Posts Tagged ‘The Author Platform’
The Red Hen Association is just a hatchling at this point. Whether it becomes the voice for independent, alternative, or self-publishers will depend on how we grow. I’ve stated the goals of the association in the manifesto, but I think they bear further examination.
- The association is intended to create common ground for all self-publishing authors to mingle, share their experiences, and assist one another. This is a place where the successful can pay it forward and the novice is assured of safe, reliable guidance.
- The association intends to provide educational opportunities to help writers achieve their goals more surely and quickly. These educational opportunities will include:
- White Papers, Books, and Free Blogs.
- Seminars, Trade Shows, and Conventions.
- Self-study audio and video tapes.
- Publishing news and opportunities.
- The association hopes to support authors in developing credibility in the marketplace, by:
- Developing standards and helping self-publishers abide by the standards to create increased pride and professionalism.
- Establishing a Red Hen trademark and allow self-publishers whose products meet tough standards to use the mark on their books and other marketing materials.
- Work toward equal access to booksellers shelves.
- Carry on the cause of self-publishing through speeches, blogs, and seminars.
- Create public relations and marketing opportunities for member authors such as: Creating a book review section on both blog and newsletter.
- Publishing co-op catalogs to send to libraries and book stores.
- Sponsoring events such as book fairs, to highlight Red Hen authors.
- Explore and advise writers on opportunities that may be available elsewhere.
- Protect authors from the Wolves and Knaves that prey on new writers by:
- Developing standards for would be services such as printing, editing, graphic design and allowing the approved to carry The Red Hen Association trademark.
- Surveying members who use unapproved vendors to gather information that could be valuable to ranking them for service, quality, and costs.
- Keeping an eye on lawsuits, and court cases involving shady services to advise members to steer clear of them.
Whew, this is a long ambitious list and not complete. There is much to do before this hatchling can fly. I won’t be able to accomplish these tasks alone, so if there are writers out there in cyberspace who can see a way to assist these efforts please let me know who you are and how you can help. Thank you.
If you have a book ready to market, are just finishing writing a book, or have plans, it isn’t too early to learn how to implement the practices you’ll need to make your book sell. Social networks are big and getting bigger. You can use them as a beginning point to developing international credibility. I learned a great deal from The Author Platform, check into it and see if they can help you on your way. Just click here for more information.
Bite your Tongue.
Those who decide to self-publish can hold their heads high, because they are counted among some of greatest authors in history. Below is but a partial list of authors who have chosen to self-publish at sometime in their career.
- William Blake, Ken Blanchard, Robert Bly,Lord Byron, Willa Cather, Stephen Crane,
- e.e. cummings, Alexander Dumas, T.S. Eliot,Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Benjamin Franklin,
- Zane Grey, Thomas Hardy, Nathaniel Hawthorne,Ernest Hemingway, Robinson Jeffers,
- Stephen King, Rudyard Kipling, Louis L’Amour, D.H. Lawrence, Anais Nin, Thomas Paine,
- Tom Peters, Edgar Allen Poe, Alexander Pope, Beatrix Potter, Ezra Pound, Marcel Proust,
- Carl Sandburg, Robert Service, George Bernard Shaw, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Upton Sinclair,
- Gertrude Stein, William Strunk, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoi,
- Mark Twain, and Walt Whitman.
Note: The list was pulled from John Kremer’s Self-Publishing Hall of Fame
If you don’t find at least one of your heroes here I would be very surprised. Also you may have noticed that quite a few poets populate the list. Modern poets complain that publishers aren’t interested in their books. It’s said that poetry doesn’t sell. Compared to a fast paced pop-novel of sex, violence, and action they are probably right. I have to keep reminding myself that publishing isn’t primarily about getting the finest works into the public’s hands–it’s a profit generating business like a grocery store. If the stock isn’t turning it is costing money. I, like many others, tend to glamorize the traditional publishing houses and imbue them with a nobility they just don’t have. It’s a business. Poetry, on the other hand, is something else. Poetry is a work of passion, not business. Publishers probably weren’t any more anxious to publish poetry then than they are now and that is why so many poets had to resort to self-publishing.

The Old Man
One of my readers added this comment about self-publishers: “For me all I had to do was find out that Hemingway’s first book was “self-published,” to help me make my decision and after 32 years of “practice” I feel I did it just right. And then later this year when I found out about Mark Twain’s force of ten thousand book agents scattered across America selling his works and Ulysses S Grant’s Memoirs (also published by Twain’s company which was run by his young nephew Webster).” Miles Cobbett, Author the Alaskan book CHAMPION.
Miles followed up with this comment in another post: “One more tasty tidbit about Hemingway and his publisher, that I bet you already know is his lively discussions in letters between him and Charles Scribner about Royalty Payments. I was fascinated to read in copies of Hemingway’s “Letters” that CS only offered to pay Ernest Hemingway 10 % of the net. And Ernest wrote back in a lively letter that he wanted 15 % or a Minimum of 12.5 %…
This was fascinating to me, especially when I read in the other book I wrote to you about, (Birth of a Salesman), how Mark Twain offered and paid U. S. Grant and his widow, a whopping 70% of the profits from publishing Grant’s Memoirs.”
