Since
releasing my first novel The Keeper of the Wind, the one thing I noticed
right away on social media was the frenzied way everyone seemed to be promoting
their books. I thought it was crazy how Indie authors were basically begging
for someone to either buy or take a look at their book for free. Social media
is saturated with this, and I found this very discouraging and wondered how i
could compete in such chaos, and I’m sure many new Indie authors think the same
way in the beginning, too. Being a very creative person, right away I started
thinking of ways to get around the frantic hustle that promoting Indie books
seemed to be based around, and started thinking of other alternatives to
promote my book.
A few days after putting my book out, another Indie author
sent me a note asking me how my book was selling and how I was promoting it. He
then proceeded to tell me how his current book wasn’t selling well at all, and
he was in the process of releasing his 4th novel. I thought this was
crazy. Then right after, I read an article online titled “Keep Your Day Job”.
It broke down how very few Indie authors are making money at their craft. And how
the chances of them being able to make a decent living from their writing are slim
to none. This pissed me off, and I saw it as a challenge for change. With this
notion I came up with the #IndieBooksBeSeen movement.
The first thing I set out
to do was to make July 1st of every year IndieBooksBeSeen Day. A day
where Indie authors show we’re unified and proud to be Indie. We would post a
picture of us holding up our Indie titles and then constantly retweet
everyone else’s book, for the world and all social media to see. One grand
gesture to show the world that we’re here and strong together. It was a better
success than I thought it would be, and I was very moved by others' warm
sentiments and sense of pride. This gave me hope and I felt encouraged to forge
ahead with a new plan while the momentum was still present.
I then decided to attempt giving struggling authors a boost, by challenging all others to seek these authors out and give them reviews to bolster them. I for one know what it’s like to just start out and hardly anyone will give you reviews, unless you pay for them. So i felt this would be an easy challenge, and boy was I wrong! I began to tweet several participants of our indie pride day to start. Thinking they were still feeling the love from our #indiebooksbeseen day a couple weeks before. Only to get one person say that she felt like she was being spammed by me. And i thought wow! But it wasn’t spam when I and tons of others spent hours retweeting your title. To make things worse, the review challenge never took flight. Out of all the people I reached out to, only a few took part. What this said to me was that most Indie authors will only get involved in projects that are self-serving to their own cause, unless they’re part of a group.
What
is so clear to me and a few others is most Indie authors can’t seem to shake
this routine of hustling the books at all cost. This mindset will keep us right
where we are, with some doing great and most of us not! I am doing everything I
can to break this routine with new innovative ideas on how to take us to that
next level where being Indie is trendy. I want Indie books to be the cool
alternative to mainstream books and the only way I can see this happening is if
we become one voice for the industry itself. I’m not saying don’t promote your
book, I’m just asking you to give some of your energy to boosting our industry.
Because when the light shines on our industry, it’ll shine on all of us.
Twitter
Facebook
I then decided to attempt giving struggling authors a boost, by challenging all others to seek these authors out and give them reviews to bolster them. I for one know what it’s like to just start out and hardly anyone will give you reviews, unless you pay for them. So i felt this would be an easy challenge, and boy was I wrong! I began to tweet several participants of our indie pride day to start. Thinking they were still feeling the love from our #indiebooksbeseen day a couple weeks before. Only to get one person say that she felt like she was being spammed by me. And i thought wow! But it wasn’t spam when I and tons of others spent hours retweeting your title. To make things worse, the review challenge never took flight. Out of all the people I reached out to, only a few took part. What this said to me was that most Indie authors will only get involved in projects that are self-serving to their own cause, unless they’re part of a group.
You make some very good points, Mark. We have to get out of the pattern of yelling self-promo and nothing else. For one, our potential readers get tired of hearing that. It's so important to support other quality Indie works so that they have a chance to be seen.
ReplyDeleteExcellent points. I've been a part of your FB group for a while, but haven't been able to do much with it. Life and the day job keep getting in the way. I really like this idea you have and want to be a part of it and help it grow.
ReplyDeleteNicely said Mark! After all, we happen to be in one of the only industries where we don't have to compete with each other for sales. Teamwork really does benefit everybody.
ReplyDeleteYes, I agree. I did a similar thing to help promote other Renaissance performers and merchants and now that page has over 5,500 fans (plus) and now I created a Facebook fan page to help promote other picture book authors. I think it helps if you help promote others. It's really a win win.
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