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Ryan Zee BookSweeps Promo: Reporting Results

Last month SkipJack authors Marcy McKay and Pamela Fagan Hutchins participated in a Ryan Zee BookSweeps promotion, to build subscriber lists. The promo cost them $60 each. The goal of the promotion was to obtain quality emails of interested readers opting in to their newsletters.

The result?

An average of 1800 signups between the two of them!!!

Opens, 70.9%.

Clicks, 48.3%.

Unsubscribes were 3.5%.

An additional 1.1% were cleaned as duplicates of existing subscribers.

We found these results to be phenomenally good. Building lists is critical and hard work. How many times do you get 1800 subscribers for $60? Us, not often. Our best contacts come from personal connections the authors make at events.

So Marcy and Pamela signed up again.  You can win their novels Going for Kona in the women’s fiction contest and Pennies from Burger Heaven and Heaven to Betsy in the female sleuth contest, plus books from authors like Liz AdairAngie Fox and Dianne Harman, .

Enter the women’s fiction giveaway by clicking here: bit.ly/rom-women-fic

Enter the giveaway by clicking here: bit.ly/women-sleuth-myst

Heck, why not enter both? And sign up to do one yourself at http://ryanzee.com.

Eric

Maximizing Author Revenue Stream With International Ebook Subscriber Sites

Unless you’re living under a rock, you are, as an author, familiar with Amazon’s Kindle Unlimited. It’s a monthly subscription service of ebooks. The arrotontent of KU is comprised of the books for which an author opts in and gives Kindle/Amazon exclusive rights to sales of that ebook. Subscribers can choose to read as many of the books within KU as they want. This appeals to volume readers. Think of it as a Netflix-of-ebooks. Authors are paid by Kindle Edition Normalized Page reads, as a percentage of overall KENP across all titles in KU in any given month, applied to a designated author payment fund for that month. You can read more about KU on an earlier SkipJack post, HERE.

Some authors don’t want to give Kindle/Amazon an exclusive on their ebooks. Some authors oppose monopoly in general. Some authors recognize that KU doesn’t yet have a big international footprint and don’t want to lose the chance for sales in countries where they individually do well. If you fall into any of those categories, Palatium Books may be for you.

Palatium curates and aggregates content for ebook subscription services worldwide in 24 countries reaching 6 million readers and growing. If you use Draft2Digital or Smashwords, you’ve encountered something similar, but a) on a far smaller scale and b) without much impact for most authors. We first learned of Palatium from—you guessed it—Jane Friedman in the Hot Sheet she puts out with Porter Anderson. It turns out that Palatium curates up front, taking only books they believe they can place successfully with their client companies. They took SkipJack’s Pamela Fagan Hutchins’ eight novels, and, within a month, had her front page on sites around the world, sites she’d never appeared on after long stints with Smashwords and Draft2Digital (because they offer false hope by letting all comers upload, saying they aggregate to the sites, but leaving out the part where they curate and you, the author, aren’t on that list).

Palatium is a young venture, but the staff is eager and delivering results in the short run, with a responsive and creative marketing approach. Palatium’s submission instructions and contact information are on their website.

Check out their website, but also, take a look at all the sites below, to get a feel for what the quality is like. These are some of their clients who now carry Pamela’s novels.

Readfy:  https://www.readfy.com/en/ebooks/100713-saving-grace-what-doesnt-kill-you-1-a-katie-romantic-mystery/

Fabula:  https://fabula.im/en/588f1dd3d65fc318002487b1-Leaving-Annalise-Pamela-Fagan-Hutchins

24Symbols: https://www.24symbols.com/book/english/pamela-fagan-hutchins/saving-grace-what-doesnt-kill-you-1-a-katie-romantic-mystery?id=1935179

Youboox: http://lire.youboox.fr/books/134097

Bookmate: https://bookmate.com/books/TSggk6SX

The list grows every day.

