and fits the genres above.  I won’t accept every book and I won’t review anything outside of the genres I’ve listed.  I will pay for each book and won’t accept any type of compensation.  I do have a page dedicated to my own works, but it stays there.  I don’t promote my work on the review pages.  All that I ask is that you consider subscribing to the blog or share my page on social media.  I look forward to hearing from you.  Please, please, please, read my rules before submitting.  Good luck to everyone and I hope success finds you!

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Filed under Awesome Indies, Indie Publishing, Reviews

Guest Post on The Rocking Self-Publishing Podcast

rockingSo today, my guest post on writer’s block went live over at the Rocking Self-Publishing Podcast site. If you’re reading my blog instead of writing, why not go have a look? 🙂

http://rockingselfpublishing.com/guest-post-005-confessions-writers-block-survivor/

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Filed under Indie Publishing, Word Counts, Writing Experience, Writing in general

New podcast: Kev & Steve’s Indie Publishing Adventure

Who said Twitter isn’t a good way to get the word out? I got a follow today and followed it to the page where you can see just who it is that followed you (me) out nowhere.  Lo and behold: an indie publishing podcast, newly minted.  What else am I going to do on a Friday night?

So I’m listening to it:

http://kevandsteve.com/

So far, sounds pretty cool.  Good voices, good personality.

** UPDATE **

Hey now — this was a very fun podcast. Sort of in the tradition of the “Self-Publishing Podcast” with Johnny/Sean/Dave, except more British and a little more focused.  Kev and Steve do talk about the craft a bit more, which I love. Also, they appear to be very aware of what’s going on in indie publishing, and they also follow the same podcasts that I do.  I’ll be listening to more.

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Three Steps For Awesome Indie Success

I woke up this morning to polish off the last 500 or so words in this week’s word count (and then some), when I came to a rather profound and marvelous conclusion — the Awesome Indie Project is officially a success. Since the project began, there have been a number of cool developments.

  • I’ve become friends with most of the authors. I send them news/tips, and they send me news/tips. I promote them, and they promote me (though I never ask).  Two of them have become friends with each other. And most of them reblog, retweet, and re-facebook anything I have to say about the other Awesome Indies.
  • Recently, Carol Ervin (the second Awesome Indie added) turned around and cross-promoted the other indies (and me too, though I’m not in the list) in her 3 part blog series: “Indie Authors: Where are they Now?”
  • Every single Awesome Indie has now been reviewed by Vine Voice and professional reviewer Carol Kean of PerihelionSF Online Magazine (though only two of the books were sci-fi and thus appropriate to be reviewed by the magazine).

More about Carol Kean: all the indies now have Vine Voice Amazon reviews, and five have Goodreads reviews from her, and she regularly tweets and facebooks about these authors.  Important note: I did NOT solicit her reviews.  She discovered them after reviewing my book and following me to my blog. This is one of the amplification effects of indies banding together.

Here are Carol Kean’s Amazon reviews:

Carol Kean’s Perhehelion SF reviews:

Carol Kean’s Goodreads reviews:

Step 1: Hoard your indies

The project started out with a post at the beginning of the year, which I eventually made a permanent tab at the top: https://john-l-monk.com/2014/02/14/indie-readingsupport-project/

In this post, I’d tasked myself with reading more indie books, hunting for those gems in the stacks at Amazon that were particularly glittery and bright (to me, of course — this is all very subjective stuff).  I then laid out the ground rules for getting onto the Awesome Indie list.

As of today, I’ve found 6 Awesome Indies and posted about their inclusion to the list (look under ‘categories’ on the left side to see all posts that I’ve tagged ‘Awesome Indies’). All but one author got on the list without knowing I was reading his or her book. For the others, I simply read their books and then asked for permission to list them.

Step 2: Promote them

After the indies got on the list, the fun didn’t end there — I tweeted about them, facebooked about them, and badgered them about news on any upcoming books. Every time something big happened in their Awesome Indie lives, I made sure to blog about it and tweet it. In turn, without asking, they promoted the sequel to my first novel “Kick.”  Four of them actually beta read it and helped me edit it.  Talk about Awesome People.

Step 3: Keep promoting them

In addition to the blog, the facebooking, the tweeting, and the emailing, I’ve also gone back to my books “Kick” and “Fool’s Ride” and inserted a page at the back listing each author and their books, and describing the Awesome Indie Project.  On November 8th, I have a Bookbub promotion. On November 9th I have an Ereader News Today promotion.  Both are free, for “Kick.”  It’s my hope that the tens of thousands of almost guaranteed downloads of “Kick” will expose those same readers to these Awesome Indies. I’ve also asked these authors to tell me if they see an uptick in sales a week or so following the promotion.

So there it is 🙂

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Sell More Books Show — 40-50 minutes of informational bliss

My only complaint about this wonderful podcast is I wish it was longer.  On the plus side, I can consume these episodes over my lunch break. The show always starts with the hosts throwing it back and forth, but always about something in the world of self-publishing. They don’t waste your time. It closes with a top 5 breakdown of the hottest self-pub news stories.  Highly recommended.

The hosts:

jim_03Jim Kukral of Author Marketing Club: the pessimist of the show, he delights in bashing  new-fangled schemes and/or tricks to get sales. If he’s not saying it like it is, he’s not happy — and it’s a blast to listen to. Someone has to keep me from giving all my hard-earned money to scammers and hucksters, right?  That’s this guy.

bryan

Bryan Cohen: he’s fun, he’s peppy, he’s always happy to listen to what’s new and go “how cool — tell me more!” Like Jim, he’s an author in his own right, with a productive writing schedule. He also listens to podcasts for 2 hours a day, which keeps him in the loop on all things self-publishing.

Together they make a great team, keeping it lively, and sharing gobs of “actual news” sure to delight and inform indie-minded folks. This podcast is as close to an industry newsletter as I’ve seen since starting down the self-pub path a little more than a year ago.

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Found a great new podcast: Armcast Podcast with Armand Rosamilia

Ok, so I just started going back through Simon Whistler’s Rocking Self-Publishing podcast, listening to his shows again for lack of anything good to listen to, and heard mention of a new podcast by the very successful indie author Armand Rosamilia: Armcastpodcast.

Primarily a horror fiction podcast, his guests are indie authors and he talks about things indie authors want to hear about.  Episode #11 is particularly helpful for folks interested in the power of the sequel, and it reinforces some of the claims made by the Tattooed Writer in RSPP episode #57.

What a joy to have another great podcast to listen to.

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“Kick” — available in paperback!

Hey now, I just published “Kick” in paperback — it looks beautiful. I’m not simply being a proud dad here. I looked the whole thing over, cover to cover, and I can’t find anything that doesn’t look great.  Very happy.

Special thanks to Jessica Richardson Weber of Cover Bistro for helping me wrap the spine and back to match with the ebook cover. She does amazing work.

 

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Woops, forgot to mention…Editing For Indies Webinar

Simon Whistler

Simon Whistler

Simon Whistler is hosting a webinar titled “Editing for Indies”, with Alida Winternheimer as presenter.

Merely signing up gets you:

The “Editing for Indies” guide.
PLUS a special offer for Alida’s editing services!
PLUS live at the webinar we’ll be giving away: 5 advance copies of Audiobooks for Indies and a one-hour consultation with Alida!

Alida Winternheimer

Alida Winternheimer

The webinar is on a Saturday, August 9th, and isn’t too long — about 1.5 hrs.  Seriously, check it out, because whom doesn’t need a little editing now and them?

http://rockingselfpublishing.com/joinwebinar

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Filed under Grammar/Punctuation, Indie Publishing, Writing in general