Publishing is All Business…or is It?

by Nina Amir, @NinaAmirCreative Visualization for Writers is a book by Nina Amir.

Publishing is all business. You have to deal with business plans or proposals, contracts, negotiations, promotion, platform, a publishing company—someone else’s or your own, marketability, taxes, and, of course, sales and royalties.

But it’s not all business.

Take, for instance, the act of writing, which is creative by nature. Writing involves ideation, character or content development, plot, structure, and imagination. It also requires problem solving abilities, which rely on creativity.

Publishing requires a unique blend of business and creativity.

Business Takeover

For many years, I’ve stressed the cold, hard business side of becoming an author. After all, tackling these tasks are necessary if you want to produce books that sell.

However, it’s easy to end up felling as if the business side of publishing has taken over your writing life. Believe me, I understand! You end up not writing. Instead, you spend your days on social networks, sending emails, fussing with your website, blogging, and finding ways to promote and build platform.

It’s frustrating, right?

As I wrote and spoke about the business side of a writer’s life, I never forgot the warm, soft (even fuzzy) side or becoming an author. After all, like you, that’s what I want to do—write. And the creative side drives the business side of publishing. Without book ideas and manuscripts, publishers—traditional or indie—have nothing to publish.

We writers are creatives, but sometimes we struggle to put words on paper. Or we just can’t come up with a new idea or the right idea. Can you relate?Continue reading

Twitterific Writing Links

The best writing links of the week are on Twitterific from Elizabeth Spann Craig.

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

A weekly roundup of the best writing links from around the web.

Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 30,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.

5 years, 6 books, 7 lessons:  http://ow.ly/bYp1304BXN8 @lisajanicecohen  @WriterUnboxed

10 Tips for Writing Through Family Stress:  http://ow.ly/929h304BZIw @bclaypolewhite

Limited vs. Omniscient Third Person POV:  http://ow.ly/zTsg304BZwy @p2p_editor

Deconstruct Your Favorite Book: http://ow.ly/fb4h304CczC @JohnnyBTruant

Adapt to Change and Become More Productive:  http://ow.ly/y9aX304DKEA @jmunroemartin               Continue reading

Creating Bestsellers

Creating Bestsellers is a blog post by Elizabeth Spann Craig

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

Family and friends will sometimes lightly tell me they’re sure that I’m going to pen a bestseller. I respond, just as lightly, that I don’t write those types of books.  I’m writing genre fiction to appeal specifically  to readers of my subgenre. Any bestseller status is in the confines of that subgenre.

Bestsellers, obviously, appeal to a broader audience. I’m not sure if I’ll ever even try to write something meant to be that  commercially successful.  But that’s not to say I’m not interested in hearing how to get there.

I received a free copy of The Bestseller Code  as a thank you from St. Martin’s publicist for promoting a contest on Twitter.

At the time, the buzz over the book hadn’t yet revved up as it has now.  There have been discussions sparked (and perhaps a bit of controversy) over the algorithms the authors Jodie Archer and Matthew L. Jockers ran to find common threads in today’s blockbusters, regardless of genre.Continue reading

Quick Writing Can Still Result in Quality Writing:

Author Roland Yeomans

by Roland Yeomans, @rxena77

Isn’t Elizabeth brave and gracious to let me borrow her blog for the day?  Give her a hand by commenting at the end of this post, will you?

“I never travel without my diary.  One should always have something sensational to read in the train.” – Oscar Wilde

dragons-over-paris_3

Let me tell you of some sensational reading that I am asking you NOT to read.  Yes, this is my first stop on my DON’T BUY MY BOOK Blog Tour!

I mean, if you buy it, you’ll just encourage me.

You know how many thousands of Indie Books are published EVERY month?

As Midnight, my kitten, says, “More than the grains of litter in my box, and most smell as bad, too!”

That is the fault of those writers who do not hold themselves to the fire of doing their best with every sentence.

We can write good novels faster than we think we can.  The past has shown it.

“If you’re going to doubt something, doubt your own limits.” -Don Ward

We can do more than we think we can.

James Horner was given TWO WEEKS to compose the soundtrack to ALIENS.Continue reading

Twitterific Writing Links

The best writing links of the week are on Twitterific from Elizabeth Spann Craig.

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

A weekly roundup of the best writing links from around the web.

Twitterific writing links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 30,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.

One question to make your novel sell: does it turn? http://ow.ly/VpPE304kVwd @kseniaanske

Your Online Writing Portfolio: Must-Haves and More:  http://ow.ly/DeYV304kRvj @MerylWilliams

47 Tips Writers Need When Their Creativity Goes AWOL:  http://ow.ly/VyTb304kUN5 @LauraJTong

5 Questions to Test Your Story Concept:  http://ow.ly/DPEl304kVsH @GoIntoTheStory

In Praise of the Micro Landscape:  http://ow.ly/MBOa304kR1B @angpalm  @lithub Continue reading

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