And it gets better. They’ve given us a code to use for readers to get a month free on Bookmate if they’ll use it to download Saving Grace free (then all books read for a month are free). Please share this with anyone and everyone you know. The code is PFHUTCHINS. Create a login. Start with this link: https://bookmate.com/books/TSggk6SX, chose to “Read”, then click your user icon and enter the promo code in the blank provided. Sweet, huh???? Even if you’re not a reader yourself, this gives you a month to check Bookmate and the world of international ebook subscription services out.

We’ll keep you updated as our experiment in this area continues. So far, so good!

Eric

Maximizing Author Revenue With Online Offerings

In the last year, SkipJack has broadened its scope to offer live webinars and online training. It took us about six months to put our first twenty classes together, fitting this new initiative into our normal operations. During that time of “soft launch”—other than investment of sweat equity/time—we’ve managed to break even on the project, leading up to our March 1st hard launch of the full school. We think it’s worthwhile for you to consider as you brainstorm ways to maximize your own author revenue stream, since it takes your content/expertise, which already exists, and offers it in a 24/7 availability format. Maybe our story will help you decide if it’s right for you.

In 2013, SkipJack’s Pamela Fagan Hutchins quickly learned that she couldn’t keep up with the demand on her for advice without it consuming her writing time. She penned What Kind of Loser Indie Publishes, and How Can I Be One, Too? so she would have something to refer people to that would answer most of their questions. She continued to speak to writers all over the US, and the demand grew. Some people had more in-depth questions during or after her workshops. Others wanted to be able to go back over her teachings and repeat the sections most pertinent to them. Many read Loser, but the questions kept coming. Honestly, charging a consulting fee works for some people, and our SkipJack publishing experts will work with authors on an hourly or per-job arrangement, but they wanted Pamela and she couldn’t afford her time, and they couldn’t afford her time. Don’t get us wrong, she gives away one-third of her time every day helping authors gratis (and working on other charities she is passionate about, like helping rescue victims of commercial sexual exploitation of children, with Hope Rising). That leaves one-third of her time to the business of her publishing, and one-third for writing/revising/rewriting.

In 2015, we had contacts who experienced significant financial success through online training offerings on topics other than writing/publishing/marketing using Udemy. In 2016, Jane Friedman spent some time in support of Teachable. There are others, but these are the two we tested out. Ultimately, they were quite similar, but Teachable just felt right to us, and we signed up and got busy. Why?

  • Because it is relatively easy to use. If you have some tech savvy, like running your own blog, this won’t be outside your stretch-skill set.

  • The pricing makes sense.

  • The interface is attractive.
  • We trust Jane. 🙂

The result? As mentioned above, we have twenty courses less than a year later, and breakeven before a real launch. Here’s a snapshot of just six of them:

In fact, thanks to some of the cool Teachable features, we can bundle our classes into discounted groupings by topic, we can offer “drip” content that sends monthly content to new subscribers (something we have yet to implement, but plan to), and integrate coupons for discounts for each class. Really, we love Teachable.

You should check it out, with the special type of information you can teach in mind. Whether it’s tips for recruiters, ways to improve your parenting, how to set up and run a blog, if you know it, chances are someone else wants that information. While you’re there, we humbly request you check out our classes, especially our bundles, which give you deep dives into almost everything we know, accessible 24/7, with unlimited playback, at great prices.

And remember, sharing is caring. If you’d like to earn 10% affiliate fees by linking to our classes on your blog/website/social media/newsletter, email [email protected] and we’ll set you up. Note: you must join our SkipJack School first for this to be possible, which is free, and you can do it here: http://skipjackpublishing.teachable.com.

Finally, here’s a snapshot of our most popular bundle/best price per class, Be a Writing, Publishing, Marketing Rock Star, which includes ALL our classes, just to give you a quick idea of what we offer, with more coming every month:

See you on Teachable, whether you’re creating your own content or accessing ours.

Eric

Maximizing Revenue With Ancillary Sales

One way an author or publishing company can further monetize their efforts is no-inventory, create-on-demand, web-based product sales. (To read more about how to further monetize your writing efforts, check out our SkipJack Online School’s Maximizing Author Revenue for only $10) SkipJack embarked on this journey with Galloree.  There are many other companies you can check out for this type of venture as well, like CafePress.com . Our offerings include everything in the photo above and more coming soon.

