Sunday, 2 December 2012

INDIE ‘L’ PLATES: MY YEAR OF TECHNOLOGY & SYSTEMS

This month marks my first year as an Indie (independent) author and publisher. Since technology and business systems have played a greater part of my working life in 2012 than in any other year of my career, I thought I would review the challenges.



THE KOBO ISSUE

KOBO, bless ‘em. Is this digital e-book platform really geared up for self-publishing authors? Their website is pretty, in a twee kind of way, but their customer care people don’t seem to have a clue what’s happening when you have a problem. In November, I uploaded the first of my Sprite Sister books. On the basis that Vol 1 went through okay, I started on the other five titles. I filled in the information and ticked the boxes: I’ve uploaded and re-loaded my e-title files numerous times on Amazon, so the process is not unfamiliar. Except the other five titles didn’t upload. Somewhere in the great KOBO computer system they got stuck.

You are 75% of the way through, the system told me. But I filled in all the information, I ticked all the boxes, I’ve uploaded the files, I kept telling them. Round and round I went, but my titles remained 75% complete.

The customer care department were of little help. Please would you explain what has happened, they kept saying. I have, I repeated, pulling out more hair. Why can’t you see that? Are you not connected to the system?

I spent three weeks waiting for KOBO’s website department to unravel the mystery, then gave up and deleted my files. There won’t be any Sprite Sister books on KOBO for the time being, until I have mustered sufficient energy to grapple with their systems again.

THE BLOG NIGHTMARE

I want to find a way to write about my big, complicated family, but it would have to be anonymously. My mother has Alzheimer’s and there’s a lot to say, some of it hilariously funny – though probably not to my sisters – and some poignantly sad. ‘I need a voice!’ I kept telling myself. And if I wrote a humorous family blog, maybe it would get picked up for a magazine column, I reasoned.

On a sweltering August afternoon, my daughter tried to set up a new blog account for me, under a new name. She galloped along and I tried hard to keep up, but somewhere, somehow, a button was pressed and suddenly all my blogs and my entire Google identity vanished into cyberspace. I was too shocked to speak. My daughter left the house very quietly.

I tried to tell Google, ‘I am who I say I am!’. But the door would not open: I was locked out of my own account. I no longer existed on Google. After hours of confusion and panic, I managed to create a new blog. I was able to re-load the text and photographs on my Sheridan Winn blogs. However, I lost the photographs on all my Authors Electric blogs.

In terms of sheer panic, this experience felt as if it took years off my life.



PRINT ON DEMAND AND SUPPLYING THE LIBRARIES

Well you can’t. It’s as simple as that. Here’s a business conundrum if ever there was one for a self-published author with print-on-demand titles.

Libraries buy their books from Peters’ Bookselling Services. Lightning Source, my print-on-demand publisher, supply to Bertram’s and Gardner’s distributors, but they do not supply to Peters – nor will they, they tell me.

If you write series fiction for children, as I do, you’re pretty much dependent on library borrowers. I can probably persuade Norfolk libraries to order my books, as it’s home turf – but what about Taunton or Aberdeen? You don’t think of this as you set out to self publish: but you should.

We might be able to order them from Amazon on this occasion, Norfolk & Norwich Millennium Library told me. My local library, this is the one with the highest footfall and borrowing levels in the UK. The librarians wanted the ‘new-look’ Sprite books: it was just a question of how to acquire them. I offered to supply the books, but this method was declined. As a special request, and for this one occasion, they would order them from Amazon.

I think libraries are amazing and Andrew Carnegie a far-sighted human being, but I wish, as a self-published author, that library purchasing systems would be more flexible. No doubt this will change in time as readers ask for the books of self-published authors, but in the meantime this was possibly the biggest single blow, financially, of 2012. The prospect of my ‘new-look’ series not being in libraries is depressing.

SUPPLYING THE BOOKSHOPS AND HOBSON’S CHOICE

Lightning Source, which supplies my print-on-demand paperbacks, allow me to set the bookseller discount, so I thought I would give 25%. But, as print-on-demand books, my titles would also be non-returnable. Would the bookshops stock them? No, I reckoned, but they would order them in for a customer.

Henry Layte, owner of The Book Hive and a long-time Sprite Sister supporter, said he’d happily stock the new-look Sprite Sisters, but the standard discount was 35%.

