Four Years

November marks my four year anniversary as an independent author-publisher. And they’ve been four super wonderful years. I’m very much looking forward to year 5.

I’ve published 28 books, with number 29 coming out by year’s end. If I’d gone the traditional publishing route, I might still be looking for an agent. Screw traditional publishing. It’s the indie life for me!

Now I’d love to write that I just bought that Rolls Royce I’ve always dreamed of owning with my royalties from this year. Unfortunately, my desire has greatly outpaced my earnings.

Am I disappointed? I’d be a liar if I said I wasn’t. But I’m only disappointed a teeny-weeny bit. Why? Because I have 28 books, soon to be 29, available for people to enjoy. I’m making some money. And people, at least some people, like my stories. Plus I’m doing what I always wanted to do and loving it. What more can one ask for?

I’ve learned a lot these past four years and I’m hoping the next four years will at least allow me to buy a Ford Focus. 🙂

While all that sounds optimistic, fundamentally I’m a pragmatist. In the end, what works is what counts. I’ve read dozens of books, articles, and blogposts by writers as to what works and what doesn’t. I don’t focus on the fads or the gimmicks or the golden parachutes. I look at what truly works.

For indie writers, there is one refrain that has been constantly sounded by virtually all the successful writers — and it’s simple: write fast, write in series, publish often, and build a mailing list. Those 4 things are what virtually all successful indie authors have done and are doing.  Sure there are exceptions. But they are the exceptions.

If you are an indie writer and aren’t writing fast, aren’t writing one or more series, if you aren’t publishing often, and you aren’t building a mailing list — then you will almost certainly fail. It doesn’t matter how good your writing is. Indie readers want lots of books, because they tend to be voracious readers, and they want them in series. It’s that simple.

Self-publishing today is easy and gaining in respectability. And I’m glad. For anyone who wants to write and publish a book, now that person can. There are no longer any gatekeepers stopping people. We can tell the world whatever is on our hearts and minds. We can tell the world all the stories we want to. And that is a good thing.

Marketing, however, remains the bugaboo — for both indies and the big corporate publishers.

Finding one’s audience is the real challenge for any artist or entertainer who hopes to make a living producing art. And fiction writers are both artist and entertainer. And this is where a mailing list can help the writer. Because a mailing list is really a list of those who like your work, or are at least interested. You won’t get that from Amazon or Apple or Barnes and Noble. They keep the email addresses to themselves.

Marketing in some form is essential to getting our name and our work out in front of potential readers and buyers. A mailing list is simply a voluntarily captive audience, as it were. There are other forms of marketing, and they should be used. But you writers, don’t neglect the mailing list.

For the curious, I’ve earned the following royalties for my efforts:

2014 (2 months) $113.48

2015   $233.87

2016   $231.04

2017   $212.53

2018 (through October) $280.53

Those earnings came from the sale of 513 books, 35 borrows, and 23,202 page reads.

As you can see, I’m no mega-star. No bestseller. No award winner. But I’m not ashamed of those numbers. Thus far I’ve achieved all that with but 4 weeks of paid advertising done at the beginning of this year. The bulk of my sales and page reads came from free advertising venues.

My fan base is tiny. And I do mean tiny. But it’s a start and I continue to be excited and encouraged with every sale and page read.

For the coming year I’m going to focus on the indie formula for success. I plan on writing lots, at least 1,000 finished words a day and hopefully I can push that to 2,000 or 2,500 on a consistent basis.

The old pulp formula, which is now the indie formula, is alive and well. Publishing 3 books in 3 months proved it to me. It’s what has given me my best year ever. I had sustained sales for 4 months after the third book was published. If I’d had more ready to go… Who knows, I might have been a bestseller.

I’m also going to work on building my mailing list. I’m a believer in the 1,000 fan theory. Which is this: all an artist needs is 1,000 super fans (those folks who will buy whatever you put out — books, recordings, cups, sweatshirts, etc.) to make a living from his art.

