Well, I did it. I created an e-book (okay, it’s just a short story, but the process is the same) and uploaded it to the Kindle store. Don’t go looking for it; Amazon says it may take up to 24 hours for it to appear on the store. Sometime soon, “Mom’s Letter” should appear.
This is an experiment. I checked the e-book out and it seemed to format okay. It looks better with font size 2, since the lines of the embedded poem run to their full length. I priced it at $0.99, the minimum Kindle allows. The royalty is 35%, so for each one that sells I’ll get almost 35 cents.
There were a lot of steps in this. Of course, part of that was the setting up of my account and entering all that information. I won’t need to do that again. Part of it was being uncertain of what I was doing, and so having to read various instructions, some of them twice. One thing that concerns me is the cover may be a bit smaller than they recommend. I think they wanted 1280 pixels mimimum on the longest side. I read that as maximum, and the pic has only 1187 pixels on the long side. Since I don’t know much about digital photos, I wasn’t sure how to change that.
I still have to set up my author page. I’ll do that after supper. I hope that won’t be too lengthy, because I had hoped to work on expanding a couple of chapters of Documenting America. Maybe I won’t be able to get to that tonight, but we’ll see.
A new era has dawned in my life. Let’s see what happens.
When you’re talking about e-self-publishing (eSP), “getting a buzz on” means something completely different than it did when I was in college in the 1970s. It means creating an interest in what’s being published; drumming up publicity; making people salivate in anticipating of your writing. For a major book launch, publishers and authors might begin getting the buzz on six to twelve months before publishing date.
In the old days writers went on book tours. Wait, they still do that and this isn’t the old days, it’s right now. I should say in the old way of publishing, with print on paper, writers went on book tours. They held readings. They did signings. They spoke to civic clubs. They talked to newspapers, radio, and, if fortunate enough, to television. They had a book in their hands, and copies to sell.
Now, with “Mom’s Letter”, all I’m going to have are pixels on a screen, organized into words and paragraphs, not even pages. A reading is out of the question, because I’d read the whole thing and then who’d want to buy it? And book signings at a bookstore are out, because, well, it’s not for sale at the bookstore, and Amazon.com has no brick and mortar stores.
So creating a buzz for the short story will be difficult, but I’ve already started. When I asked my fellow writers at Suite101.com to comment on the two covers I was considering, several expressed interest in buying the short story. The woman here at work that I shared it with on Tuesday, before the storm, read it during the storm, and today she told me she loved it. I think she would write a 5-star review on Amazon. One Suite101 writer is putting together an e-literary magazine, and is looking to do book reviews on it. I’ll be e-mailing him today. As he has no subscribers, but will be selling the mag via Kindle, I don’t know how much buzz that will be, if he even decides to include me in his reviews section.
Then there’s this blog, which has 10 subscribers and about 4 other regular readers, plus drop-bys. If I can convince them to say something about it on their blogs, that would be a few more potential buyers. There’s always Facebook, with my 90 or so friends. If some of them would buy it and read it and post something about it on their FB page, with their hundreds or thousands of friends, maybe that will be a little bit of buzz. My son says I need to join Twitter and begin tweeting to gain publicity. Maybe. I’ll give it some thought.
Also, I can become a little bit active again at Absolute Write, put a link in my signature there, and see what that will do. I will need to add a link to a blogger signature as well. I can also contact local media via press releases and see if I can get a notice there. That seems like overkill, however.
So there’s no shortage of things I can do to promote the book, and I’ll probably do most of them. But the good news is, beyond this I don’t really have to do anything. If it gets a buzz on and begins to sell, great. If it doesn’t, no biggy. If I keep submitting the short story to literary quarterlies and finally get accepted, I could expect a payment between $10 and $50. Actually, the more likely scenario is it would be accepted by one of those literary mags that offers no payment except two contributor’s copies. The holy grail of publishing is to get $1.00 dollar a word, which would be about $1850. To reach that I’d have to sell 5,340 e-copies. To reach $50 I’d have to sell 145; to reach $10 only 29 copies. I think I’ll wind up somewhere between 29 and 5340 (if I’m not being delusional), so already I’m thinking the short story launch is successful, buzz or no buzz.
