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

See all my books at AllThatChazz.com.

How to Use Google Search Stories Video: Watch me be the drama king!

Google Logo officially released on May 2010

Google Logo officially released on May 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

You’ve seen how Go!Animate works in the previous post. Now check out Google Search Stories. This is free video software that’s even easier to use than Go!Animate. You’re telling a story with images, news, maps,

google searches and books (yes, books!) This could be a very useful promotional tool for indies when used correctly.

Easy to do: plug in search terms, tell your story creatively, add music, preview and publish to YouTube. And free.

Click here to see my Quit My Day Job post and Google Search Stories video. 

The link to make your own Google Search Story is at the bottom of the video post on my author site.

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Use GoAnimate to spread the word about your book

Go!Animate is a free YouTube program that allows you to make short cartoons quickly and easily. You can pay a little more to make it more complex, but it seems much cheaper than several of the other video animation options. Here’s my little cartoon I experiment for Sex, Death & Mind Control now posted to the world on YouTube to promote my author site AllThatChazz.com. It’s not perfect, but it was a first attempt and only took a few minutes. Something to consider. I know I’ll play around with it further for future book promotion projects.

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On The Media – How Publishing and Reading Is Changing

See on Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

Publishers are trying to adapt as the book industry changes dramatically, and they’re doing so in the face of rapidly changing reading habits among consumers.

See on www.onthemedia.org

Filed under: publishing

Can you tie your book’s title to something larger?

When I put together my collection of short stories, I knew I had a problem: traditionally, short story collections don’t sell. I think that’s changing. With e-readers, we’re turning away from ever bigger Stephen King-size  tomes. Digital brings the short form (or at least shorter forms) back because page counts don’t count. I looked at the themes of the collection and added chapters that were inspirational and thought-provoking. I thought about how it was director Kevin Smith who inspired me to write full-time. What emerged was a bathroom book of stories: Self-help for Stoners, Stuff to Read When You’re High. It’s suspenseful, yet full of parables. Yep, it’s an odd book.

Image

Today is 4/20. I’m hoping that, because of the tie-in to a niche, my book will find readers who would otherwise have passed it by. Every day I say you don’t have to be a stoner to love it and that’s true. However, I wanted to have a hook with an identifiable market because, sadly, a book that’s for everyone is for no one.

When you choose your next title, what event or group could you tie it to? For instance, if you can legitimately come up with a book that has “Christmas” in the title, it might sell much better than a title that sounds too much like a bunch of other titles.

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Please support Indies Unite for Joshua

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Ourselves Alone: For the love of publishing

We are not simply self-publishers. We are publishers. This little poll explores why you chose publishing your work yourself.

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Top Five Tips – Ways To Promote Your Self Published Novel

Via Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

I’ve just started to go around to specialty and book shops to see if they are willing to take my paperback on consignment. I’m pleased with the initial results and things are looking up. Pandragon Dan’s latest post on promoting your work includes a tip about book promotion by going to the shops in person and I certainly agree. It’s too easy to say no over the phone but to get in there and make that contact is worth the time. Even if you don’t set up a consignment agreeement, you might sell a book. (I did.) Check out the link for all the tips. ~ Chazz

Via www.pandragondan.co.uk

Filed under: publishing

Microsoft Word is cumbersome, inefficient, and obsolete. It’s time for it to die.

Via Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

This is a link to an interesting argument from Slate against using Word. I have to agree that I don’t like Track Changes much (especially when making a small change like comma placement. You have to bump up the screen magnification huge to figure out what’s going on when there’s a lot of editing on the page.) However, Word is still the most common program so people are used to it and that preference won’t change soon. Open Office is a nice option, but I’ve become a big fan of Scrivener.

I haven’t formatted an ebook with Scrivener yet but I’ll let you know when I do. I’m in the home stretch with my crime novel and on deadline so I’ll find out soon.

Click the link to find out more. The comment thread is a kind of funny/sad display of tribalism in that some people get very proprietary about what systems they use, as if Word is their home team and the visitors are evil baby eaters.) ~ Chazz

Via www.slate.com

Filed under: publishing

The Writer’s Challenge in 4 Simple Steps

Keeping with the theme that’s emerged this week, I just read an agent blog espousing why we should want to be traditionally published. I found myself rejecting most of her points easily. Validation? I can get that straight from readers. Marketing? Unless you’re Stephen King, very little is spent on marketing and I can do the promotion myself, just as they’d expect me to do with a trad contract (for free.) Partnership? Working in traditional publishing is not a partnership. Editors? I can hire editors. I can do just about everything a regular publisher can do because I am a regular publisher! (Get it?) I just happen to publish myself. Yes, I wish I had more resources, interns and more time in each day and it would be great to have the help, but I don’t have to give up the rights to my books forever to do that.

The article went on and some of the comments were misinformed and dismissive. I became exasperated because all this stuff is too familiar. I heard it in my twenties when I worked inside traditional publishing: Pay your dues, make your bones, and wait, wait, wait! We’ll value your opinion some day. Maybe.

I’ve promoted indies and traditionally published authors. I know going indie isn’t for everybody just as trad publishing isn’t for everybody. Circumstances change so we do switch back and forth. We’re all writers. We should strive to support each other because it’s a harsh world and we can each share information to become the tide that raises all boats. We are undervalued but we can value each other, respect the craft, respect the reader and respect ourselves. At least some of the people who say, “Wait, wait, wait,” are self-serving or past their “best before” date. Fortunately the world has changed and we don’t have to let someone else drive this bus and go where others want us to go. We can drive now, too.

And then I thought how tired I am of the trad vs. indie discussion and whom does it serve? I’ll do no more research today. I will not wallow in negativity. I’ll go write something great, work on my books, be the example and prove the naysayers wrong.

Trad or indie, that’s my challenge to you today:

1. Go write something great.

2. Work on your books.

3. Be the example.

4. Prove the naysayers wrong.

Filed under: publishing, , , , , ,

Are Self-Published Authors Happier Than Traditionally Published Authors?

Via Scoop.itWriting and reading fiction

I just read a comment from David Gaughram’s article (below) stating that self-publishers “in their heart of hearts” want to be discovered by traditional publishing. Ack!

 

The commenter is sure we’re all secretly itching to jump at a deal and get taken care of. I’m sure that’s not true since I can see better into my heart than the guy somewhere out there looking at my world through his lens. There are a plethora of reasons not to want to be traditionally published. I’m not saying no one should, of course. I’m saying you should read through all of Konrath’s blog and make an informed choice before you leap.

 

Some of us value control and freedom over short-term money and long-term loss of rights. We want to make our own mistakes rather than be at the whims of others.

 

Just after I read the stranger divine my feelings and thoughts in error, I ran across this latest post from Joanna Penn’s blog suggesting indies are happier than the traditionally published. Check the link below and see what you think for yourself. For your consideration and greater happiness… ~Chazz

 

There are a myriad of options for authors these days, and the pros and cons of each must be weighed up against the individual’s goals and ex…

Via www.thecreativepenn.com

Filed under: publishing

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

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