Dog tees:

 

Women’s tees:

Tote bags:

Men’s tees:

Coffee mugs. And more coming soon. We’d love it if you checked out (and sported) our offerings, and we wish you the best in your own quest to maximize your author revenue stream.

 

Ryan Zee Giveaways: A Great Way to Build Subscriber Lists

Since most writers are readers, let’s start by giving you a chance to ENTER a Ryan Zee giveaway and possibly win mysteries with humor from 50+ author, including Deborah Coonts, Jana DeLeon, and SkipJack’s own Marcy McKay and Pamela Fagan Hutchins. One lucky grand prize winner will win a Kindle Fire as well!

Enter the giveaway by clicking here:  https://www.booksweeps.com/enter-win-50-mysteries-humor/. Entries are accepted through February 6, 2017.

Good luck, and enjoy! 
Now, on to how you can build your newsletter subscriber list by participating in a Ryan Zee giveaway.
First, you can learn all about Ryan Zee and his newsletter list building promos, HERE. He also does BookBub follow promotions. Same link.
The price varies. Our authors paid $60 each to participate in Mysteries with Humor. The sign ups vary: readers can choose whose newsletters to sign up for, so they may not choose yours. The more they choose, the more entries they get for the grand prize (in the case of most giveaways, this is a Kindle Fire). Friend-of-SkipJack, author Pat McLinn, has had signups from 600-1200 for the giveaways she’s participated in, with very good conversion and low unsubscription. You provide the book, Ryan Zee’s group provides the materials and grand prize, all the authors promote, the readers have fun, and you get targeted newsletter subscription.
Pretty cool, huh?
So, sign up for Ryan Zee promos for great newsletter list building, and, in the meantime, sign up to win one or all of 50+ mysteries with humor.

Maximizing Your Author Revenue Stream

What is it about the “new”?  I love “Back-to-School”  in August when I get brand new office supplies.  (I know, weird, right?)  I love spring time when I try every year to plant seeds and see if I can grow anything with my black thumb.  And I love the NEW year when we literally and figuratively put the past behind us and gaze into the future – the new future.  Something about the new year makes things seem possible that didn’t seem as possible before.  So what is it about the “new”?  I think it’s that space within us that we call HOPE.  Tennyson said, “Hope smiles from the threshold of the year to come, whispering, ‘It will be happier.'”  What did you hope for in the coming year?  My list includes publishing my book (again), helping 5 authors publish their books, and making a million dollars on Amazon (hey, don’t judge).  Do you have publishing goals for the new year? Are you baffled about where to begin?  May I humbly suggest a good place to figure it all out is over at the SkipJack School?

We’ve just launched our 8th class, Maximizing Your Author Revenue Stream.  (I like the sound of that.)  SkipJack author, Pamela Fagan Hutchins, shares strategies for taking your masterpiece from a revenue drip-drip to (hopefully) a revenue stream.  Here’s what she has to say about it:

How long and hard did you work to write your book? If you make the decision to publish it, don’t you want that investment of time and energy (and talent) to pay off in as many ways as possible? I sure do. That’s why I spin off as many types of products as I can muster out of each book I write. Paperbacks, hardbacks, audiobooks, foreign translations, speaking engagements, coloring books, film, and other products: your imagination is your only limitation these days. Together in this module we’ll explore how and where to pursue these opportunities, as well as how to prioritize, budget, and promote them.

Authors continue to tell us how the SkipJack School is helping them pursue their writing goals.  We sincerely HOPE this year that you accomplish all you’ve set out to do in 2017.  We love to see authors realize their dreams and become successful.  Join the growing number of students who are learning from somebody who’s “been there & done that.”  Here’s a list of all of our classes (and we’ve got more we’re rolling out every month!).