We’ll see what happens. E-self-publishing “Mom’s Letter” is an experiment. The minimum price Amazon allows is $0.99, with the royalty being 35%. Some have said that’s too high a price for a short story when you have novels on the Kindle platform selling for $0.99. But I feel that as long as I accurately say what the buyer can expect for his or her 99 cents, I’m not cheating anyone. I’m excited. This is the start of an adventure. As with most adventures the outcome is not clear. Let the journey commence, sometime in the next three days, I hope.
Home again today. I could have made it to work, but a call to the office determined that I could stay home if I wanted. My pick-up is all cleaned off and dug out, ready to hit the plowed roads at 6:30 AM tomorrow. So I’ve had a pleasant day of exercising my body via shoveling, and my brain via reading and writing. I wrote one new chapter of Documenting America, and expanded one old one to full length. I also did some research for future chapters. The word count now stands at 23,300, so I’m edging close to done. I’ve done half of my daily Wesley research, read the couple of writing blogs I follow, followed stocks for a while. I’m ready for something else. Oh, yes, I’ve also begun research for my next Suite101 article.

A few days ago I posted two trial covers for my short story, “Mom’s Letter”, asking people to weigh in on which one looked better. I also posted a notice about this at the writer’s forums at Suite101. Not may people commented on the blog (only one, in fact), but many of my friend and colleagues from Suite101 dropped by, looked at the two, then went back to the Suite forums and posted comments. I also received comments from my wife and son. The verdict is…
…both covers are good (one Suite woman described both as “gorgeous”), but cover one was better than cover two. The comments were about 14:1 in favor of cover one. The only negatives about cover one concerned the font. Some thought the letters in the word “Mom’s” and my name seemed “squooshed” together. Some saw the font as “non-professional”. I must confess that I didn’t see the squooshing, and still don’t after the comments. When I first looked at the font it did look non-professional to me. However, after dwelling on it a bit, I think it’s the right font for the story. It looks like it came off a typewriter—an old typewriter—which fits the story with it’s span of forty years and attention to memories.
I was going to re-shoot the second one, see if I could do better with the lighting, but have changed my mind. With such a large margin between the two, it’s doubtful that better lighting on two will overturn the verdict in favor of one. Perhaps the cover designer might want to tweak the letter spacing, perhaps not. I’m pleased with it the way it is. All it needs, IMHO, is the words “a short story” added somewhere, so that potential buyers are not led astray, and it’s good to go.
One of my Suite commenters said she’d been in many editorial meetings where covers were discussed and had never seen such a lopsided agreement between competing covers. That may be due to the fact that the photographer for one is accomplished in that pursuit, while the photographer for two (meaning me) is not, and has no sense of artistic layout, lighting, spacing, etc.
The good thing is, with e-self-publishing, it’s easy to change the cover. Short story not selling? Early reviews say the cover stinks? Change it. If that doesn’t work change it again. If that doesn’t work change it again. Change it daily if you want. It’s not a question of pulling a print run; it’s a question of deleting a file and uploading a new one. How cool is that.
So, I’m inching closer to publishing this. Maybe I can get it done by the weekend. My schedule will require me to wait until early March if I don’t get it done by then. Must next see if the story needs any tweaking. Amazingly, I found one typo in it on Tuesday, and a “that” I think I can delete. Recent beta readers have suggested a tweak or two, which I’ll evaluate. Then, I have to finish research into how to upload the file and list it on Kindle. Then I’ll have to see about other publishing platforms. Nice, discrete tasks all in a row.
tairs, then out to shovel the driveway. That took an hour, then back in for some soup and back downstairs. I decided to do a files cleaning of the computer. I figured at the same time I’d install updates and re-boot. This took forever.Okay, readers, I need some opinions. My good friend Gary Boden has prepared two trial covers for my short story, “Mom’s Letter”. I know, some will think “A short story needs a cover?” When you list it on Amazon.com, it does. The cover conveys an impression to a buyer, and either draws them in or turns them away. It could be a neutral thing, but you want it to be a positive.
