Showing posts with label earning a living from writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label earning a living from writing. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

A Career Without A Living

 

Recently, I read Ron Collins’ informative and inspirational book, On Writing (and Reading) Short: A Science Fiction Writer’s Quest for Stories that Matter.


It was a very good read. I picked the book up as part of a Kickstarter campaign Mr. Collins did some months ago.


He has lots of things to say about writing in general and short stories in particular. I encourage you to pick up a copy.


Somewhere in the book he gives us his view of what it means to have a career writing short stories. It was a beautiful statement. And I found it very inspirational.


I present it below in a modified form. I use it as a contemplative read every morning.


I can have a career writing even if I never make my living from writing.


I can have a career writing by simply applying my time to pursuing it.


The only real requirements are that this pursuit fills my soul, that I create some thing, and that I don’t stop.


There are five moving parts to this statement:


  1. I can have a career without it providing a living
  2. I can have a career simply by pursuing one
  3. The career must fill my soul
  4. I must create something to have a career
  5. I can have a career as long as I don’t stop pursuing it


We’ll only look at the first part today. We may look at the others in future posts.


I can have a career without it providing me a living.


That is a significant statement. A career and a living are not the same thing. At least according to Mr. Collins.


Upon reflection, I find myself agreeing with him.


We perform all manner of tasks to provide ourselves with a living. A living is nothing more than doing something that provides us with money so that we may live. Eat. Dress in suitable clothes. Procure a roof over our heads. And perhaps a few luxuries along the way.


A career, on the other hand, may provide a living. Then again it may “only” provide non-monetary satisfaction.


Being a short story writer, Mr. Collins knows that in today’s world he is not going to make any money—at least any significant money—from writing.


Much the same when I was a career poet. There is no money in poetry, and there is no money in short stories.


And sad to say, for most of us writers there is no money in writing no matter what we write. That is a fact of life. Statistically, the vast majority of writers cannot earn a living from their pens and keyboards.


Which is why I find Mr. Collins’ statement so significant. We write because we love it. We write because the act fills our souls. And because it fills our souls, we will write even if we are our only reader. Hopefully, though, we aren’t alone.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!







CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with three bestselling novels. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.



If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes 


Tuesday, December 28, 2021

What I’m Writing in 2022


 

Each year end I give some thought to what I’d like to focus on writing in the coming year, and what I want to accomplish on the business end of my writing enterprise.


Inevitably, I get sidetracked along the way and don’t go 100% through with my “New Year’s Resolutions”.


And 2022 may end up no different than any other year. In the end, I suppose none of this matters. I’m retired. I’ve pretty much resigned myself to the fact that my writing is a hobby. I don’t need to make money from my pen. Sure, it would be nice. But it’s not a necessity.


Which means it’s all fun. :) And if I’m not having fun, I ain’t gonna be doing it.


Nevertheless, it’s good to plot a course even if along the way you decide to deviate at some point. So, for 2022, I’ve specified a few high priority items I want to accomplish.


Screenplays


For quite some time I’ve wanted to try my hand at screenplays. Probably because I’ve had a long standing interest in drama. After all, my first “publishing credit” was way back in high school when my 11th grade drama class produced for the school a play I’d written. Quite a neat experience that was!


Therefore, the major focus of my writing in 2022 will be screenplays.


I’ll still write shorter fiction for my mailing list folk. So if you’re interested in that, sign up for my mailing list. You’ll get a freebie if you do. You’ll also get news about my screenplay adventure, and all the other things I’m writing.


A New Series


I like the occult detective genre. A blend of mystery and the macabre. The two genres I most like to read.


Sometime in 2022 I intend to introduce an occult detective series. The stories will begin as screenplays, and then I will write the books from the screenplays. The ol’ two birds with one stone idea.


Audio Books


A couple years ago I bought an excellent DIY audiobook course from Derek Doepker. The course is just what I was looking for.


I bought the equipment, and now all I need to do is carve out time and start recording. There is, of course, editing, and all the other stuff that goes with producing a “book”.


The guesstimate for the first few audiobooks is around 6+ hours for every finished hour of the recording. That will come down in time as I get more experience. Or so I’m told. :)


And with 30+ books in my oeuvre, I have plenty of material to record. Which will keep me out of mischief for a very long time.


Move My Blog to YouTube


This one is iffy. I’ve put it on my list for 2022, but it’s at the bottom of my top tier of projects.


I don’t intend anything fancy. No vlog, at least as vlogs are popularly conceived of these days. No high tech YouTube Channel; mostly because I don’t have the know-how. Nor do I know anyone who has the know-how.


I envision the project to start off as a verbal form of my blog. If it takes off, then I can get more high tech. “Take off” really means making money from it.


