Since Google+ folded up, this blog's readership has collapsed too. Bit of a shame.
The thing is, I'm in the middle of reorganising my books and online presence, since what I've been doing hasn't really worked. Just not enough sales. So I'm going to use WebNovel and Patreon to try building awareness, and funnel profits from that into advertising for the novels already published. So since I'm changing things anyway, it might be that I drop this blog and instead write shorter, snappier pieces on my Ben Blake Facebook page, and on my website.
It's not decided yet, not for sure. But there's not much point writing this blog for 40 people, really. It's been going for years now and if this is as far as it's got so far, it might mean this is as far as it will ever get.
We'll see. Pip pip for now.
In Dreams Awake
Our truest life is when we are in dreams awake.
(Henry David Thoreau)
Showing posts with label sales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sales. Show all posts
Wednesday, 3 April 2019
Friday, 31 August 2018
Onwards and Upwards
Self-publishing has changed.
When I published my first book, back in 2013, people mostly put their books out and talked about them a lot - blogs, Facebook, Twitter, and so on. The aim was to try to create awareness. To some extent it worked, and I sold a couple of hundred copies. I thought that was OK for a debut. Onwards and upwards, things will build from there.
They haven't - in fact, my sales have fallen away. My latest book, Fanged Fish, is the worst seller I've had so far. That's because online self-publishing is different now. It's not enough to talk a lot on social media, you have to advertise on Facebook and Amazon, buy slots on book promotion sites like Bookbub (good luck with that), and generally spend money. Ironically, I could have done that easily in 2013, but now I've got kids I don't have the money to spare.
So what to do? I've used GoFundMe and similar sites before, to not much benefit. No help there. My family is a) fractured and b) poor, so that's another dry well. It's frustrating. I've learned a lot about publishing, and improved my writing too I think, and I can't make any serious impact because I don't have money to spend.
I begin to think that online self-publishing has become as hard to break into as traditional publishing, only the gatekeepers are advertising companies instead of editors.
To add to the problems, I can't write a novel in a month, as many online authors seem to do. They bang out a book every two or three months - sometimes even less. That seems to work for them, especially in YA. But my work takes too much research, an I want to rewrite and edit too many times, so it doesn't work for me.
I need to think about what I'm doing, and how to make it productive, because right now I'm not sure I know.
When I published my first book, back in 2013, people mostly put their books out and talked about them a lot - blogs, Facebook, Twitter, and so on. The aim was to try to create awareness. To some extent it worked, and I sold a couple of hundred copies. I thought that was OK for a debut. Onwards and upwards, things will build from there.
They haven't - in fact, my sales have fallen away. My latest book, Fanged Fish, is the worst seller I've had so far. That's because online self-publishing is different now. It's not enough to talk a lot on social media, you have to advertise on Facebook and Amazon, buy slots on book promotion sites like Bookbub (good luck with that), and generally spend money. Ironically, I could have done that easily in 2013, but now I've got kids I don't have the money to spare.
So what to do? I've used GoFundMe and similar sites before, to not much benefit. No help there. My family is a) fractured and b) poor, so that's another dry well. It's frustrating. I've learned a lot about publishing, and improved my writing too I think, and I can't make any serious impact because I don't have money to spend.
I begin to think that online self-publishing has become as hard to break into as traditional publishing, only the gatekeepers are advertising companies instead of editors.
To add to the problems, I can't write a novel in a month, as many online authors seem to do. They bang out a book every two or three months - sometimes even less. That seems to work for them, especially in YA. But my work takes too much research, an I want to rewrite and edit too many times, so it doesn't work for me.
I need to think about what I'm doing, and how to make it productive, because right now I'm not sure I know.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)