How to Sell a Ton of Books in 5 Simple Steps

How to Get Book Reviews in 10 Surefire Ways

How to Score a Bookbub Promotion and Send Your Book to the Top

Engaging Readers Through Your Online Author Presence

Drawing In Readers with Rock Star Book Events

Build Reader Subscriber Lists For Sales Independence

Maximizing Your Author Revenue Stream

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

SkipJack’s Vision: Suspense Laced With Faith, Whatever That Faith May Be

Recently our author Pamela Fagan Hutchins received this e-mail:

I enjoyed the books I read in this series (5,6,7) but was somewhat perplexed by some of the characters in the book, Emily’s character in particular.  I was struggling with the concept of church going, prayers to God for direction, protection, etc. while still having a sexual relationship out of wedlock.  I am a Christian…believe God sent his Son Jesus to die on the cross for my sin as well as the sin of others, that Jesus was without sin and died in my place, was raised from the grave, and sits on the right hand of the Father so even though it wasn’t stated for fact in the books I read that Emily was a believer, the book suggested a relationship with God.  Believers do sin and have to ask for forgiveness but certainly should not be ‘living in sin.”  So as I said I was perplexed with the story line that had no problem with sex outside of marriage.
Thought I should at least share my concern.
Sincerely,
Your Reader

Pamela responded, after much thought and some discussion with our assistant, Bobbye, who keeps herself busy (more than)  as mom-to-four, romantic mystery author, and pastor’s wife, amongst about a bazillion other things.

Here was Pamela’s reply:

Dear Reader:

Great to hear from you, and I think you’ve nailed one of the themes of the book. Can an imperfect person believe and still sin? I think the answer is yes, that is a normal condition with a multitude of sins, not just “living in sin”. 😉 I didn’t try to write Emily perfectly, just authentically, which means having flaws consistent with her upbringing and experiences. If I wrote Christian fiction, I would have left Emily in a different place in her personal development, but I don’t, so I left it to the imagination of each reader to figure out where her growth will take her next.

Thanks for writing!
Pamela

After their talk, Bobbye asked if she could guest post on this topic, and we loved the idea, so, we want to share her interpretation on this question, from a bigger perspective than just Pamela’s novels, to include all the novels from SkipJack Publishing.

We thought her perspective on our authors, their novels, their characters, and our take on fiction is awesome,  so here you go!


By Bobbye Marrs, romantic mystery author and publishing assistant at SkipJack Publishing

SkipJack Publishing is a small, indie-focused publishing company.  We may be small, but we have huge expectations. Our authors are professionals with award-winning masterpieces. The types of books we publish are “novels for adults that are not inconsistent with a life of faith—whatever that faith may be, and however questioning.”  Wow—that’s a mouthful. Recently a reader showed concern for one of our main characters who appears to be a Christian, but displays behavior not traditionally Christian. This incongruity of choosing a lifestyle that some would consider sinful, but also praying and appearing to have a relationship with God, were cause for confusion.

So where does this “faith—whatever that faith may be” come in to the writing process for our SkipJack authors? If you were hoping that because I’m a pastor’s wife that I’m the in-house expert theologian, you are in for disappointment. But I hope I can give some insight as a reader into the characters of the What Doesn’t Kill You series, and those from Whippoorwill Hollow as well as  the characters from Pennies from Burger Heaven that sleep beneath the Warrior Angel statue.

It really boils down to one thing: Authenticity.  When you read the pages of these books you’ll find people struggling with addiction, dealing with broken relationships, behaving in ways that might not be considered polite. And that’s authentic. To take those things out would be to write a sci-fi novel about a utopian society (which sounds interesting, but not what we publish). Or to include them and resolve them consistent with the highest aspirations of the Christian faith would be Christian fiction (and that’s not what we publish either).

If I were to meet some of these characters in real life—Katie with her “sloppy drinking habits,” or Emily who lives with “smoldering and mysterious” Jack, or Michele who has a hard time controlling her language, or Copper who’s seen more than any kid should, or Wallace and Ethan, the homosexual couple from the Emily and Michele books—what would my reaction be?  How would I treat them?  I hope I’d be a nice person. I sincerely pray I wouldn’t be a jerk. I’d like to think I’d be my authentic self, too—BTW, that’s someone with “a past,” someone with flaws, and someone always in need of an extra measure of grace.