Mostly, I’m contemplating doing this to save wear and tear on my hands and still produce blog-type content.


We’ll see how it goes.


Wrap-Up


So those are my major plans for the new year. I will, in addition, continue to build up my mailing list as I search for my 1,000 True Fans. I know they’re out there. Wish me luck!



Comments are always welcome. And until next time, I wish you a fabulous new year!

Tuesday, July 6, 2021

The Sunday Writer

 Or, do writers really have to make money from their writing to enjoy their craft?


Or, do writers really have to make money from their writing to be considered successful?


Sometime back in the 1970s, Lawrence Block asked questions very much like the ones posed above.


I don’t know what issue of Writers Digest his column originally appeared in, but you can read his thoughts in Chapter 6 of Telling Lies for Fun & Profit: A Manual for Fiction Writers.


Block notes that writing fiction is the only art that seems to demand payment as an indicator of success.


Certainly writing poetry does not. There is no money in poetry. One writes it because one loves to do so. I wrote poetry for around 20 years and was steadily and frequently published for a dozen, and made around 5 bucks. I had to find some other measure of success than greenbacks.


Block goes on to note that most painters paint simply for the enjoyment of painting and never offer their work for sale. And that probably goes for potters and jewelry makers as well. 


Certainly the vast majority of people who play a musical instrument do so for personal enjoyment and not for money. How many actors and actresses perform without the thought of money? Certainly all those in community theater.


I dare say that most creative people are not paid for what they do. They create simply because they love to do so. They derive great personal pleasure from the act of creation. So why shouldn’t fiction writers do the same?


For some reason, though, they can’t. Every writer of fiction seems to think he or she must reach a point where they can quit their day job or they are a failure.


In reality, however, only a tiny percentage of writers ever make enough money to earn a living from their writing, and not necessarily a good living at that. Philip K Dick made money — just enough to not starve to death.


My writer friends hear this: Damn few of us will ever make enough money to quit the day job. 

And I say, So what? If we love writing, can’t we just write for the sake of the enjoyment? Of course we can.


Especially in this day and age when the gatekeepers are gone. We can publish with abandon our masterpieces, as well as our drivel.


We fiction writers are free to publish our stories and let the public decide if they’re good, bad, ugly, mediocre, or okay.


There are countless outlets for publishing our work, and countless ways to tell folks where to find it.


This is truly a wonderful age in which we live.


So why do we think we have to earn a living from  our pens, pencils, and keyboards? I really don’t know where this idea came from, especially when reality tells us differently.


How many painters earn a living from their brush? Exceedingly few. Most of the “successful” painters don’t earn their money from selling paintings, they earn their daily bread from teaching others how to paint.


How many potters sell enough pots to quit the day job? How many pianists, or guitar players make enough money to kiss goodbye the 9 to 5? My guess is next to none.


I’ve been thinking about this notion of the Sunday Writer, that is, the person who just writes because he or she loves to write, for some time. The Sunday Writer writes, not because he thinks he’s the next Patterson, or she thinks she’s the next Rowling, but simply because he or she has to. The Sunday Writer writes for the love of it. Nothing more. Nothing less.


Today, one can write and post his or her work on a blog, or read it on YouTube, or publish it on Amazon, Apple, Kobo, and Barnes & Noble.


Print On Demand paperbacks allow you to cheaply produce a print book, and you can stand on a street corner or at an intersection and sell your book to people. Or just give it away, if you prefer.


Heck, you can even DIY your own audiobooks with minimal investment, and sell or giveaway the MP3 of your fabulous fiction.


You can get your work into as many people’s hands as you want to put in the time and effort to reach. And if you never get paid a dime, is that any different from the poet who sees hundreds of his poems in print and never gets paid a cent for them?


Is it any different than the writer, looking to make the big bucks, who gives away 5000 copies of his first in series novel, hoping at least 10% go on to buy and read Book 2? No, not really.


My first published novels appeared on Amazon November 2014. To date, I’ve earned a little over $1800. Am I a failure? I don’t think so. People are buying my books. Some like them. Some don’t. But that’s how it is with any work of art. People have loved and hated every artist that’s come along. Why should I be any different?


Sunday Writers. I think it’s okay to be a Sunday Writer. I think it’s okay to write because you love writing and to share what you’ve written with anyone who wants to read it — whether you make any money from it or not.


I’m lucky. I’ve made over $1800. There are people out there who wish they made that much money from their writing.


I’ve taken many classes and workshops — and spent a lot of money doing so — to learn how to sell my books, how to make money at this writing gig.


I’m declaring here and now to hell with all that.


