C h a z z W r i t e s . c o m

See all my books at AllThatChazz.com.

Let’s close our ambition gap with social media

IMG_9300

Image by burntbroccoli via Flickr

Saturday I dropped into SMarts, the London Social Media Un-Conference, a conference on social media for artists. I picked up a few ideas that could prove helpful in the long-term. No matter who you are, there’s a gap between where you are and where you want to be. Here’s what I’m considering to close that gap:

1. Using YouTube much more for this blog and making my own videos People are visual. If your tweet has the word VIDEO in it, people click through.

2. Using feedburner and hootsuite to make my social media content management more efficient. I checked into hootsuite last summer when a couple social media gurus at a writing and publishing conference recommended it. I had a major problem with the hootsuite interface back then. The bad went to worse when the application wouldn’t allow me to delete the account so I could start again and customer service was nil. Maybe now I’ve recovered enough that I can try another run at it. If I can get it to work right this time, it means saved time. Saved time equals more writing time, more editing time and more time for more clients. (Or a relaxing hot toddy by the woodstove.)

3. I’m thinking about blogging a book. I’ve got several novels written (but the revisions aren’t yet finished.)  That could really be a fun way to go with it.

4. I’ve got non-fiction content about publishing that could be very effective as an e-book. I’m going to research Book Brewer as one possibility to create the e-book. (Mignon Fogerty had a great interview with Book Brewer’s president recently on Grammar Girl.)

5. I need to reach out to more people to engage people in conversation (and so I have.) I’ve contacted four authors so far about doing a profile on this blog. I’m really excited about this for several reasons. I love books and authors. This is an opportunity to learn directly from various authors’ publishing experiences.

Watch this space. Coming soon. Stay tuned.

All that stuff.

 

 

Filed under: blogs & blogging, book reviews, Books, DIY, ebooks, Publicity & Promotion, publishing, self-publishing, Social Media, Writing Conferences, writing tips, , , , , , , , ,

#E-books publishing, promotion and what’s given away

This is a photo of a computer lab on the Unive...

Image via Wikipedia

Call My Agent! has a great post on e-books and deciding what you’re ready to give away for free.

The digital revolution is coming, but what will it cost?

We’re still working out the details on that.

That’s what’s so cool about DIY. We get to figure this out for ourselves.

The article is called The author, the book and the new frontier.‏

Filed under: ebooks, Publicity & Promotion, self-publishing, , , ,

Tuesday Publishing Links for You

Free twitter badge

Image via Wikipedia

5 Ways to Make Your Blog Posts Outstanding | Social Media Examiner‏

The Slush Pile: Enter at Your Own Risk | Steve Laube‏

Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » What NOT to do at a Bookstore Signing‏

What does self-publishing cost?

How to Get an Agent for Your Book‏

InDigital | Twitter and the Publishing Industry‏

 Related Articles

Filed under: agents, ebooks, Publicity & Promotion, publishing, queries, self-publishing, Useful writing links, web reviews, writing tips, , , , , , ,

Comparing E-readers (because I’m running out of room!)

 
Friday's Library Sale Haul
Friday’s Library Sale Haul

 

But the problem is...
But the problem is…

 The bookshelves are groaning. I’m going to need to get an e-reader so I can store my books in the weightless, spaceless ether.

Are you wondering what e-reader to buy? Here’s a an interesting link that compares the tech:

How five e-readers stacked up – USATODAY.com‏

Filed under: Books, ebooks, web reviews, , , , , , , , ,

What Books are Safe from the E-book Revolution?

Cover of "The Going-To-Bed Book"

Cover of The Going-To-Bed Book

I bet you never thought about this. I sure didn’t until I was hanging about with my friend Peter at the Toronto’s Word on the Street. What Books will be safe from the E-book Revolution?

We wandered around the venue and it was a great time. But Peter is sharper than I am and he picked up on a few things. He noticed right away that there were a lot of big publishers absent from the festivities. He also wasn’t impressed with many of the discounts. True, there were some smaller publishers trying to  move their remainders with sale prices as low as a buck a book. Generally the discounts were around 15%. Peter pointed out that when he worked Word on the Street for a major publisher, their discounts were deep but they made it up on volume. They moved a lot of books.

The other thing he noticed was that several children’s bookstores and publishers were represented. “Maybe they won’t have to cut so deep because they’ll be safe from the e-book cull,” he said.

I’d never thought about it, but yes, children’s bookstores should survive. When I think of children’s books, I think of treasured books from my youth. I still have Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. It’s Ian Fleming‘s best work. (I loved many of the Bond movies, but the books don’t hold up.) Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was the Christmas I went to bed with a huge container of Smarties and ate and read until I had no appetite for the Christmas turkey.

When I think of my own kids’ books, an e-book version just wouldn’t do. I can’t read Sandra Boynton‘s The Going to Bed Book* on a screen to my baby! And what if the kid throws up on my iPad? Unacceptable! Besides, little kids are fascinated with the turning of the pages of actual books.

Also, the scholastic market needs children’s readers. School budgets won’t allow for electronic readers for all those kids. Also, little kids with sticky fingers would constantly smear your screen as you read to them.

