Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

July BAIPA Meeting: Using CreateSpace to Self-Publish & Start Your Own Home-Based Business

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

Today’s BAIPA speaker was Christy Pinheiro, a successful self-publisher. In 3 short years, her company is consistently grossing $10,000 – $18,000/month in royalties. (Yes, that’s ten THOUSAND to eighteen THOUSAND per MONTH in royalties — and she even had the royalty sheet from CreateSpace to prove it.) Her publications include The PassKey EA Exam Review book series, as well as a number of other books on various accounting and bookkeeping subjects.

In addition to her accounting book, she is also the author of Step-by-Step Guide to Self Publishing for Profit: Start Your Own Home-Based Publishing Company and Publish Your Non-Fiction Book with CreateSpace and Amazon.

The majority of her marketing efforts are done through Google AdWords.

Christy is the best speaker I’ve had the pleasure of listening to at BAIPA. She is very up-beat, well-spoken, with a blunt sense of humor. I lost count of the number of times she had the audience laughing.

According to Christy, publishing is “10% creativity and 90% outright stubbornness and the willingness to accept criticism.” I think they should make t-shirts with this slogan!

For as little as $25 (the cost of a proof copy) you can have your book on - for as little as $25 (the cost of a proof copy) you can have your book on CreateSpace. They even have free software to help you create your book cover. CreateSpace is owned by Amazon; any book sold on CreateSpace is automatically available through Amazon.

However, Christy pointed out that just because you can have your book published for as little as $25, that doesn’t mean you should. She emphasized the importance of hiring good copy editors and designers. The idea is to make your book look as good as anything being published by the mainstream, New York publishers. Christy also emphasized that dangers of publishing a book without getting the proper edits and design work done: bad reviews on Amazon. And those reviews stay up on Amazon.

Christy runs a free website for publishers called Step-by-Step Self Publishing. She offers lots of free information, such as how to create your own sell sheet and lists of no-cost book reviews.

She also discussed the difference between Vanity Publishing and Self Publishing. This was very interesting to me, as I’ve seen both terms thrown around quite a bit and did not have a firm grasp of the difference. So here’s what I learned:

Vanity Publishing is when you pay someone to publish you. For example, publishing your book through Book Surge or iUniverse. The target profit center for these companies is the authors themselves; their emphasis is to sell books to authors, not to the public. Vanity publishers also own the ISBNs.

Self-Publishing is getting your books published on your own. You own the ISBN. The emphasis is to sell books to others, not to yourself.

All-in-all, Christy Pinherio gave a wonderful presentation and shared lots of information with all the BAIPA members today. I hope I have the pleasure of seeing her speak again sometime in the future.

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Speculative Fiction in Education, (Final) Post #8: Any last comments you’d like to make about the importance of speculative fiction in education?

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Any last comments you’d like to make about the importance of speculative fiction in education?

From Dan Willis: There’s a place for all fiction in the educational process.  Adventure stories make it easier for kids to access reading, but hey, if you’ve got a kid who loves machinery, give him Clancy’s “Hunt for Red October.”  I remember the kinds of things the made us read when I was in school.  It was either insufferably boring (The Grapes of Wrath) or insultingly propagandizing (any of the early-feminist tripe of Willa Cather).  If the goal is to get kids reading, you might as well use every advantage you have.

From Eric G. Swedin: As a K-12 student I was always excited when I got the read speculative fiction for class, but it was a rare opportunity.  I hope that is different today and that speculative fiction will take its rightful place in our changing, technologically-driven society.

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Speculative Fiction in Education, Post #7: 6. Any anecdotes you can share that support the use of speculative fiction in the classroom?

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Any anecdotes you can share that support the use of speculative fiction in the classroom?

From Dan Willis: I tried everything I could think of to get my daughter interested in reading.  It wasn’t until she discovered the Rick Riordan books, however, that she really learned to love it.  It was the same teacher my son has now who pointed her at those. 

From Eric G. Swedin: Science fiction (and other branches of speculative fiction) profoundly affected the person that I became.  And in my opinion, those effects were all for the good.

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BAIPA (Bay Area Independent Publishers Assoc.) Meeting, 1/9/10 – An innovative approach to EBooks

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

At this month’s meeting of the Bay Area Independent Publishers Assoc, we were given a special treat: a power point presentation by E.M. Ginger of 42-Line. 42-Line is a publishing company specializing in converting rare manuscripts into digital books.

What I loved most about this presentation was the innovative use of digital media and eBooks. There are lots of eBooks out there, but let’s face it: nothing beats the smell and feel of a real book. But 42-Line realizes there are in fact a lot of rare books out there that can’tbe held and touched and smelled by the common public–books like the Guttenberg Bible, of which there are only 3 in the world. 42-Line makes rare and special books available to common public though digital media. A rare book that carries a price tag of $143,000 can be purchased as a digital book for anywhere from $20 – $80 from 42-Line.

42-Line gained access to the Library of Congress, where they used specialized equipment to photograph every page of rare books such as the Guttenberg Bible. They use the highest resolution available, so that buyers of their ebooks can zoom in on rare illustrations found inside the books. They also take high-res photos of the book covers, so the details can be enjoyed by bibliophiles. 

The photographs of the books and all the interior pages are only one facet of 42-Line’s digital books. Each eBook is designed so reader can print the entire content. They also include translations. They even embed a search engine into the eBook, so readers can search for special passages. This isn’t as easy as it sounds. The eBook software can’t scan the pictures of the text. Instead, every word of the books has to be manually embedded into the software for the search engine.

To produce these digital formats of rare books, 42-Line employed designers, photographers, typographers, writers, translators, etc. — everything you would need to produce a print book, and in some cases, more.

And where does the name of the company, “42-Line,” come from? Apparently, the Guttenburg Bible is famous for having 42 lines of text on each page. From what I understood from Ginger’s presentation, this was the first time 42 lines of text was made standard.

I’ve seen a lot of great presentations at the monthly BAIPA meetings, but this one was by far the most exciting. I love to see how other publishers are distinguishing themselves through creative innovation.

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