I am going to write and publish my work because I love writing. In the process, I hope to find those for whom my stories bring a bit of pleasure to their lives. In the end, we are entertainers and isn’t that the end goal of every entertainer? To bring pleasure to people’s lives?


If I make money entertaining people with my writing, great. I’m not going to turn it down, or throw it away. But if I don’t make money, I’m not going to view myself as a failure. Why? Because I’m a Sunday Writer. Greenbacks don’t determine if I’m a success or not. I and my readers do that.


Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading! And I’d love it, if you were reading one of my books. :)

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

The Writer’s Magic Marketing Machine


We writers are constantly looking for the magic formula for success. We want to quit our day jobs and live off of the bucks flowing from our pens or keyboards. The success of J K Rowling, Stephen King, Danielle Steel, Tom Clancy, and others, fuels our imagination and dreams.

But what is the key to success? What is that magic formula? Is it social media? Or Facebook ads? Or maybe Amazon ads? Perhaps it’s paid reviews, such as Kirkus. 

Or maybe indie success story Hugh Howey is right: there is no magic formula and success is just dumb luck. Keep writing and hopefully you’ll sell something.

I jumped into the self-publishing pond in 2014. Mostly because I’d read too many horror stories of writers getting screwed by publishers and agents. But also because being 64 I don’t have time to wait around for someone else to decide if I’m good enough or not. Let the public decide.

So in November 2014 I published 4 books and 2 more in December and waited for the money to roll in. It didn’t. It dribbled in and the dribble gradually turned into the occasional drip.

I looked for the magic formula to jumpstart sales. Unfortunately, I quickly discovered magic doesn’t exist.

However, amongst all the noise pretending to be magic, the successful indie authors continued to be of one accord. To have any hope for success, writers need to:

  • write well
  • write lots, preferably in series
  • publish often

What wasn’t said was how to put those things into a coherent plan and they didn’t mention anything about a mailing list. In the early days, I don’t think a mailing list was necessary. Today it is. The independent author/publisher is basically no different than a mail order company. And they succeed or fail on their mailing list. I spent $700 to learn that tidbit. Now I just saved you some money.

Nevertheless, how to do what the successful writers did remained a mystery.

About a month ago, I discovered author Patty Jansen’s key to success. It is the best formula I’ve found in the couple of years I’ve spent looking for the magic marketing machine. Her post — The Three-Year, No-Bestseller Plan To A Sustainable Income From Self-Publishing — is a must read for any writer who wants to make a living from writing.

There is no magic wand, my writer friends. There is only hard work and maybe, possibly, hopefully success. What I found encouraging — supremely encouraging — in Patty’s post was she has never had a bestseller. Yet, she makes 3K-5K/month (2016) and noted that her income has doubled every year. I have lived comfortably on 60K/year.

I don’t want to rehash her post here because it’s best if you read if for yourself and contemplate on it. However, I do want to emphasize a few points. Patty wrote that in order to succeed writers need to

  • write well
  • write lots
  • write in series
  • publish often
  • build a mailing list

It goes without saying writers need to write well, and the only way to learn how to write is by writing. Not rewriting, not editing, but writing. Edgar Rice Burroughs (the guy who created Tarzan) supposedly said if you write one story you have an almost 100% chance of failure and if you write 100 stories you have an almost 100% chance of having at least one success.

An indie writer needs to write lots. We are the 21st century’s version of the pulp fiction writers of the ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s. Those writers had to write lots if they wanted to pay the rent and put food on their table. They didn’t have time for oodles of rewrites and edits. Robert Heinlein noted that one should never edit unless the editor makes you. Writers write.

Indie authors need to write in series. Doing so generates traction and keeps one’s name in front of the reader. As does publishing often.

And we need to build a mailing list. After all, what would we do if Amazon suddenly changed the rules and was no longer indie friendly? Most of us would be in a world of hurt. But not so much if we had a mailing list of devoted fans.

Patty’s post gives more detail and you, my writer friends, need to read it and embrace it.

In fact, her post completely revolutionized my thinking. Suddenly I had a workable game plan to follow. Where I had been wandering in the wilderness, I now had a GPS with destination keyed in. Hopefully, by 2020 I’ll be making some bucks from my writing.

I’m lucky. Being retired I have a lot of time in which to write and work on marketing. Being retired also means I have an income coming in that I don’t have to work to get. Which means I can get by very nicely with 20K or 30K from my writing. It would make a super supplement. I won’t turn down more by any means. After all, my dream car is a Rolls Royce.

Read Patty’s post and follow it. Save yourself some time and a pile of money. It’s a super simple solution to the question ‘What do I need to do to make a living from my writing.’

As always, comments are welcome! And until next time, happy reading!