Saturday, June 2, 2012

The Rush to Print

Conventional indie wisdom and some as yet unverified statistics indicate that the more books an author has for sale online, the more money they're going to make. Some writers talk about hitting a kind of critical mass. The actual threshold itself varies from opinion to opinion, but once that magic number is hit, the idea is that sales will start flooding in. I'm oversimplifying of course, but the essence of the argument is there. And contrary to where you think I might be going here, I don't disagree. I think they are right. The more titles the better. For the most part at least.


Part of the reason for that kind of advice is the luck factor. It's pretty strong in this new ebook market, because most writers (and even publishers) aren't really sure why certain books become mega hits and others sit largely unread. Thus the more books one has floating around the Kindleverse or any other ebookverse, the greater your chances of being discovered. I think it's also true that when readers discover and like one of your books, the chances are strong that they'll go on to buy your other titles. Writing a series dramatically increases this.

But I believe that a lot of authors have taken that conventional wisdom and completely turned it on its head. I know of some authors (none I know personally, so don't worry, I'm not talking about you!) who cram as many titles on their author shelves as fast as humanly possible. Many probably even use several pen names to accommodate the onslaught and I know several of them are making good money doing it, at least in the short term. Thus the ends seem to justify the means. If someone is in this business just to make a quick buck and doesn't care about the health of the industry as a whole or building a career that spans decades, then I suppose that approach sort of makes sense.

I've come to realize this first hand by reading reviews. I read a lot of reviews because I like to get an idea of what readers look for in the books they read and what pisses them off. Poor editing (typos and plot/character development) seem to be at the top of this list. And more often than not I noticed the worst offenders have dozens and dozens of books online, repackaged a million different ways. Some I'm told have even taken books they've already released and remade the cover and blurb and thrown them back on Amazon using a pen name.

The most egregious example I've heard of recently is one person (I won't even bother calling him an author) who has over 100,000 books on Amazon. Most of it is crap, probably illegally farmed off the internet and slapped online, but this guy's following the spammers golden rule. The more the merrier. It's the same numbers game I mentioned above but taken to the absolute extreme. Who needs quality when you can just flood the market right? And I'm worried that's the same slippery slope many self-published authors are inching toward (some as I've mentioned are already well on their way). It doesn't feel like spam if it's something you want and a product that's well made. Spammers sell crap in bulk. Authors shouldn't become spammers.

4 comments:

  1. Interesting. I saw one of these the other day, I think - 20 or so books from the same author - but none of them appeared to be selling very well.

    Couldn't agree more with the overall premise. I didn't know people were repackaging the exact same book under a different title and pen name. That's... really despicable. I want to start getting some books out faster ("critical mass" indeed), but yeah, there are some lines I'm just not willing to cross.

    BTW, I picked up Dark Passage today. The sample grabbed me.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Adam,

    You're right. It's one thing if an author is prolific and has a publishing schedule and it's another thing entirely when authors throw anything and everything they can against the wall and hope that at least some of it will stick.

    Thanks for picking up a copy of Dark Passage. Send me an email when you're done and let me know what you think.

    Also, I'm so glad to see your novel Alex is still going strong. Great book!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I couldn't agree more. On the trek to doing this right now, but it's taking its sweet time. My brother wants to publish as quickly as possible. I'm more in the middle - I do want my stuff out there reasonably fast, but I don't want to rush it. I feel it would destroy the quality to some extent and not provide enough time for drafts, edits and feedback.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I can't stress how important this is. Don't let your brother slap it online before it's ready. If the chef at your local restaurant took food out of the oven long before it was ready because he was anxious to 'get it out there', you wouldn't be impressed and you probably also wouldn't go back there. You'll never nuke every typo, but having a book that's as clean and professionally presented as possible can make all the difference. If you're in this for the long haul, I think it's the right way to go.

    ReplyDelete