I have more sympathy for the traditional publishers than you might think from reading my posts. They have to have highly tuned crystal balls to foresee the future. If they choose to take a gamble on an author, and it tanks, what do they lose? Why the entire investment, of course. And what about credibility? What happens to the employee who stands behind a book bomb? Or two, or three? Can you say pink slip?
If you know your book will sell–you stand behind it. Raise the money to print and promote it. You might be like my friend Miles Corbbett whom I quoted above. His self-published book CHAMPION is selling well and he owes it all to word-of-mouth advertising. Miles has this to say about his success: “Getting the word out has been a fun & challenging journey, but it’s all been done so far without any help from a Madison Avenue super advertising blitz.”
If you are a self-publisher, considering self-publishing, or a supplier to self-publishers be sure to check out the manifesto for The Red Hen Association of Self-Publishing Authors, Inc. (click here).
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Mark Twain had an army of ten-thousand salesmen peddling his books all over the country. He understood the principles of marketing as they applied to his time. Today’s marketing is different and requires an understanding of blogging, social networking, books on Amazon, etc. You can get that information from The Author Platform (TAP). It’s not free but almost click (here) for more information. If you can sell your book yourself you’ll earn 15 times more than if you traditionally publish.
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This article was republished with permission from the author’s blog Talking Through My Hat.
I’m not just talking through my hat here. Yesterday I was asked by a librarian to tell her about book publishing in today’s world. I am not a publisher, but she thought my print production experience would give me an understanding. One thing is very evident, everything that was once true before, is not true now.
The traditional book publishing business has changed dramatically. In the past a publisher bought the rights to an author’s book, they edited the book, typeset the book, promoted the book, they printed the book, and they distributed the book. In return the author received a royalty. Today publishers demand that the author do most of the promotion. The author has to set up their own book signings and public relations tours. And the biggest surprise of all is that if an author is over fifty or deceased you can forget about it. In the past the quality of the literature reigned supreme. Not anymore. By today’s publishing standards Emily Dickinson’s poems would have never seen the light of day.
What’s going on with publishing? In my opinion it is too focused on the almighty dollar and is losing its soul. Can you say profit motive?

Mountains of Books
It could be because the shear magnitude of manuscripts circulating is overwhelming. In fact, most traditional publishers will not accept a manuscript unless it comes to them first through a trusted literary agent. They’ve barricaded themselves in their towers and I believe, cutting off their noses to spite their faces. I know, I know, those are cliches and not a particularly good ones, but it makes my point. Traditional publishing has become a closed loop. If you are in the loop, you’ll get published, if not, good damn luck.
The tragedy is that the pressure is on the popular authors to keep knockin’ ‘em out at a speed that keeps the cash registers ringing, but floods the public with marginal work. It has the feel of an egg farm. Just keep the authors on the roost pushing out eggs as fast as they can.
No wonder everyone thinks they can be a writer, when the bar is set so low. Much of the material that gets through to the bookshelves is not worth reading. I can’t believe that those authors are proud of their work. How could they be? Today’s system turns potentially good authors into hacks. Is that too strong? I’m sorry, but if anyone has laid down good money to buy a book, knowing it is light beach reading, and found it falling short of that expectation, then there is something really wrong with the system. Publishers, especially well-known publishing houses should guard their honor with their lives. Maybe is is just me, but if their stamp is on a book, the public should be able to trust that it has real intrinsic value.
What about authors who haven’t found a place in the closed loop? Self-publishing is their only hope. What do I mean by that? If you have a manuscript that in your opinion, must be published you can do it yourself. The traditionalists haven’t thought very highly of what they call vanity publishing. Vanity publishers have been mocked and derided. If you had to resort to self-publishing you were considered to be a second rate author. That belief is disappearing. Some excellent writers are self-publishing now to earn more profit on the book sales, or are using the book sales as a bargaining point to secure a better publishing contract. Numbers talk.
Today, since the publishers have pulled back into their shells, authors have no choice but to do all the work themselves. It’s like the old Golden Books story of The Little Red Hen. After all of the work is done and the book is selling well, then, and only then will the publishers get interested. I tell you it is the profit motive.
Richard Paul Evans wrote and promoted his little book called the Christmas Box Story. He was so successful in selling it that the publisher paid over $4 million dollars for the rights. He proved that his book was a viable piece of property and the publisher who now wanted in, paid dearly for it. That’s where publishing is going. You self-publish, you self-promote, you keep a bigger slice of the pie, and if you get a good enough offer, you sell it, if you want to. Some publisher-authors may never want to get in that game at all.
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Most of us would-be-published-authors are best expressing ourselves through the written word. That’s why we write. Unfortunately in today’s publishing environment whether you self or traditionally publish you will be required to market/sell your book. What do you do? Where do you start? You can follow the steps outlined in the author platform. I can personally vouch for it because I’ve done it and still refer to it even now. Follow this link to learn how you can participate for a nominal cost.



