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

See all my books at AllThatChazz.com.

Ebook Boxed Set Tips and How Tos

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

1. Check out this great post on ebook box sets by DD Scott at The Writer’s Guide to E-Publishing to make more money and sell more books.

 

2. I’m always researching how to best proceed in the book business. I run across great stuff all the time. When I want to keep a link for future reference, I dutifully click "Add to reading list." The article is added to the nigh-infinite cyber pile of stuff I’ll never look at again. RSS feeds pile up and notes get filed under: "Stuff to definitely get to once I become immortal."Scoopit! is my solution.

3. I add value to this blog by using Scoopit! links to point readers to useful stuff they might have missed. My blog is the surest way I have to avoid losing useful information to the "Add to reading list" button.

 

Enjoy DD Scott’s suggestions at the link below.

See on thewritersguidetoepublishing.com

Filed under: publishing

Do You Know These 9 Huge Opportunities Even Smart Authors Miss? — The Book Designer

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

Do You Know These 9 Huge Opportunities Even Smart Authors Miss? describes numerous ways indie authors can improve their traffic, authority, and sales

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

Great suggestions (with even more helpful links) from Joan Stewart on The Book Designer’s website. For instance, Locus.com wasn’t really on my radar.

 

I do wonder about the real value of blogging sometimes. Blogging success (as in eventually gathering a base, driving traffic and selling books and/or monetizing in an author’s case) depends on how you do it, your target audience and your goals. I justify this blog for writers by gathering publishing allies, building community and turning years of blogging about writing into two books, for instance.

If blogging takes time away from writing books you should be writing, blogging hurts you. An author page *is* necessary and you do need to at least blog that much so you have web real estate you own. Your blog is where you build your mailing list and you can’t do that on Amazon. (Subscribe to my mailing list at www.AllThatChazz.com, BTW.)

I’m not saying don’t blog (I have five blogs.) However, blogging must be pursued strategically, using time management and prioritzation. How do I do it? I don’t blog on all my blogs daily and the books come first. I’m getting better at writing shorter blog posts that are easily done and quicker  for readers to digest: Less Tolstoy, more Seth Godin.

 

Learn more about publicity from Joan Stewart at the link to The Book Designer below.

 

See on www.thebookdesigner.com

Filed under: publishing

Set Your Internet to Ignore (Psst! The fun is in the parentheticals)

Comment threads and reviews are interesting windows to the human heart. Well, maybe not always the heart. Sometimes the comments come straight from the toe jam.

If you want to be disillusioned with the future of the human race, read YouTube comments. You won’t have to read much before you actually welcome the massive meteor that will destroy Earth this Friday afternoon around 2 pm EST. (Wear a sweater.)

Recently some fool seemed said anyone who criticized a single Amazon policy was against capitalism. No point worrying about people who conflate one thing with a different thing. (“Brainless communists are behind every rock and tree!” is so ’50s.)

In another thread that was very anti-indie, a snarky commenter replied to an indie’s post by correcting a minor typo. The indie made great points about the industry, but the message from the traditional author was clear: A single typo invalidates your argument. (I almost commented, “Bitch move, traddy.”)

But then it occurred to me, I am not a lone genius. If I see it, everyone sees it.

When you read an illiterate one-star review or when someone slips into a screed about  unrelated topics, everyone sees it for what it is. That’s a good feeling isn’t it? I’m even starting to regret that meteor strike burning up all the planet’s oxygen before the next Game of Thrones. (Perhaps I should cancel the order. Hm.)

This week a person of my acquaintance was criticized because, at the end of his post…wait for it…he dared to point out that he sold stuff for a living. As if that’s a bad thing. (Wait! Maybe Communism is coming back, after all.)

Stop worrying

These comments don’t hurt you as an author or blogger. They hurt the snarker. I’ve gone out of my way to block people who are mean to others. I report abusive reviews that libel the author instead of talk about the book. I know who’s naughty and nice. If the offenders are authors, they are banished and I never buy their books. I’ve gone out of my way to purchase books because of egregious reviews.

 

Here’s the math:

Idiot reviewer hates book + nastiness + condescension (+ possible libel) – a kind thought =  it’s probably not a book nasty, condescending idiots enjoy < I’d like to think I’m not an idiot, therefore, I give that book a try. (Was that condescending?)

Don’t act like a knob

No, you don’t have to be sunshine and sweet cakes all the time, but if you’re going to be mean, you better be twice as smart and savvy with facts. (For instance, Scalzi, Konrath and Wendig can be cutting, but they’re always smarter than they are savage.)

Act like a knob and you’ll be treated like a knob should be treated:

I won’t give you more thought.

I won’t think you’re clever.

I’ll set the Internet to Ignore.

~ I am Robert Chazz Chute and I sell stuff. 

Filed under: author platform, authors, book reviews, ebooks, publishing, Writers, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Amazon’s New SciFi, Fantasy, and Romance Subcategories

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

Author India Drummond noticed that Amazon has new categories, subcategories, theme categories and character categories. Learn at the link to The Writer’s Guide to E-publishing. They’re pretty detailed, cool and interesting (though they’ve got elves, dragons and pirates, but no zombies, darnnit!)

