Book Marketing Bestsellers: Promoting and selling your books to a worldwide audience. The Book Promotion Blog!

StumbleUpon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Join My Community at MyBloglog!
Subscribe via Email to this blog!
To receive this blog via email as it is posted and get a free report on 50 Creative Ways to Market Your Books, enter your Email address below:


Powered by FeedBlitz

1001Ways

My Websites


Book Publishing Key Statement

BookMarket.com

John Kremer's File Cabinet

Promoting Your Books

Self-Publishing Hall of Fame

John Kremer Sent Me

Hot Times, Cool Places

Quotable Books

Way Back Words



My Blogs


Teleseminars & Free Reports

Hot Times, Cool Places


What does every good marketer really do? He creates relationships. She make friends. When you begin to think of marketing in this way, everything about marketing becomes more fun. Suddenly there is no foreignness, no fear, no feelings of inadequacy. We can all make friends. It's a talent we've had since we were little children. Use it.

Master Syndicator Gateway

Always do your best. And always, always have fun.

HubPages

Friday, May 02, 2008

Harlan Ellison: Writers Should Be Paid!


In the video above, Harlan Ellison, one of the great writers of the past 50 years and a multiple award winner in the field of science fiction, argues that writers should get paid for their work. He makes some great points. Pay attention.

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Copywriting Manuscripts
A week ago, I spoke at the Learning Annex in Los Angeles to a group of about 30 authors. During my talk, I told the authors that they did not have to copyright their book before sending the manuscript out to publishers.

First, putting a copyright notice on your manuscripts marks you as an amateur.

Second, some editors will not look at a manuscript that has a copyright notice because if the publisher ends up publishing a similar book, the author will accuse the publisher of stealing (when, in truth, there's a good chance that the publisher might already have a similar book in the works).

Third, publishers hate dealing with paranoid authors. I've seen manuscripts sent to publishers where there was a big copyright notice on every page. Yuk.

Fourth, publishers can buy authors for less money than it would cost them to steal the author's book idea. Why? Because most authors are desperate to be published and sign bad contracts. And because the publisher would have to hire a professional writer to rework the book if they were going to steal the book idea. That would always be more expensive than buying the rights from a debut author.

Fifth, every manuscript is already protected by copyright without a copyright notice or official copyright submission.

Note: When an author signs a contract with a publisher, they should make sure the book is copyrighted in their (the author's) name. A very few publishers do try to sneak in a copyright under their name.




Well, one of the participants questioned my advice about copyrights.

She wrote me the following:

One of my contacts through The Hampton's Writer's Table asked his editor friends at the following book publishers about whether it was considered amateur to copyright a book. Their responses follow. John, with all due respect for you and your success, I must comment that advising novice writers to avoid copyrighting their material is..., well, the overwhelming response from the table was that you really shouldn't tell people such things, even if it is common practice among some publishers.

Meredith Books — I can't imagine that would be a turn off, but I don't know for sure. Sorry.

Simon & Schuster — I wouldn't think so… I doubt that anyone would pay much attention to it.

Dutton — No taboo. It's fine for authors to copyright their work.




Well, I still disagree. My experience with many, many editors and publishers is that they don't like working with amateur authors and putting a big copyright notice on a manuscript submission is a clear sign of an amateur. Professionals know they are protected.

It doesn't mean that you can't copyright the manuscript if you are really paranoid. If you must, you must, but don't make a big production of it. One small copyright notice on the title page is all you need. No extra verbiage. No paranoid wording. Simply the standard copyright notice: Copyright 2007 by John Kremer. You can use the copyright symbol, but I don't know how to get blogger to enter that into a blog entry.

But, again, here is my basic point: Publishers will not steal from an author. It simply doesn't make sense. Authors are far too paranoid. That paranoia if too explicit will turn off publishers.

Having said all that, if you'd like to see a list of more than 400 editors at major publishers who have bought a first novel from a new writer within the past two years, go here: http://www.bookmarket.com/newnovels.htm.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Technorati Search

Book Marketing Web Site
Google

John Kremer

I am the author of many books including 1001 Ways to Market Your Books, The Do-It-Yourself Book Publicity Kit, and many other titles. I also developed the New York Times Bestseller Program to help authors become bestselling book authors. I often speak on book marketing, book publishing, writing, branding, and book and website rights.


RSS Feeds

Powered by Blogger

Subscribe to the RSS Feed by clicking on one of the following graphics:

Open Horizons

Open Horizons

Open Horizons

Open Horizons

AudioAcrobat!
Previous Posts

10 Million Eyeballs: Up Your Alexa Rank Now!

10 Reasons: Pro and Con for a Book

Harlan Ellison: Writers Should Be Paid!

Why Someone Should Buy Your Book: Pros and Cons

From 10 People to 3 Million in Six Months

A $20 Million Blog

MTV's Half-Billion Dollar Online Presence

Online Promotion Can Make a Difference

Blogger Gets $350,000 Book Deal

40 Million Views for One Poem-Related Video


Archives

January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008

Blog Roll

Backstory by M.J. Rose

Bob Bly's Writing Blog

Booklust by Patricia Storm

Bookslut by Jessica Crispin and Michael Schaub

Buzz, Balls & Hype by M.J. Rose

The Cusp of Something by Jai Claire

The Elegant Variation by Mark Sarvas

Galley Cat by Nathalie Chicha

The LitBlog Co-op

Old Hag by Lizzie Skurnick

Principled Profit by Shel Horowitz

Published and Profitable by Roger Parker

Readerville, edited by Karen Templer

Small Press Blog by Tom Nixon

The Writing Life by Terry Whalin

Claire Zulkey's Literary

Open Horizons, P.O. Box 2887, Taos NM 87571
Phone: 575-751-3398
Email: John Kremer
Copyright © 2008 by John Kremer. All Rights Reserved