Gary took a photo, I took a photo, and he composed them into covers. The first one was before he knew the words “short story” needed to be on it. We’ll get that fixed; easy enough.
I know nothing about art and what’s attractive or what isn’t. I’d like to know what other people think. Which looks better? Which one would make you more likely to spend 99 cents to buy the short story? And, if you want to take the time, why?
So far this weekend has been productive. I wrote and posted one article at Suite101.com. I don’t think it’s one of my better articles, but it’s up and available for making money. I wrote a chapter in Documenting America. This was with research and writing complete in one day. I also did a little bit on another chapter. If I can complete the other chapter, and rewrite the third chapter to expand to full length, I will, with this blog post, have completed my writing goals for the weekend. I could then go and work on the research for two Bible studies. I’ve already done quite a bit on one of them Friday night and last night.
Well, my other writing goal was to research e-self-publishing some more. I left some things hanging on Friday. I’m pretty sure I don’t have the whole story concerning what to do with the mechanics of eSP. I found a good reference for that today, and will read it later. Events are moving in the right direction for this. I took some pictures yesterday to serve as a basis for the cover of “Mom’s Letter”. Hopefully they will work out. My goal for publishing that remains around March 1.
I have two other reasons for making this post. I want to test the feature for “scheduled posts” on Blogspot. I knew this was possible, but never saw how to do it until Friday. So I’m going to schedule this to post about an hour after I finish it, just to see how it works. The other is I want to post a couple of figures of my statistics for Suite101, for page views and earnings. Friday evening I merged several spreadsheets, so that I have graphs covering my entire time there. I’ll post them below, or at some place on the post. One is page views, per day and the seven day moving average. As can be seen, my page views are not going up even though I ad articles. The other shows the amount I make per article per month. This is also not going up, indicating that my articles are not gaining revenue over time, but in fact may be earning less revenue as they age. It’s perhaps too early to tell what I should do about this. For now it’s just data tabulated, graphed, and waiting for analysis.
Last night they said we would have snow showers today, with no mention of accumulation. So I assumed that meant a dusting, with no accumulation. This morning that was changed to a winter weather advisory, with 1 to 3 inches expected. Right now it’s snowing heavily, and has been snowing since 10 AM, sometimes light, sometimes heavy. It’s pretty out there, but not exactly what I’d call “snow showers”. Oh, well, I don’t suppose the weather dudes can get it right every time. They did really well the last time.
So this noon hour I spent time researching the Kindle publishing process. Talk about confused! I have so much to learn. Somewhere I read that you basically create a Word document, don’t use footers or a few other features, upload it to Kindle, add page breaks, and publish. But today in the FAQ, or somewhere on the Kindle pages for would-be self-publishers, I saw all kinds of talk about html. I don’t know html, and despite some attempt to learn it I have failed. If I have to learn html to eSP, I’m done before I start. Surely I’m confused as to what it will take.
I finally managed to get to the Kindle Forums, and will start browsing. I have always found the forums, wherever I go online, as a good place to start and to get information. Perhaps browsing the forums will be the cure to my confusion.
So, the activities to further my writing career are going on these lines. First, complete works to eSP. I’ve mentioned these in previous posts. Second, learn the mechanics of eSP. This may take longer than I’d like, and may end up being more a case of doing than of learning. Third, I’ll continue with my freelancing work. Suite101 and Buildipedia are my two main outlets for this. I’m not actively chasing any other freelance gigs. The one for Safe Highway Matters came to me without any marketing on my part.
I guess that’s a pretty good game plan. It’s certainly enough for the moment. Later there will be more works, and more learning, and promotion of eSP works. I can’t really think that far ahead. In fact, it’s now after 5 PM. My thoughts have turned to the drive home, with a stop at Wal-Mart on the way to pick up the urgently needed things so we don’t have to go out tomorrow. For the next 90 minutes I’ll be able to work without confusion, on the mundane tasks of life, concentrating on the shopping and the roads.
I’ve made up my mind. The first work I will e-self-publish is my short story, “Mom’s Letter.”
