Three Things I Wish First Time Indie Authors Knew

first-time-indieI've been fortunate to work with many indie authors during the publishing of their first book. Self-publishing your first book is a thrilling, empowering process, but may also overwhelm or intimidate the unprepared. Once you're through it the first time, you learn many valuable lessons that make the next one even easier.

Here are three things I wish first time indie authors knew about self-publishing.


 

Exact publication dates are very difficult to meet.

Publishing is a long and complex process. A great many opportunities for things to go wrong exist between all the editing, cover design and formatting that must be completely perfect before your book is live. Even if all goes well, you could hit the approve and publish button the night before your publication day only to find it will take 5 days for your book to actually appear on Amazon.

First time authors can get themselves in tricky situations when they pre-pay for advertising to run on launch day or make public promises about a specific day. This is easy to avoid.

Take a tip from startups, be very specific with yourself and your publishing team about your date. Manage the process tight to make sure everything stays on track. However, be more vague publicly. Instead of saying your book will be out "December 20th", you can say it will be available "late December". Small difference, but a huge impact on stress levels.


 

Your book will not sell thousands of copies simply because it's on Amazon.

Do not tell me about the exceptions because you are not one of them.* Once you hit publish and post the link to your book on your Facebook page, your work is far from over. Your friends and family may buy 20 copies of the book, but then what?

In July of this year, there were over 30 million titles on Amazon (across all sites). Traditional publishers add another 300,000 new titles each year. On top of that, you must account for the legions of your self-publishing peers using Kindle Direct Publishing and CreateSpace. Your book desperately needs your direct help to stand out above the rest.

I encourage my author clients to ask themselves how many people did they reach today. Your "reach" is how many people heard about your book. Scale matters when it comes to sales. Facebook is a great start. If you build an author platform, that will increase your reach. You can purchase ads to increase your reach. You can look for reviews, blog appearances and media coverage to increase your reach. If you aren't working to market your book, no one else is either. It's up to you to get the word out. You can't rely on your book's mere existence on Amazon to bring you sales.

*If you are a celebrity, you are an exception as you already have a great reach and an audience that will buy your book. In fact, you should probably share this blog right now with your loyal followers. Thanks!


 

 A stranger will read your book and it will feel GOOD.

2012 survey of indie authors found that only half make more than $500 on their books. However, only 5% considered themselves unsuccessful. Even the most artistically, altruistically-driven among us agree that it would be very nice to earn money from our creative pursuits. However, turns out that we're not all that upset if that doesn't happen. Why is that?

Imagine you've come home late on a Monday evening from the job you tolerate to pay your bills. You log in to check your sales and find you've only sold three books this month. Crushing bummer. But then, what's this? A new five-star review from someone named MaryGold12 from Toledo says the story in your heartfelt novel was not only deeply moving and cleverly captured in beautiful prose, but also gave her the courage she needed to tell her own story. You sit back as the warm glow of meaningful human connection triggers all your dopamine transmitters and floods your body with pleasing chemicals. The joy of making a real impact on another soul, or even of having your art recognized by one person, is a better high than all the red wine and shiny new things can bring you.

Indie publishing presents an excellent learning opportunity. You may have great fun and find the experience wholly satisfying. I hope that the first book you publish will not be your last. Onward!

If you need help building your author platform, I'm leading a course called Small Town Writer, Big World Audience on Gutsy Creatives. If you enter the discount code BLOGGISH you'll get $25 off the cost of the full course. Click here to register.

You can even preview a sample lesson here!

Best of luck on your publishing journey!

Leave a comment



Pam Stucky

9 years ago

Also, the people who contact you through your contact form on your website (which of course you have up and running!) saying they read your book and it affected them in this or that way, or it helped them with some planning, or it reminded them of a favorite series from childhood ... Those all feel so good! Or people who actually send snail mail fan mail! OMG! The best!!

Kelsye

9 years ago

FREAKING FAN MAIL. Yes. The absolute best.

Anonymous

9 years ago

Wise words Kelsye.

Kelsye

9 years ago

Thank you, Anonymous. You've been known to say many wise things in your own time as well. 😉

J.P. Sexton

9 years ago

I had no idea there were 30 million titles milling around on Amazon. You definitely hit the proverbial nail on the head regarding marketing. I have made a pact with myself that I will pull out all the stops. Just like in business really, it would be hard to find a better advocate than yourself.