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Jeff Haws

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Publishing

Three mistakes I made with my first book

June 15, 2017 by Jeff Haws 3 Comments

While my next novel faces my editor’s red pen, I’ve been thinking about how to make this next book release better than my first one. Not that it was a disaster or anything, but I figure I should always try to improve. When you’re a self-published author, it’s all on you. So if you don’t find ways to improve, nobody’s gonna do it for you, and there’s plenty of competition ready to lap you if you’re moving slow.

So, I was looking back at what I did for that first book release, and I picked out three mistakes I want to make sure I don’t replicate. And, hey, if you’re an author, maybe you can learn from my stupid mistakes so that you don’t make the same ones. Because I’m a helper. [Read more…] about Three mistakes I made with my first book

Filed Under: Blog, Personal, Process Tagged With: formatting, learning, lessons, mistakes, promotion, Publishing

5 Lessons from a First-Time Author

August 2, 2016 by Jeff Haws Leave a Comment

Lessons 3

Writing your first novel is, in many ways, a grueling experience. Some of it, I wasn’t entirely prepared for. A lot of it, I definitely didn’t see coming. Through the process, I learned I was well suited and trained for much of it, and not really ready at all for some of it.

I started writing on the morning of Dec. 19, and it took me right at six weeks to write about 85,000 words. From there, it took me six months to edit it and get it to where I felt like it didn’t suck, and could go out into the world. Sometimes, I got frustrated. Other times, I was excited. Almost all the time, I wanted it to be over, and be where I am today, with a brand new novel sitting on Amazon’s virtual shelves and several positive reviews alongside it.

Here are five key lessons I’ve learned from going through this process. If you ever think about writing a book of your own, hopefully you can learn from the stupid things I did, and do fewer stupid things yourself. [Read more…] about 5 Lessons from a First-Time Author

Filed Under: Blog, Marketing, Process, Publishing, Selling Tagged With: author, first, lessons, Publishing

How Much Should a Novel Cost?

July 5, 2016 by Jeff Haws Leave a Comment

wallet-669458_1280

It’s a tough question, and it’s one that shouldn’t be answered with a shrug and a blindfolded dart toss: How much should a novel cost? More specifically when it comes to me (and, maybe, you), how much should my novel cost? There are plenty of factors that go into figuring that out. [Read more…] about How Much Should a Novel Cost?

Filed Under: Blog, books, Marketing, Process, Selling Tagged With: Amazon, cost, novel, price, Publishing, sales

Setting Sales Goals for Your First Novel

May 10, 2016 by Jeff Haws Leave a Comment

Goals

As I get closer to sending my first novel, “Killing the Immortals,” sailing out into the world, I’m starting to think seriously about what I want to accomplish with it, what sorts of goals to set for myself. The Nobel Prize for Literature would be all right, I guess. There may be a step or two to get through before that, though. Admittedly, I don’t know a lot about the committee that decides those sorts of things, but my assumption is that they’ve got a high-ish bar.

So, we all may want to have incremental goals shy of a Nobel Prize that will give us something to shoot for in the meantime, until fame and fortune come to whisk us away. I think goals are important, but I also think they’re challenging to figure out when you’ve never published a novel before. You can look at all the “The average self-published book sells 250 (or whatever) copies” blog posts you want, but how does that relate to what you’re doing? So many factors are going to impact how many people buy your book and how wide a reception it gets, from its genres to its cover to the blurb you write to the following you’ve built up to how much work you put into marketing the book to whether or not your story/writing sucks. What does “average” even really mean when so many books are haphazardly thrown together with visions of hefty royalty checks, mahogany-decked libraries, and new elbow-patched jackets without considering the insane amount of work and luck it takes to become the next millionaire author? [Read more…] about Setting Sales Goals for Your First Novel

Filed Under: Blog, Marketing, Process, Publishing, Selling, Writing Tagged With: Books, first novel, goals, Publishing, Selling

Why Shouldn’t I Hire an Editor for My Novel?

April 19, 2016 by Jeff Haws 1 Comment

Perfect-hire-editor

To figure out why you should hire a professional editor for your novel, perhaps we should first look at why you shouldn’t do so. That because, well, it’s not at all cut and dried. Not everybody needs to put forth the effort, legwork and cold, hard cash to hire an editor for their novel. There are good reasons not to, and you might fit that profile. [Read more…] about Why Shouldn’t I Hire an Editor for My Novel?

Filed Under: Blog, Character development, Criticism, Editing, Process, Publishing, Writing Tagged With: criticism, editing, Editor, Publishing, Writing

Patience Between Rough Draft and Publication

March 15, 2016 by Jeff Haws Leave a Comment

Patience

I’m not a particularly patient person, and writing (then, eventually, publishing) a novel is certainly a good test for whatever patience I have. It’s sometimes amazing just how little of the time you spend writing, and how much is spent doing all sorts of things to polish and prepare that novel — and yourself, because you’re a writer, not a salesman, or something like that — for people buying it. And reading it. And not thinking it sucks. It’s not a quick process.

As I’m right in the middle of that, a blog post from Just Publishing Advice caught my eye the other day, looking at “How To Publish A Terrible Book.” Incidentally, it used to be really hard to publish a terrible book. You had to slip it by a lot of gatekeepers, from agents to editors to publishers before it ever saw the light of day, beyond you just paying to print a few copies for the people in your Bridge club. But today, with Amazon and other self-publishing services just a few mouse clicks away, it’s never been easier to publish your crappy little novel about unicorns and fairy dust (not that there’s anything wrong with unicorns and fairy dust). It takes no time at all to publish a terrible book. Anybody can do it, in less than the time it takes you to boil a pot of water for the pasta you’ll eat because it’s cheap, and nobody’s buying your terrible book.

If you want to write a good book, though — one people will buy, and enjoy, and recommend to their friends, and subsequently stalk you over — it takes a lot of patience, and a willingness to go through a borderline masochistic process of having people rip your work apart, and ripping it apart yourself, in the hopes of finding the diamond that hopefully lays at the heart of it. Here are the steps Just Publishing Advice laid out, all of which, once complete, might tempt you to publish, but that’s a temptation you must resist. I’ll look at where I stand with each. [Read more…] about Patience Between Rough Draft and Publication

Filed Under: Blog, Editing, Process, Publishing Tagged With: editing, novel, process, Publishing, Writing

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