I’ve thought about Emily’s specific situation, which Pamela’s reader referred to as “living in sin.” Let’s be super clear here and identify the actual issue here is sex outside of marriage. Wow, that’s can of worms if I ever saw one, but it is an issue at the foundation of the Christian faith. In the course of my adult life I’ve had many friends and loved ones in Emily’s situation; specifically, people who were Christians but lived a life not necessarily consistent with the values they professed. What have I done? I’ve smiled. I’ve hugged. I’ve welcomed people into my home. I’ve hoped that I’ve been a blessing to those around me. Maybe that’s just part of getting the plank out of my own eye before I worry about the splinter in someone else’s. I try to be totally authentic in real life, and I want that in the characters I read about, too.  As a reader I love to get to “peek behind the curtain” and see the emotional turmoil in a character’s life.  It’s rewarding to travel with them along their character arc.

We write fiction here at SkipJack, but that doesn’t necessarily mean fake. SkipJack books are not faith-based books, but our writers understand that within the human heart is a place made for faith. And just like in real life, that faith takes on a lot of different forms. For many of our characters their religious upbringing or their experience in church or their search for life’s meaning is what makes them deeper than just the page they’re written on.

So if you see characters whose actions don’t always match up to what they may profess to believe, take a look around the real world, or even in your own mirror. I’ll bet you’ll see some real people just like that.

Bobbye

Bobbye Marrs is a supermom extraordinaire with currently 5 jobs, 4 teenagers, 2 dogs, and a husband crazy enough to be a pastor.  When she’s not working or Bobbyelearning some new hobby like the HAM radio, she is trying to be a romantic mystery writer. Look for her book, I Am My Beloved’s to debut this spring.  In the meantime, she started a t-shirt business to support her writing habit at www.greetingsfrommarrs.com.

Our Pick: How to Format Your Book, Part 2

screen-shot-2016-12-03-at-9-31-28-pm screen-shot-2016-12-03-at-9-31-51-pmPart 2 in a Post by Bobbye Marrs, SkipJack Publishing Assistant Extraordinaire


Start from the beginning, HERE, with Part 1.

CUSTOMER SERVICE

I have a love-hate relationship with PressBooks’ support.  They seem like really nice people, but every time I’ve had an issue they start their “support” by sending me the User’s Guide.  This has caused me to totally lose my religion.  If I’m contacting support it means I’ve already looked in the User’s Guide, researched the internet, and tried to figure it out myself.  Because I’m usually doing something more complicated than the typical user such as modifying the CSS, it takes several emails back and forth before I get to someone who can help me.  They are a small company so I’m typically dealing with the same 2 people, but their developer only works part time.  This wasn’t an issue.  Until it was.

As of this writing I’m a month behind on an update project.  And we always have an update project going on.  PressBooks made modifications to at least one of the theme’s CSS.  What this means is that when I went to make the PDF the page numbers didn’t come out right.  Pamela has 15 print books.  That 15 covers and some hard covers.  These are designed to fit an exact page number.  So I can’t have a 325-page PDF today and a 360-page PDF tomorrow.  I figured out a way around the problem, but I spent a lot of time trying to fix this.  Pamela writes about PressBooks in her book, What Kind of Loser Indie Publishes.  We give them a lot of business and send a lot of business their way so I was disappointed at this blot on their almost perfect record.

COLLABORATION

One great thing about PressBooks is that it’s online so if you have an assistant or expect to collaborate with anyone, it can all be done online.  If you want to update your bio, you can just get on there and do it because it’s not like the files are sitting somewhere on your assistant’s hard drive.

Scrivener limits the possibility of online collaboration because it’s on your computer.  This would be fine for me for my own work in progress because sadly, I don’t have an assistant.  So this isn’t an issue.  Also, Scrivener’s website says they’re working on potentially having something online in the future.  And they also have an iPad and iPhone app which I haven’t tried, but if you like that kind of stuff (and I do) it would be worth exploring.  You can sync your devices using Dropbox so your masterpiece isn’t stuck at home while you’re out having an epiphany that you need to jot down.

