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Jessica Ferguson

Author, Writing Coach, Speaker

L.J. Sellers Shares All In The Writer

September 24, 2012 By Jessica Ferguson Leave a Comment

Awhile back I told you that The Writer magazine would shut their doors if a buyer wasn’t found. I’m thrilled that they did find a buyer–Madavor Media. As far as I know, they’ll continue as they are, publishing wonderful articles like A Successful Journey into E-Books by L.J. Sellers. You absolutely cannot afford to miss this article. It’s in the October 2012 issue. L.J. lays it out there for you, all the reasons she switched from being a traditionally published author to an eBook author. Her reasons are good and methodically thought out. The best thing about this piece is the honesty, her tone. L.J. doesn’t skip or skimp on the info she shares with the reader. You can trust this information.
Some of her valuable advice was in this paragraph: I decided to stop wasting time and money on things that weren’t working and focus on things that were. What wasn’t working for me was my small publisher, which couldn’t get my books into stores. What was working for other people was the growth in ebook sales.
This is excellent advice for all of us. We need to evaluate what’s working for us and what isn’t.
L.J. shares her path through the digital world, and her decision to forget about print books and bookstores certainly paid off. Amazon Publishing offered her an 11-book contract. Yep, you read right. Now rush out to the bookstore and pick up a copy of The Writer. You can learn something from L.J. Sellers.
You can read more about L.J. Sellers by visiting her website.  

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Amazon Publishing, digital publishing, L.J. Sellers, The Writer, Uncategorized

Updated – Outdated

February 7, 2012 By Jessica Ferguson Leave a Comment

Awhile back I took a class from an editor who explained the ins and outs of digital publishing, compared digital to traditional, and explained the advantages and disadvantages of both. It was a great course–very informative and encouraging.  I learned a lot and I’m still mulling over things she told us.

This instructor/editor who is also an author said we should use every publishing option available to us. She said that the most “successful” author is the one who understands how to make his writing work to his advantage. She did not say to throw traditional publishing by the wayside and pursue digital; she advised us to use both.

She said, “I highly recommend that while you’re writing stories for the Big 6 to consider, that you schedule a block of time to write something you can digitally publish. Shoot for a novella. Why? Because you aren’t sitting and waiting, letting perfectly viable opportunities slip past you.”

When I asked her for a career plan for me, she said:

So Jess, my advice in a nutshell:  Get yourself in a small, respectable e-house, and continue to work the traditional end. Keep fresh titles out in the e-house, but don’t shrug off traditional in favor of digital. You need them both. There may come a time when that’s not true, but today, you need the marketing that traditional printing does for an author, simply by nature of the beast.

Do you purchase digital books? Do you read their reviews? I do and today I came across a reviewer who complained that a character in the book I was purchasing was packing lots of film and flashbulbs into a bag. The reviewer said, “I can remember them from way back but then I’m not that young … This must be a VERY old story. Just hope she doesn’t pull out a cell phone.”

Do you think old novels should be updated before digitally publishing? If a character ducks into a phone booth, are you yanked out of the story?  Should authors label with a specific year or can your imagination transport you to pre-cell phone/pre-digital camera days? I have to admit I’m a little hesitant about putting my 1996 Silhouette Romance out there when it was a little out-dated in 1996 since it’s about Elvis look-alikes and fanatics. The reader will absolutely have to let her imagination shake, rattle and roll with the story.

Teach me something about updated/outdated books.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: digital publishing, Elvis, outdated books, traditional publishing

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