Jane
Friedman will be the keynote speaker at Publish Now: Find Your Path to Publication,
on June 13, a day-long seminar that will explore different ways to get your
work into the hands of readers. The event will take place at The Writer’s
Center. For a complete schedule and early bird registration, visit
www.writer.org/publishnow.
By
Jane Friedman
As
much as my own career has revolved around the reading, writing and publishing
of books, the book can, in fact, have limitations.
Stating
this is close to sacrilege in some circles, and not just for those who work in
publishing. For hundreds of years now, the book has been the primary vehicle to
share knowledge and authority. To some extent, it still is.
But
there’s another history of the book that isn’t often acknowledged, and that’s
its history as a business. The book was one of the very first products that was
mass marketed and sold. And today, with hundreds of thousands of books
published every year, books are dramatically overproduced in the hopes of
producing profit or launching a career. Very few reach the level of shaping
culture or influencing ideas.
In
the name of sharing ideas, telling stories, or wielding influence, authoring a
book is only one tool or method available to us today, and not always the best.
We now have the best speakers and thinkers lecturing through video and online
courses, reporting through multimedia websites and blogs, and offering professionally
produced podcasts—just to mention a few mediums that weren’t available to most
of us even twenty years ago.
It
is possible to thrill at a beautifully written passage that fundamentally
shifts how we see ourselves and the world, and at the same time acknowledge
that the physical form of the book, as well as the ebook, doesn’t always fit
into the multi-faceted digital network we’re immersed in on a daily basis.
This
is why I try to help writers think beyond the book. Consider the story or
message you wish to share, rather than focusing on the container. There has
been so much aspirational focus on writing and publishing a book without
consideration of the many other ways we can write, publish, and share ideas in
the digital age.
I’m
not saying that the book is dead. However, the way the book has traditionally
been sold and distributed will die. By the end of 2012, nearly half of U.S.
book sales—that includes both print and digital books—were happening through
online retailers. As most people know, online retail is dominated by Amazon.
While
many people talk about whether the percentage of ebook sales is growing or not,
it’s in fact more important to keep tabs on where the majority of sales are
happening, regardless of format. This directly affects how books are
discovered, and puts more power into the hands of tech giants. These companies
have far more data and insight into book consumption and readers than the
publishers themselves.
It’s
also important to separate the future of the print book, or even the book
itself, from the future of writing, reading, and literacy. Many people value
long-form reading and the experience of deep immersion in a book. But the
number of heavy readers who avidly consume books has always been a minority of
the total population. Most studies show that we read as much as we ever did—but
what, where, and how we’re reading is changing.
For
a long time to come—for at least as long as the printing press revolutionized
all aspects of society—we’ll experience a revolution in how we find, use, and
share stories and information. On the most practical level, authors who
understand when and how a book is needed or valuable for their audience will
have a leg up on the competition.
This
is particularly important to understand because, by some accounts, we now live
in a time of universal authorship, where anyone and everyone writes for public
consumption. While that might not mean writing a book for publication, it
includes things such as commenting, blogging, posting updates on social media,
and being active in online communities. Everyone now has the same tools to
distribute their work, and it requires virtually no technical expertise or
investment to do so. You simply click the publish button, and your words are
available to the world.
Every decision you make as a writer has to be made
with this bigger picture in mind—of how a particular book, article, blog post,
or social media effort attracts a certain type of reader, and how you expect to
funnel that reader to the next experience if they enjoy your work.
Try
to focus on the why of what you’re doing. What is it you stand for
that’s bigger than the specific book or story you want to publish? I know that
writers hate thinking of themselves as brands, but if they can at least see
themselves as a unique voice, with a unique position or perspective on the
world, that can help create a plan or strategy that encompasses many possible
models for creating stories and sharing information.
Jane Friedman has more than 15 years of
experience in the book and magazine publishing industry, with expertise in
digital media and the future of authorship. She speaks around the world at
events such as BookExpo America, Frankfurt Book Fair, and Digital Book World,
and has keynoted writing conferences such as The Muse & The Marketplace.
She currently teaches publishing at the University of Virginia. For more, visit
janefriedman.com.
6 comments:
Excellent article. I particularly agree with this: but if they can at least see themselves as a unique voice, with a unique position or perspective on the world, that can help create a plan or strategy that encompasses many possible models for creating stories and sharing information.
Makes a lot of sense. There's a message in everything we write, on any level. Then why not champion it?
As always, thank you for this. You are right. The book is only part of the story.
An excellent post and one to which I would like to add a recent (desperate to start with)strategy. Rather than go on offering disconnected posts of limited value ( except to keep a blog fire burning) desperation put my book on trial. New writing, and new perception enables me to 'see' the book from new perpectives, and accuse and defend it ( and expose its entrails in such a way as to make it more accessible). I think I have thereby written a play! Anyone interested can find it on http://involution-odyssey.com/blogscribe/
No one wants to be preached at, but any good story, well told, will have take away lessons. My dilemma? Branding myself when my "platform" includes denigrating our current culture's values of material success over personal fulfillment and responsibility, and encouraging the use of individual giftedness to that end. Batting people over the head with the message gets old, while weaving it into a 300 page novel enriches both reader and the story - but only if it is marketed and becomes a commercial success. It's a catch 22. http://www.camorganwrites.com
I completely agree with this post and its message. However I would like to see it approached from the angle of making a living from your work. As far as I can tell right now, books are the best way to get paid for the message you want to convey - unless you can get paid for speaking engagements, which for most people are few and far between. Surely that has to be why people are so focused on spreading the message through books, as a book is a product that can actually be packaged and sold.
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