Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

If you could change five things (or less) in CBA publishing, what would they (it) be? (Unabridged and Unedited.)

 

From an Agent (Anonymous):

 

That all CBA retailers report to the NY Times list. Parable, Mardel, and I believe Family have just begun doing so, which is huge. Hope the other chains and individuals will follow.


That publishers will rethink the royalty rates that they're offering for e-book rights to make them more fair. The "standard" right now is 25% and, frankly, that's ridiculously low.  

 

Stop discounting front list books – it's killing the publishers (and authors).  You discount something after it’s been out there a while. But to launch a book with deep discounts is having huge repercussions for us all. It's a short term strategy that's having long term effects, and not good ones!

 

 

Combined answers from Authors (Anonymous):

 

Assembly line approach to marketing, wherein most novels receive essentially the same promotional treatment, rather than thinking hard about where to find readers who will be interested in that particular novel, and then devising a creative approach to communicate the essence of that novel to them in an interesting way.

 

Editors who take months to turn around drafts, then ask authors for changes in weeks.

 

This is not specific to CBA, but I’d love to see the elimination of returns. It hurts authors.

 

Publishing novels without a passionate in-house champion. If the     acquisitions editor (who after all presumably convinced a publication board to pay an advance on the story) is not excited enough about a novel to energetically promote it within the publishing house, then the release should be postponed and more work done until such time as that novel makes the editor so excited he or she can’t help telling everyone in the publishing house “You have GOT to read this novel!”

 

I’d love to see publishers spend less money advertising “sure thing” authors and take a fraction of that to really promote up and coming authors.

 

Copycat marketing. After The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood hit it big, suddenly we had The Yada Yada Prayer Group. And when Blue Like Jazz was a bestseller, along came Blue Like Play Dough. Usually authors don’t pick titles. This is almost always the publisher’s marketing team’s decision, and it’s shameless for a Christian businessperson to try to piggy-back on someone else’s success this way.

 

A concerted effort on behalf of book club fiction authors to get those books in the hands of book clubs.

 

Christian authors who write three or more novels in one year. It’s not possible to produce that many deeply thoughtful and extremely well written words in one year, yet every Christian novel should be deeply thoughtful and extremely well written, since the Bible says, “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men.”

 

That only 5% of the books get 90% of marketing, sales promotion, and shelf placement so that many titles with outstanding reviews sell under 10,000 just because no one sees them.

 

Placing fiction in a 70-90,000 word count box with an occasional stretch to 120,000 when the ABA routinely allows books to range from 50,000 to the million-word Tom Clancy, if that is what it takes to write a great book. There is currently no place in CBA for the complex full-length blockbuster novel.

 

From Author (Anonymous):

 

My big piece of advice would be for publishers to listen to Seth Godin, especially his comments on tribes.

 

To be continued . . .

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4 responses to “Change from the Inside Out, Day Six”

  1. Brenda Avatar
    Brenda

    I respectfully disagree with the copycat marketing comment. The copycat strategy is used across all businesses all the time. Think of generic brands for just one example (Airborne and Walborne). Indeed writers themselves copycat. Have we never seen an author jump on an end-times or Amish fiction bandwagon? That’s what humans do. Nor do I see a sound biblical reason to consider it beneath us to do so. For as many people as will be turned off by another “blue” or “Ya Ya” title, as many others will be enticed to pick up the book because of it until that particular fad passes out of existence.
    Interesting comment on word count. An aspect I don’t fully understand in terms of why it’s such a big deal in the grand scheme of things. Perhaps that does lend itself to another reason why I haven’t seen much in the way of a true epic, although I am sure it has much to do with risk-taking as well.
    Thank you for all these posts and comments. Very insightful.

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  2. Nicole Avatar

    Brenda, I’m a lover of long novels, and I write them. I miss them in CBA. That’s one reason I was ecstatic to see The Bishop by Steven James (Revell) at 520 pages. Another well-known bestselling writer I know was told to get his novels down closer to 100,000 words. Unbelievable. The fear is the novels will cost more thereby deterring consumers from purchasing them. I doubt that fans of an author will be deterred by lengths of stories. Lovers of longer novels are another group of consumers who are being ignored.
    My interpretation of the copycat marketing opinion is that origniality is more desirable. To stand out with unique and appealing titles, covers, stories, will in the long run appeal to more people than to have a copycat title that doesn’t deliver or piggybacks on someone else’s success.
    Thanks for your opinions, Brenda.

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  3. Normandie Avatar
    Normandie

    On the subject of long. I love long. I write longish stories. I was thinking recently about what I’d have to do to shorten one…I think I’d need to remove an entire storyline. Which, of course, I could do and write another entire book around it. But why? If that secondary character’s life intersects in a way that broadens the whole piece, that deepens it? Why would I want to?

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  4. Nicole Avatar

    You know I agree, N. Completely. The short novels cut out so much depth in character development. Not that those writers of good shorter novels don’t capture the subtleties of their characters, but they’re limited in just how deep they can go with them unless there are only a couple to write about. Which ends up producing more formulaic novels than meaningful ones–in my opinion.

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