PRICE

Scrivener is absolutely the best price.  It’s $45 and it comes with a free trial for 30 actual days.  When I first heard about Scrivener I thought the it would be outrageously expensive.  I thought it was $45 a month.  Not so.  You do have to pay for a separate license for each platform such as your iPhone and your Mac or PC, but it’s still a bargain.

PressBooks is more expensive, but it’s not a deal breaker.  You can begin using it for free.  Downloads will have a PressBooks watermark in them.  If you’re just wanting to do ebooks you upgrade for $19.  If you’re adding in the PDF you upgrade for $99.  They have a couple of ½ off sales a year so if you’re savvy you can always upgrade for $49.50.  That is per book though where Scrivener is a one-time payment.  But if you’re looking for ease of use it’s totally worth it.

END PRODUCT/BELLS AND WHISTLES

In less than an hour I can have a nice looking book using PressBooks.  One reason I ditched Scrivener in the middle of trying to figure it out was that each of our authors have a specific style.  As I’ve updated Pamela’s What Doesn’t Kill You series, I’ve tried to make it uniform.  Adding in a new program would’ve totally put a kink in that plan.

Even though I wasn’t able to get the right end product in the short amount of time I allotted for this research project, I am still completely impressed with Scrivener’s bells and whistles.  For my current work in progress my work is spread out over a three-ring binder, a couple of spiral notebooks, multiple Word documents for the outline, the character arcs, the original manuscript, the rewrite, 2 manuscript consults, and a junky style sheet.  The idea of being able to put this all in one neat and tidy place is very alluring.  You can even add movie clips, PDFs, images and work on your screenplay.  Imagine the possibilities.  Do you ever give birth to a plot bunny in the most inconvenient time and place?  I wrote the entire outline for my 2nd novel waiting in the doctor’s office on a receipt from the depths of my purse.  I don’t have a clue where that ended up.

CONCLUSION

So what’s the bottom line?  Which one will I be using in the future?  Well this isn’t a Robert Frost poem so when two roads diverged in a yellow wood I decided to travel both.  I actually really like both of these programs.  I will use Scrivener for planning and writing my next novel and I may even use it to produce the files.  But until I master it, I’m sticking with PressBooks for the work I do for SkipJack authors because it’s fast, easy, and mostly reliable.

Bobbye

Bobbye Marrs is a supermom extraordinaire with currently 5 jobs, 4 teenagers, 2 dogs, and a husband crazy enough to be a pastor.  When she’s not working or Bobbyelearning some new hobby like the HAM radio, she is trying to be a romantic mystery writer.  Look for her book, I Am My Beloved’s to debut this spring.  In the meantime, she started a t-shirt business to support her writing habit at www.greetingsfrommarrs.com.

Our Pick: How to Format Your Book, Part 1

screen-shot-2016-12-03-at-9-31-51-pm screen-shot-2016-12-03-at-9-31-28-pmPost by Bobbye Marrs, SkipJack Publishing Assistant Extraordinaire


Once our authors here at SkipJack finalize their masterpieces, it’s my job to make them into actual books for sale.  That means taking their Word document and formatting them into an ePub, a Mobi, and a PDF.  Typically, I use PressBooks for this process, but one of our authors asked me to research Scrivener and compare the two.  It’s important to note that comparing these two programs isn’t really apples to apples.  It’s more like comparing a minivan to an RV.  Both get you from point A to point B, but the process is entirely different.  So depending on your end goal (like going to the grocery store or visiting the Grand Canyon), the ideal vehicle to get you there would be different. PressBooks and Scrivener are like that.  You can get to Point B in either one, but the process, the price and the perks are not the same.

SCOPE

By their own definition PressBooks is a simple book production software.  You put in the necessary information and then export your books.  It’s a cookie cutter program with 52 different formatting themes that contain a variety of fonts, styles, and features for use in non-fiction and fiction.  If you’re comfortable enough modifying HTML and CSS then you can make a lot of customizations.