Um, hello, Amazon? I’ve got a bunch of books on your site. I’m grateful to India for pointing this out, of course, but shouldn’t Amazon go out of their way to let us know about something like this? Did I miss a meeting or a memo? Lots of things happen on Amazon and sometimes it seems like they rely on osmosis to announce changes. (Like one day you wake up and the tags are gone.)

It’s a good idea to revisit your book’s categories from time to time. If your work isn’t moving in Mystery, you might have more luck in Action/Adventure (assuming your book could reasonably fit both categories.)

 

You’re allowed two categories on Amazon, so explore your options so readers can find you. The more specific your list, the greater your chances of book buyers discovering you’re awesome (assuming you’re awesome.) You could be ranked 1,786,023 in sci-fi, but you could potentially be huge  in a subcategory, like First Contact, Galactic Empire or Cyberpunk.

 

It’s an exciting marketing opportunity if we work it right.

 

~ Chazz

 

See on thewritersguidetoepublishing.com

Filed under: publishing

How to create your own audiobooks

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

For authors who want to use their own home equipment to narrate an audio version of their own books, or if you want to record your kids reading their favorite stories for posterity, you can do it with a microphone, and iPad and GarageBand.

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

At the link, you’ll find an interesting how-to breakdown on DIY audiobook creation by Geoffrey Goetz. Learn at the link!

The post brings up a question that isn’t much dealt with in this particular article. It’s not a how-to question. It’s a should-you? Would you be comfortable putting a DIY audiobook up for sale on iTunes?

Standards for what’s acceptable vary.

A comedian friend refused to sell a recording because the audience wasn’t on mic. Without their reactions, he didn’t feel the funny was legitimized to the listener (even though he killed.) He thought selling that recording would be “mercenary”. Meanwhile, another professional comedian performed a special for an audience of two: Her parents. (The review was on the Slate Culture Gabfest and they loved it.)

I record author readings on the All That Chazz podcast. I do the podcast for free, but I’d worry about production quality if it were on iTunes. But maybe I’m being too shy or plain wrong about that. Maybe I’ve been indoctrinated with historic audiobook rules instead of looking to the future.

Do you need a full studio to produce something to sell? A video engineer friend of mine announced recently that he’s ditching the heavy, $6,000 camera and making movies with an iPhone now. You can produce high production values with relatively inexpensive equipment. New tech can often deliver higher production value than what the richest Hollywood studios had a few years ago. If you can rise to the occasion in employing that tech, you could come pretty close to par. The first no-budget Paranormal movie comes to mind.

Back to audio:

On Podiobooks, audiobooks are given away free. There are still hoops to jump through, but since it’s free, few listeners really expect perfection. Up the capitalist foodchain, if you go with ACX, you’ve got professional voice talent and an expensive production that’s still much cheaper than it used to be and you maintain control of your art.

As the bar to entry has lowers through easily accessible technology,will the audiobook production industry undergo an influx of independents as has happened with the book industry? Audio purists will likely be resistant to that idea.

We touched on this issue in a post last week: Experts recommend their services and condemn all intruders in their realm. This isn’t just in publishing. To illustrate, let me paraphrase an old medical adage: If you go to a surgeon for advice, his advice is going to be, “I’ll cut you” Every specialty is predisposed to recommend their intervention.

Could we sell a DIY recording on iTunes (through CD Baby)? Yes.

Should we? Before we rush to judgment, consider that independent musicians reach professional standards from their garages and basements all the time. People who call themselves “Indie” in the music and film industries get much more respect than Indies in the book industry. Musicians and filmmakers are called brave, innovative and entrepreneurial. In the book industry, outdated views still hold with the term “vanity press”.

I can’t fathom why this is so. I’m not pretending. I’m publishing.

~ Chazz

See on gigaom.com

Filed under: audiobooks, , , , , ,

The eBook Author’s Corner: Free eBooks Promotions Can Be Pure Gold for Authors

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

Here’s an interesting survey of authors’ experiences with free promotions. Have a look at The ebook Author’s Corner at the link.

 

Most of us still try free promotions on Amazon. They are still the big dog by far. However, after 90 days with KDP Select, we move on to propagate on other platforms. Since free often isn’t effective, ninety days of exclusivity often feels too long for those five days of giveaways. We have to be clever about leveraging those promotions.

It would be encouraging if we heard about wild success on a platform other than Amazon at least once in a while. However, no one listens to Chazz so the distant second, third and fourth runners in the sales platform race still aren’t stealing the best ideas from each other to optimize their effectiveness. Ergo, anonymous reviews suck; anon reviews with stars but no explanatory comments suck harder; being unable to find a book you know is there is freakin’ ridic! (I’ve never used the phrase "freakin’ ridic" before. Once in a lifetime is sufficient.)

 

My horror serial, This Plague of Days, releases soon. I will be going with Amazon first, but I suspect for only one 90-day period and I don’t even plan to use all five days of free promotion. I’ll let you know how my clever leverage tactics work out. Gee, I hope they’re clever enough. 

