Recently
I heard about a wonderfully successful and deservedly so writer friend of mine
who got regularly asked both privately and in person for her “secret” to
success, even to the extent where she was offered money to divulge it. While
there are surface issues of basic politeness that such people need to address,
it got me thinking about why beginning writers tend to have such a desperate craving
for a supposed miracle potion that will magic them on the way to literary
success. After all, how many times have you heard of someone running up to a
banking executive, grabbing him by the lapels and demanding to know his “secret”?
No, neither have I.
I
quite clearly remember being 17 and having a book physically torn out of my
hands during a free period in the Sixth Form common room, along with a “stop
wasting your time reading” admonishment. The culprit, a kind of mate at the
time, is now as far as I know an engineer. He probably builds bridges or
whatnot and is probably a lot wealthier than me. I also remember floundering my
way through woodwork class while another kid who sucked at English created the
most beautiful chairs and tables in half the time it took me to make a jewelry
box with a drawer that didn’t shut properly.
People
are all different, and some people are better at certain skills than others. People
good at maths tend to do well in banking jobs, people good at crafts tend to do
more hands-on work, while people good at writing often end up as journalists or
writers.
Someone
who wants to be a banking executive will look at the CEO he wants to emulate,
figure out where he went to university, what he studied, where he first worked,
which positions he held and how he gradually made his way up the corporate
ladder. The wannabe bestselling writer will look at a real bestselling
writer, get all gooey-eyed and start jumping up and down in frustration.
Anyone
who writes stories tends be a lot more emotionally charged than someone who
draws plans for building projects or analyses chemical reactions. I know this
is a gross generalization, but it makes sense that someone who regularly wears
their heart on their sleeve in their fiction will view real life in the same
way, with a romantic, heroic notion than success is based on luck, unexpected
fortune, or pure chance, because of course, these are the kind of plot devices that drive their fiction.
Not
so.
Repeat
the mantra - “writing is art, bookselling is business”. Do it ten times. Every day. Then
realise that if you’re going to be successful you’re going to have to learn to
wear two different hats, the one that writes the stories and the one that ships
them.
There
are seemingly a lot of “overnight” (read ten years of trying) successes in
self-publishing, but that’s only because they’re the ones that stand out. There
are countless thousands of writers under the radar for every one who achieves
great success, but here’s the key - you don’t need to sell thousands of copies
per day to be successful. Just ten copies a day will add up. Trust me.
When
I started out in self-publishing just over two years ago I felt like I was
standing at the bottom of a mountain. EVERYONE seemed to be doing better than
me, and I felt like I was forever playing catch up.
What
you have to learn is that the writing mountain is climbed in the same way as
every other mountain, one step at a time. While there might be the odd
helicopter that will pick you up and fly you to the top they are few and far
between, so get your best hiking boots on and start walking. It’s the only sure
why to get to the top.
Remember,
this is not a race. Self-publishing isn’t going anywhere, and while every day
there are new writers starting out there are also those who are giving up, and
there will always been room in the market for good writing. You have to
separate your heart (the writing) from your head (the business side), give each
equal weight and don’t let one encroach on the other. Write the best books
you can with your heart, then shift them over to your head to prepare them and
shop them for sale. Rinse and repeat. Work on building up YOUR brand and YOUR backlist, and don’t
go chasing after other people’s success, because that’s just what it is -
someone else’s path to the top. Work on following your own.
That
is all.
By the way, if you're wondering if my books are as good as my blogs, sign up for my mailing list to get offers, discounts, and notification of new releases. Here's the link.
Chris
Ward
April
1st 2014
Thank for the good topic,Thanks for your sharing.
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