A short story, you say? What demand is there for a stand-alone short story at any price? Enough, it would seem. Several authors report on Joe Konrath’s blog that their short stories are making enough money to justify the time and limited expense of formatting it, preparing a cover, and listing it. They are all published for $0.99, the minimum allowed for an Amazon Kindle title. The royalty on that is $0.35. So for every ten copies sold the short story will earn $3.50. If I could set it placed in a literary journal, the most I could realistically hope to make is $50.00 (though some pay higher). That means I’d need to sell 143 copies to justify going the eSP route.
This will give me experience with all the techno-stuff related to e-publishing. How to go from a Word document to a Kindle document. How to actually upload it to Kindle. How to see that it’s properly listed. How to add tags to it. How to select the genre. How to do an author page. How to do back-cover text. How to select the amount of preview material. So much to learn, so little time. Oh, yeah, and how to make and upload a cover.
That last one will be close to a deal killer. You might not think a short story has a cover, but for e-sales it does, just as a novel does. The cover shows up as a thumbnail view in Kindle listings, then as a larger view when clicked on. I’m not sure I can do this. I have no artistic skills, I’ve never used artistic software, and am pretty much clueless of what looks good and what doesn’t. But paying to have a cover made costs about $300 the eSP-ers tell me. That’s more than I’m willing to spend.
But I will do this. I have an idea for a cover that I’ll make and upload. If it looks terrible, maybe I’ll spring for someone to make one, if I can find a reduced cost for a short story cover. I ran “Mom’s Letter” through two critique groups, and three beta readers some time ago. I recently solicited beta readers at Suite101.com. Two of the four who were willing to read it have reported back, and say the story is ready to go, with maybe a tweak or two.
I don’t know what my time frame is. It would be nice to get it done before I head to Orlando later this month for a convention, but I’m not sure I can, given everything else going on. Early March for sure.
Stay tuned for results.
Beginning last week the weather folks were predicting a major winter storm for Tuesday. By Sunday some of the numbers had firmed up: 6-12 inches in our area. So Monday morning, to allow me to get to work the next two days over short, flat roads, I packed to stay two days in town with my mother-in-law, since Lynda was in Oklahoma City and not planning to be back until Wednesday, after the storm. However, as she got news reports there she decided to come back Monday, before the storm. So I came home, knowing that if the weather people were even close to right I would lose at least one and probably two days of work.
That’s what happened. We have 7 or 8 inches of snow, on top of about a 1/4 inch of sleet. It fell mostly during the daylight hours yesterday, so we hunkered down, read, used the computer, and ate. Today has been a mix of sun and clouds. I got out early to shovel the drive to let the radiant energy dry it out. I also cleared off my pick-up early (it’s parked well up the road, not quite at the top of the hill). I also shoveled our large deck, which had an average of 12 inches due to drifting. So today has been busy.
But on both days I was able to write. Yesterday I completed chapter 22 in Documenting America. I decided to use the extra research I did on Rev. John Urmstone and wrote a second chapter from some of his writings. I also began research for the next chapter. I read one document which, unfortunately, I can’t figure out how to use. I scanned several others.
Today I wrote an article for Suite101.com, the next in my series of genealogy articles. I don’t know if this is a correlation or not, but January is a record revenue month for me at Suite, 37 percent higher than my previous best month. January last year was good too; it’s my third best month, not topped until last November. So maybe January is just a good month, or maybe my genealogy articles are making some money. Either way, I have quite a few more in the series to write before I run out of ideas.
Now I’m going to start the next chapter in Documenting America. I found a document I can use, some of the writing of William Bradford of the Plymouth colony. I’ve also spent a lot of time these last two days reading for my next two Bible studies, and beginning to outline one of them. I’ve also studied (some) in the e-self-publishing market. I’ve printed out a lot of Joe Konrath’s blog posts, and the comments, to look for ideas and for guidance on the nuts and bolts of creating the e-book once you’ve got the words finished.
So these two days—the second one still with 6 to 7 waking hours in it—may not have been my most productive, but they have been good. Back to work tomorrow, with deadlines two days closer without commensurate production. Not looking forward to it.