Ah. Right. So that means I sell the book at £7.99; the bookseller takes £2.80; Lightning Source takes £3.42. And I’m left with . . . £1.77. Hm. Bit less than I’d expected as author and publisher.


THE PROOF ISSUE

Beware the print specs! Should you colour correct the jacket or not? Should you leave I the trim marks on the pages? You need to know these things if you are supplying files to a print on demand printer. Lightning Source's media department has very specific requirements and if you don’t meet them, you may flounder. It took weeks of going back and forth with the artist who’d drawn my new jackets and Lightning Source, to get the files for my six titles absolutely spot on.

Also, I urge anyone publishing as print-on-demand to get a physical proof before signing off the print run. Yes, it costs, but you will see things there that you won’t see on the electronic proof. For instance, I didn’t spot that the text for Sprites Vol 1 was grey, not black, on the electronic proof. I’d loaded the wrong file by mistake. However, not realising, I approved the proof and ordered a box of copies at £160. Bad move. Thankfully I was able to reload the text with the correct file for a fee. More cost.

THE DISAPPEARING EMAIL NIGHTMARE

Where did they go? Where are the hundreds of mails that were in my Inbox a minute ago? Argh . . .

In October, with an unerring ability to press the wrong button, it transpired I had somehow switched to another mail identity within Entourage on my iMac. With the help of my trusty Mac man all was restored, but it was, to say the least, a little worrying.

ALL MY E-BOOKS FREE ON AMAZON PRIME!

What? Not just one, but all six? I didn’t say you could do that! Or did I? Was was it I agreed with Amazon . . .

Then I remembered I’d signed up for Kindle Select – and one of the conditions was that Amazon could offer your books thus. Quickly, I unselected that option but it won’t come into effect until January. Until then, you can get all six of my e-books free if you are a member of Amazon Prime.

WITTERING

Twitter has the effect on me similar to flashing lights. I want to turn away.
I know I should do it – all Indie authors do to rpomote their books – but I just cannot summon up the enthusiasm. I realise I am Grumpy Old Woman at last.

FACEBOOK

Non starter (see Twitter).

EIN OR ITIN? UNRAVELLING THE US TAX SYSTEM

In the early summer, I decided to apply for a US tax number. A fellow Indie author advised me to call the US Embassy in London. Apparently that department gives you another number to ring, and, when you get through to that department, they will give you an EIN over the phone. I waited an hour to get through, then hung up.

Leave it, I thought – and did until I tried to register with NOOK last week. This e-book platform, owned by Barnes & Noble, requires you to have a US Tax ID Number to register. But now that I have a company, do I need an EIN or an ITIN? Perhaps my accountant can sort this – for a fee . . .


WRITING

Way behind. I keep receiving mails from my readers asking when the 7th Sprite title will be finished. Earlier this year I was confident I’d have Magic at Drysdale’s School written, edited and published by Christmas. And when are The Earth Stories coming, other readers asked?

The truth is I’ve so busy with the business and technology side of things that the writing has got pushed back. If I want to get the book out by February, I have 40,000 words to write by the end of the year. Ha.

HOWEVER . . .

Early this year I set out to:-

·      buy back the Sprite Sisters book rights from Piccadilly Press
·      sell my sixth title direct to Fischer Verlag for publication in Germany
·      commission new jackets for the original five Piccadilly titles
·      re-publish the six stories as print-on-demand paperbacks and as e-books
·      start writing a blog for my website
·      write a humorous blog anonymously
·      write and publish the seventh Sprite Sisters book
·      find an agent to sell my books in Japan

It took months to re-edit and re-format the six books, and it cost a bomb. But it’s all done and I now have a terrific set of paperbacks and e-books to send to the US and out to film production companies, as well as sell.

I managed six out of my eight aims, which is not bad going considering the multiple challenges faced this year.

Next year I’ll aim to be more techno-savvy – but that may be a bit of a long-shot.

My best wishes for a happy and prosperous 2013 to one and all!


My thanks to Chris Winn for his wonderful jacket illustrations and to 
Simon Cheshire for all help with the formatting. We got there in the end!


Sheridan Winn is the author of the bestselling Sprite Sisters books.
You can find out more about her at: www.sheridanwinn.com


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