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Authors' Coalition Media Releases

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"AC is the current that propels your career."

Carolyn Howard-Johnson, Authors' Coalition founder

 

 

Tip

Winning a contest is an opportunity to let readers know more about you. Even a small contest win may be news to you hometown newspapers. Even a runner-up poisition is something to crow about. Contests are one of the easiest ways to make news. Check out small ones like the Noble (Not Nobel!) )Prize at MyShelf.com

  Find tips on writing, promotion or tech on every page of this website. 

  

 

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Authors' Coalition Media Releases

 

Beware of Your Own Culpability:  Writers’ Traps and Scams

 

By

 

Joyce Faulkner

 

          Many folks dream of making it to the top of an enormous pyramid of literary talent where they will rub shoulders with the likes of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Harper Lee and J.D. Salinger.   Others fantasize about writing a runaway best seller and becoming the next Stephen King or Dan Brown. 

 

For most, fortune is an elusive pixie that dances just beyond their fingertips.  Not everyone with a story is talented enough or persistent enough to finish a book.   Not all of those who do end up with a professional, commercially viable product.  For the gifted, determined few who complete publishable projects, the industry is a maze of questionable opportunities, u-turns and dead-ends.   The odds are against any one writer being at the right place and time with the right book.  No wonder many would-be authors end up frustrated and vulnerable. 

 

Impatient with the seemingly endless process, hopeful writers sometimes pay to see their work in print only to feel cheated and embarrassed by the effort later on.  It happens so often that bookstores and writers’ sites feature books, websites and magazines filled with advice and warnings.   Watch out for fraudulent agents and publishers, they say.  Stay clear of anthologies that ask accepted authors to buy several copies.  Don’t pay reading fees.  Be careful of publisher referrals to editors who expect payment.  Don’t write for free.  The laundry list goes on and on.  Given that so much of the traditional approach is out of the author’s hands, these cautions make non-traditional routes seem all the more treacherous.  There are so many ways to slip up, it seems.

 

Certainly, there are scam artists out there who take advantage of those who dream of being ‘published’.   Swindlers rely on their victims to participate in the double-cross which makes the result all the more humiliating.   However, not all unhappy endings come from fraud.  Some new author grief has to do with unmet expectations.  One writer thought that once his book was accepted all he had to do was sit back and wait for the royalties to come rolling in.   He learned otherwise when his handsome, well-written novel sold very few copies.   Another author paid $500 to a publicist who told her that he’d present her book to the chain bookstore buyers.  She imagined dozens of books on the front table at Barnes and Noble.  There are no guarantees, she learned.   Neither of these writers were duped.  They didn’t understand the book business and their decisions were injudicious.

 

Regardless of which publishing approach an author pursues, here are a few attitudinal perspectives that might make the process less stressful. 

 

  • · Adjust your expectations.   Understand why you are writing and set goals based on that understanding.

  • · Evaluate your work with an eye to understanding who might be interested in reading it.   Creativity is a wonderful thing, but if you aren’t speaking to an audience there will be no one to buy your book.  As elementary as that sounds, garages full of unsold volumes abound. 

  • · Understand that regardless of how you publish your book, that’s only one part of the process.  You must dedicate yourself to selling it.   Don’t expect anyone else to do this for you although larger publishers have more resources to help you than smaller ones.

  • · Focus on the art of self promotion.  People won’t buy your book if they don’t know who you are.  There are many books to help with this.  One of the best is “The Frugal Book Promoter” by Carolyn Howard-Johnson.

  • · Network with other writers and learn from their successes and mistakes. 

  • · Have a plan and make tactical decisions that support your strategy.  For example, if your goal is to make money from freelance work, don’t give away articles but if your goal is to create audience for your books, writing in exchange for ad space may be a smart move.

  • · Understand what services you are buying.  For example, are you buying results or time?  Are you paying for expertise or for a task?  

  • · Understand how you are paying for services.  Are you paying by the hour?   By the project? 

  • ·  If someone with a deal that sounds too good to be true approaches you, it probably is.  It’s a cliché but it’s true.

Most of us have been disappointed by what we perceived as broken promises.  When this is the result of fraud, call a lawyer and take action.  Warn others.  When it’s the result of misunderstanding, making decisions based on inadequate information, or choosing the wrong service, there are fewer legal or moral recourses.  However, assess why the results were less than you expected.   Experience is a great teacher.  Too bad it’s also a painful one.

 

 

 

"First in a series by Nadine Laman. Part romance, part mainstream, completely entrancing." ~Carolyn Howard-Johnson, award-winning author of This Is The Place.

Everything Melinda Powell has she's earned the hard way. She became partner at her law firm and bought a charming brownstone in Boston's Back Bay. Her father dies suddenly and Melinda returns to the life she left behind in northern Nevada's Carson Valley. Melinda and her mother have a tense relationship and she plans to return east as soon as she settles her father's affairs...but life has other plans for Melinda as she uncovers family secrets and betrayal that threaten to destroy her very existence.

 

Authors' Coalition proudly honors its sponsors.

Sponsorships are open for participation from any publishing-related entity--presses, artists, speakers, conferences, tradeshows, individual authors.  Please click here for details.).

                 

Directors: Pat McGrath Avery, Joyce Faulkner
Founded by Carolyn Howard-Johnson
 

"AC is the current that propels your career."

Carolyn Howard-Johnson, Authors' Coalition founder

 

 
Disclaimer
You are encouraged to download and reprint much of what you find on this site.
If you choose to do so, please include bylines, taglines and copyright tag. 
For those who prefer express permission, contact Carolyn Howard-Johnson at
HoJoNew@aol.com and she will put you in touch with the owner of the creative material.

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