To find those fans, I’ll be using such avenues as Prolific Works and BookFunnel: giving away a free copy of a story in exchange for an email. The process is slow and tedious. Many unsubscribe right away. Many drop off in the first few months, and many never open an email. I’ll cull from the list those who are unresponsive. Leaving the folks who are hopefully interested in my books.

I love writing. I love being retired so I have the freedom to write all day if I choose. I wouldn’t have it any other way. Life is grand.

Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

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12 thoughts on “Four Years”

  1. I am impressed! You have definitely put in the work – congratulations on your 29th child.

    In about the same amount of time, I have published ONE book (in 2015) and have written 1/4 of the second book in the mainstream PC trilogy.

    I’ve sold maybe 150 copies, with fewer than 25 in paperback, and have under 15,000 in KU pages read. I’ve given away another 100 copies, and have 42 reviews (had more, but Amazon removed a few).

    Hadn’t really looked at the numbers (KDP makes it easy – the data is always there) before, but I’m satisfied. For a writer who can’t do “write fast, write in series, publish often, and build a mailing list,” due to a profound lack of energy, to have done what I have, staying focused for that kind of an effort, still amazes me.

    Marketing is still the bugaboo – my 1000 true fans probably won’t join me at this stage from random searches at Amazon, even with the best of keywords, because that’s not how they find books (I tell myself) and I’m not yet capable of making a splash in the places where they DO find their reading recommendations.

    I love to see other indie’s success, because it penetrates the public’s consciousness that there is something other than traditional publishing out there. I hope I’m wrong, but I concluded long ago that I probably wouldn’t garner the attention of an agent. Even if I had, TP is abusive in the field of contracts, rights, and royalties, so I’m glad I haven’t submitted to that sword.

    We’ll see. I’m still writing. I can do as I please, and still have some reach. It is enough.

    Keep at it – when you do hit bigger numbers of fans, you will be ready with a whole bunch more good reading for them. Think of the read-through!

    1. Thanks for the encouragement and support Alicia! Marketing is the bugaboo. It has to be done in some way, shape, or form because with over 3,000 new books appearing on Amazon each day, coupled with the millions there already, the odds of any one book being seen are pretty remote

      For you to have gathered over 40 reviews is very good, and you’ve sold some and gotten some reads. The pubishing end for most of us is like that snowball that starts out small and gets bigger going down the hill. Work on getting more books out there, and you’ll find your fans.

  2. Congratulations Christopher! You’re an example of how this gig could work and I look forward to reading more Pierce Mostyn adventures!

  3. Congratulations CW and good luck with your plans for the year ahead! Not only have you been prolific, but you have also managed to maintain quality. That is the key. I’ve seen writers churn books out each and every month, yet there is little in the way of quality about them. True, they might sell, but there is more to it than that. At least there is to me.

    Personally, as a reader, I’m not a great fan of long series. I like my stories to be one-offs or short-stories arranged around a theme. Trilogies are okay. I guess that’s why I write the way I do. Needless to say, I am long on the path that leads away from the warm glow of commercial success. I have, however, brought along some petrol and a few matches. Perhaps I’ll start a blaze of my own… or maybe just wind up burning myself. Only time will tell.

    1. Thanks, Crispian!

      The great thing about literature is that there is something for everyone. If you like standalones, they’re out there. You like long series, they’re out there. Whatever we readers like, it’s out there to be read.

      As a writer, I take great comfort in that because it means no matter what I write there is an audience. Might not be big, but they’re out there. We just have to find each other.

      Lee Child wrote if you can see the trend it’s too late to get on the bandwagon. So go ahead and blaze the trail. The worst that can happen is you’ll run out of petrol. No matter, get more and blaze a different one. 🙂

  4. Speaking of pulp, I recently rewatched Disney’s ‘John Carter’ on DVD, one of my favorite movies despite its box office failure. I’ve begun reading ‘A Princess of Mars’, which is excellent so far.

  5. Congratulations on all you have achieved over this last four years! You are a great writer and I wish you all the success in the world!

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