Louis Shalako
Publishing is not rocket science.
When my old computer was dying, and I knew I had to
get a new one, it was obvious that there would be a transition, some kind of
learning curve, if and when I got a new one.
Everything worthwhile in life has some kind of learning
curve. For example, my brand new program has metric for the margins and page
sizes, headers and footers. I’m used to measurements in the old English system.
In the short term, I fiddle with the measurements when making a print on demand
paperback. When I find something that works, I jot it down, even though the
measurements for a 250-page POD are irrelevant for a 440-page POD. With my new
program, I have published a handful of ebook titles and one or two PODs.
The thing is quick. When I perform an operation, there
is no waiting around, no going into the kitchen and setting some eggs on to
boil for egg salad sandwiches.
It’s a learning curve, and over time, looking at it
often enough, it will become as natural as breathing.
I won’t even be able to
explain it.
My new program wanted me to work in the cloud. The
interface was tiny. I was so pissed-off when I saw that, it practically made me sick to my stomach. I was throwing hissy-fits, I kid you not. I was spitting mad. With a remote session with my tech guy, I can now
create a document on the desktop and keep it there where the interface is
similar but cleaner than the old XP version.
(In a bit of a side-bar, going blind is not a fucking joke.)
It used to take my old machine anything up to thirty
seconds or more to open an email.
It took a second to see what it was, and then thirty
more seconds to delete it and open up the next one….
Life’s a lot easier, even though there was a bit of a
panic session when I went to print something and discovered the machine didn’t
want to do it. When I hooked up my printer, the thing went directly online and
downloaded the program, so I thought that was it. The disc is in a box
somewhere, and it took quite a long time to load on the old machine. But the
fact was, I had to hack around a bit to learn that the thing won’t print until
‘OneNote’ (another cloud aspect of this program) had been opened at least once.
You have to sign into your Microsoft account, but then
I did that to activate and validate the new software anyways. Short story made
longer, now we can print.
And the whole game is like that. You pay as you go and
learn as you go, and you can push it as far as you want.
***
As the reader knows, we like conducting experiments.
Recently we went on Smashwords and opted out of Kobo distribution for five pen
names and something like a hundred titles.
Then we went to Kobo and opened an account. We
uploaded the exact same titles to Kobo. We don’t give a shit so much about the
royalty rate. But in the entire year last year, we sold a grand total of three
books by using the Kobo distribution channel through SW. If you’re not selling
any books the royalty rate is irrelevant.
What is important is thinking clearly.
We’ve sold three books this year, in about two weeks.
What’s really different is that we can see free books being downloaded. This Kobo
channel information is unavailable from SW. It would be nice to know which
titles are going for free on Kobo. This way we would know what sort of material
to produce more of.
They have to see your book before they can take it for
free. For all we knew there was no one looking at our books on the Kobo
site—judging by the data provided by SW. Yet we know that’s not true now.
As to whether that was
true or not, we simply don’t know based upon zero information, however, we can
safely say that we have distributed 480 + free titles through Kobo since the
experiment began just a couple of short months ago.
***
Later today, we will take our half-dozen latest titles
down from SW on the Kobo distribution channel. The fact that we left them up
when publishing simply made our day simpler. We’ll stick them up directly
through Kobo. This means that our titles will pop out on the just released page
twice, and we will now have more control over prices on each individual
platform. We can set a book for free on Kobo, and it won’t affect the price on
Barnes & Noble, iTunes, etc.
At some point in the future, if we get bored enough or
disappointed enough, we’ll sign up for iTunes, go through the whole ITIN/tax
withholding rigmarole, and upload directly to them for greater control over
pricing and availability. It is irritating to upload a fresh cover and then on
some site or other, discover that they’re still using something from three
years ago.
It would be interesting to see what sort of metrics
and analytics we can get off that site, and it would also be interesting to
fiddle with the site and see if we can move a few more books.
This is no big reflection or criticism of Smashwords,
but it is a logical extension of our knowledge and our capabilities.
Other than that, things are going along about as well
as expected. At some point in the future, for example when I get the new
machine paid down a bit, we can purchase Adobe Photoshop and learn how to use
that too.
It’s all part of the constant learning curve that is
modern digital publishing.
That is our basic method and our most useful tool: a willingness to experiment, and one would think a willingness to learn the job and to do the work.
END
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please feel free to comment on the blog posts, art or editing.