To battle. Squire! My armor! 

 

~ Chazz

See on hbspublications.blogspot.it

Filed under: publishing

An astonishing five out of ten of last year’s bestsellers were whodunits. Here Ian Rankin reveals how to write your own

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

With worldwide sales of 30 million for his Rebus books, the writer is just the man to compile Event’s ten-point guide to writing the perfect whodunit…

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

I write crime novels in which the cops never show up. However, my first love in the mystery genre was Agatha Christie. I also like Ian Rankin’s books very much. You’ll enjoy Rankin’s article on building your whodunit.

Learn at the link below and enjoy!

 

~ Chazz 

See on www.dailymail.co.uk

Filed under: publishing

50 Ways To Reach Your Reader

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

How to use Amazon’s excellent Author Tools to reach readers

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

I especially like the idea of identifying top reviewers of your genre and offering them a free copy to review. Lots of ideas about tweaking the basics on this advice blog from How to Successfully Self-Publish. Learn at the link below.

 

~ Chazz

See on selfpublishingadvice.org

Filed under: publishing

JW Manus: What are the Real Costs of Self-publishing? Wrong Question.

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

Ebooks = Real Books

Robert Chazz Chute‘s insight:

Click the Scoopit! link below to scoot over to JW Manus’s blog for an excellent take on the nature of advice, advice-givers and how we might look at the cost/benefit analysis of self-publishing. Love this! Subscribe over there, too. It’s a solid blog with lots of advice about ebook formatting, too.

(When you’re done that, check out author Jordanna East’s guest post on my blog, www.ThisPlagueOfDays.com. Recent tragic and insane weather events underline our needs for disaster preparedness and Jordanna asks what’s in your BOB? Check it out. It’s important.)

 

Cheers!

 

~ Chazz

See on jwmanus.wordpress.com

Filed under: publishing

Writing and Publishing: The balls I juggle

Cool+People+Podcast+Final

I’m currently adding a scene to This Plague of Days in which Queen Elizabeth’s Corgis get fed to rampaging zombies as an appetizer before the main (royal) course. As I move through the day, fueled by coffee and rage, I stop to take care of details: Fun details, critical details, tiny details. Here’s the last few days:

1. Sent uncorrected ARCs of This Plague of Days Episode 1 to a bunch of people. The early reviews are happy ones.

2. Published a new Cool People Podcast. I interviewed Renee Pawlish about her strategies for writing and selling books. Good stuff and of particular interest if you read this blog regularly.

3. Updated several plugins across my five blogs, but the change to the Image Rotator Widget screwed up so the covers of my books were displayed in too huge a fashion. Sigh.

4. Sent off a couple more suggestions to Kit, graphic designer extraordinaire, for promotional T-shirts, prizes and giveaways. I plan to sell the shirts in the future, too. Fun, dark and brilliant designs by my man Kit. I knew he was great at book covers. He’s got an impressive flair for t-shirt designs, too. (Hint: hire him for your next book cover, website header, Zazzle product, etc.,…)

5. Commented on some blogs on a few Facebook posts and blogs of interest. Posted to my own blogs. (There are five now. I post to DecisionToChange.com almost daily.)

6. Wrote several new scenes for This Plague of Days and posted some excerpts as teasers. A novel is slightly different from a serial. I’m a teasing, surprising, cliffhanger guy anyway, but to keep the readers moving from one episode to the next, I added new material for extra punch.

7. I recorded a new All That Chazz podcast. I have to edit it and publish it later this weekend since that’s behind schedule. Sickness and book launch prep has eaten into my podcast time, but something had to give.

8. Emailed back and forth with future guests on the Cool People Podcast. People are asking to be on, so it’s picking up.

9. Did some promotions on Vine and performed an experimental giveaway with Murders Among Dead Trees. Hit #34 in free on Amazon on the short story collection list with one day of promotion. Lessons learned: Get a higher profile on Vine and post more often. Most of the people who picked up the freebie came through my friends on Facebook.

10. Did some research on book sales and picked up Chuck Sambuchino’s new book Create Your Writing Platform. I also listened to the Self-Publishing Podcast in which the hosts believe free on Amazon is dead (as is the 99-cent price point.)

Bonus 1: I just learned that the plural is Corgis, not “Corgies”. 

Bonus 2: I learned a blog post about publishing with the word “enema” in the title, gets a lot of traffic.

Question:

How about it? Is free dead to you? Does 99 cents mean the book is inexpensive or just crap? The guys on the Self-Publishing Podcast advised putting your stuff out on all platforms. I’d feel better about that if the other platforms sold more and had a more active review culture. What do you think?

And now back to edits with The Little Things by Danny Elfman as my soundtrack…

Me B&W~ Follow Chazz on Twitter @rchazzchute. If you’re feeling down, go make a kale smoothie and dance sweaty. If you’re feeling up, make sure you have permission and then get sweaty.

Filed under: author platform, blogs & blogging, book marketing, This Plague of Days, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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

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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

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