reddragdiva: (stress relief)
divabot ([personal profile] reddragdiva) wrote2020-10-03 12:41 pm

Libra Shrugged: How Facebook’s dream of controlling the world’s money crashed and burned. 2 NOV 2020

jesus fuck, self publishing.

so IT’S A HAPPENER YAY W00T

publishing date is 2 NOV 2020.

book page: https://davidgerard.co.uk/blockchain/libra/

so i need to get text to amazon 3 days before, and smashwords wants ten days before. (i might push smashwords date back.)

at this point 95% of my problems are marketing and promotion.

the other 5% are re-remembering mercifully repressed details of the self-publishing process, given the inarguable certainty of universal laws that computers are dogshit. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

in more comforting news, here's past asset bubble veteran Inch to offer calming advice on writing:

[personal profile] theandrewhickey 2020-10-03 04:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Recommendation for future books -- use Draft2Digital rather than Smashwords. It's much better at international payments and tax stuff, has an interface that seems designed some time later than 1993, doesn't just repeatedly throw a million errors every time you upload an ebook until you sacrifice a goat, has dynamically-updating author information (so every time you publish a new book, the "also by this author" pages in the old books and the author bio auto-update), and creates nifty author pages like https://books2read.com/ap/vxbkLR/andrew-hickey and book pages like https://books2read.com/b/mVrzYM , which will take people to their retailer of choice.

[personal profile] theandrewhickey 2020-10-03 04:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Ignore that. I now see you've used D2D *and* Smashwords. I personally can't be bothered selling through Smashwords any more, because 99% of its usefulness is as a distributor, but clearly you have more patience than me ;)

[personal profile] theandrewhickey 2020-10-03 05:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, my sales go Kindle >>>>> Apple >>> Kobo >>>>>>>>> everything else.
One other bit of advice -- I'd put it out as a hardback as well, through Lulu. Not because you'll get many sales that way (though you might get a few -- I usually get the odd sale that way) but because when people look at Amazon and see the ebook for £5 and the paperback for £10 (or whatever), both of those suddenly look cheaper if there's a £20 hardback there as well. You can use the same PDF file and cover art you used for the paperback, so there's no real additional effort
Plus if, once Covid is over if ever, you decide you want to do speaking gigs or signings or something, a small stack of hardbacks along with the paperbacks can look impressive.