Taking this logic one step further, it occurs to me that cookbooks might be sustainable. You don’t want to get buttery fingers on your Kindle. However, maybe people will just print off individual pages unless they are really devoted cookbooks fans (there is a wild foodie sub-culture.) There are tons of free recipes available online, so if you have a printer, you’ll never really need to buy a cookbook again unless you look at cookbooks like a dying scuba diver looks at a fresh oxygen tank.

I don’t know what books will be immune. What do you think?

*If you have little kids or know someone who does, you must go buy The Going to Bed Book. It’s very sweet. I read it to my kids so often I can still recite it. We had a massive purge of our children’s library because the kids were getting too old for a lot of the books on the shelves. Sandra Boynton’s book is one of those we kept. We always will.

Filed under: ebooks, publishing, , , , ,

The Paper Book Sustainability Question

At The Carousel

Image by SewPixie via Flickr

 

I was mulling over PA Melo’s post from yesterday. E-book or P-book? To be or not to be?

I do agree with him that paper books will continue to be available, though eventually you’ll have to pay through the nose to get those specialty items. (Oh, right, you already do!)

The conundrum is not just that ebooks are biting into the paper book market. It is that ebooks eventually make p-books impractical on the grand scale they now occupy (i.e. that scale which allows me to wander around bookstores as I love to do.) Part of what makes books affordable is volume. The more you produce, the less you pay per unit.

My question: How much of the industry—what percentage*—has to go electronic before mass production of paperbacks is unsustainable? Please let me know what you think.

*I have heard predictions as low as 35% and as high as 50% Either way, we’re well on our way to being bookstoreless. I’ll have to go back to hanging out in bars (okay) or coffeehouses that aren’t part of bookstores. Horrors!

Filed under: ebooks, publishing, , ,

Poll: When will you be ready to buy an e-reader?

Filed under: ebooks, poll, , ,

Just added to the blogroll: Kindle Homepage

The back of the Kindle 1 (Left) and Kindle 2 (...

Image via Wikipedia

Kindle Homepage: The Inside Scoop on all things Kindle.

Filed under: ebooks, ,

Lurking in bookstores

india calcutta bookstore

I’m on a diet. Yeah, I know I’m supposed to call it a “lifestyle” for long-term success. But no, this is a diet. Short-term and urgent. Grueling even. Low calorie, no processed foods etc.,… The other day I knew that if I stayed in the house, I would eat and I might not stop.  I found out that if I leave the house and it’s not to go get some food, my choices as to what to do are narrowed precipitously. Since eating raw and clean, I’ve noticed something about my spending habits. My mind is clearer and I see now that I’ve been a big consumer, figuratively and literally. With so much food off the table, I’m focused on buying knowledge and experience.

Naturally, I sought refuge in a bookstore. Among books I feel calm. There’s so much to browse that the experience is different each time. If you don’t know what you’re looking for, it’s a treasure hunt. I was distracted from my hunger pangs and felt my shoulders loosen as I disappeared among the shelves. I breathed deeper and took my time. I contemplated all the books there are to read and all the books I have to write.

And I was inspired. Despite all the bad news about the publishing industry (often detailed on this very blog by your trusty reporter) there are still so many ideas to explore in fiction and non-fiction. As I perused the how-tos, I thought about what I could write to help people. As I ran my hand along the spines of  paperbacks, I thought, “Soon.”

I admit bookstores and libraries make me happy in a way that browsing online does not. Shopping for books is a deeper experience when you hold the weight of it in your hand and flip through at random trying to get a sense if this is the book that will grant you a kind of glorious insomnia. I do hope bookstores will be around for a long time. The independents will have to be very creative and very knowledgeable to stay alive in the ebook environment. I do believe there will always be paper books, but they will be  a more expensive specialty item in the future. Some people say that won’t happen. Their (fallacious) argument often seems to be that it won’t happen because it hasn’t happened yet. It’s early days. Ebooks will get the bugs worked out. Then our consumer society’s spending habits will change again. We’ll get even less sunlight than we do now.

Bt for now, I have a safe place to run to as long as I stay away from Starbucks (conveniently located in the bookstore.) Otherwise, I’ll have to run to the gym looking for a place to hide from hunger pangs.

I so love books in all their forms. Also, I could be high on book glue.

Filed under: Books, ebooks, publishing, , , ,

Seth Godin Quits Traditional Publishing; Readers Respond

Seth Godin Quits Traditional Publishing; Readers Respond.

Filed under: blogs & blogging, Books, ebooks, publishing, Writers

Bestseller with over 1,000 reviews!
Winner of the North Street Book Prize, Reader's Favorite, the
Literary Titan Award, the Hollywood Book Festival, and the
New York Book Festival.

http://mybook.to/OurZombieHours
A NEW ZOMBIE ANTHOLOGY

Winner of Writer's Digest's 2014 Honorable Mention in Self-published Ebook Awards in Genre

The first 81 lessons to get your Buffy on

More lessons to help you survive Armageddon

"You will laugh your ass off!" ~ Maxwell Cynn, author of Cybergrrl

Available now!

Fast-paced terror, new threats, more twists.

An autistic boy versus our world in free fall

Suspense to melt your face and play with your brain.

Action like a Guy Ritchie film. Funny like Woody Allen when he was funny.

Jesus: Sexier and even more addicted to love.

You can pick this ebook up for free today at this link: http://bit.ly/TheNightMan

Join my inner circle at AllThatChazz.com

See my books, blogs, links and podcasts.

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2,063 other subscribers