Scrivener is not just for producing the end product.  It’s a total management software program for authors to use from conception to research to writing and re-writing and finalizing a multitude of formats.  It has lots of bells and whistles and a neat interface with index cards that’s very satisfying for the OCD control freaks out there (who shall remain nameless).

EASE OF USE

PressBooks is hands down much easier to use than Scrivener.  It’s actually a WordPress application so if you’re familiar with WordPress, it’s going to look very similar.  I’ve managed ten different websites this past year and 8 of them were WordPress sites so learning PressBooks was very intuitive.

At first Scrivener also seemed very intuitive.  Getting everything put into the program was relatively simple.  But when the time came for me to produce the actual books, I kept hitting a brick wall because of the customization I do in Pamela’s books.  At SkipJack when it comes to troubleshooting, I’m the end of the line.  So when I can’t figure something out, I’ve got to head on over to the Internet and research it myself.

KNOWLEDGE BASE

I’ve used Ye Olde Internet for a multitude of problems including figuring out why my car wouldn’t start, what to do when my dog ate candy corn and how to fix my dryer.  What I’ve discovered is that if I’ve had this problem, some other poor soul out there has too and there’s likely a community board or FAQ out there that can help.  Not so with PressBooks.  It’s been around for 8 years already so more of this type of thing should be out there.  Once the Internet fails I usually resort to the user manual.  The PressBooks User Guide is an online book that addresses basic issues.  For the most part I have found it useless past a point.  By the time I look at it, I’m beyond the User Guide.

At the risk of sounding like Goldilocks, if the Pressbook User Guide is too small then the Scrivener User Guide is too big.  It’s 525 pages.  That’s not a typo.  Over five hundred pages.  It was downright overwhelming.  I tried to pick and choose the topic I needed help on, but when I got there it felt like picking up in the middle of an Algebra book.  Like I needed that first semester of exponentials and equations before I ever got to matrices.

SkipJack authors are potentially rolling out 5 new releases in 2017.  Plus, I’m publishing my own book, doing cover designs, running a t-shirt business and oh yeah, I have another part-time job.  We are constantly in motion here and our authors have lots and lots of plates spinning.  I have an entire spreadsheet just labeled Deadlines.  A 525 page User Guide?  Uh, no.  Ain’t nobody got time for that.

The good news is that Scrivener also has an extensive knowledge base and other books have been written about Scrivener.  So if a plethora of information is what you’re looking for, you’re in luck.

Since this topic is too extensive to cover in just one past, join me next week for the second and final installment!

Bobbye

BobbyeBobbye Marrs is a supermom extraordinaire with currently 5 jobs, 4 teenagers, 2 dogs, and a husband crazy enough to be a pastor.  When she’s not working or learning some new hobby like the HAM radio, she is trying to be a romantic mystery writer.  Look for her book, I Am My Beloved’s to debut this spring.  In the meantime, she started a t-shirt business to support her writing habit at www.greetingsfrommarrs.com.

No Nonsense e-Book Strategy: Destress for Success

screen-shot-2016-12-07-at-10-14-50-am

SkipJack has added No Nonsense e-Book Strategy: Simplifying and Optimizing the Complex to the SkipJack Online School!

If you’ve ever asked yourself any of these questions, this is the class for you:

  • Should I have an e-book?
  • Are e-book sales up or down?
  • How do I make one?
  • Do I need a mobi or a pdf or an epub or what?
  • Where do I put my e-book?
  • Where and how do I sell it? What’s Kobo?
  • Should I be on Nook, iBooks, and Google Play?
  • I’ve heard about libraries and bookstores doing e-books. How can I get in on that?
  • And what about subscription e-book sales?

There’s a hundred questions for every one of those listed above, and we know it’s overwhelming for an author to cut through the chatter and get to the point: what strategy should I pursue, and how do I go about doing it most simply and cost-effectively. When Pamela Fagan Hutchins published her first book as an indie, she decided to do it all by her onesie, so that she would know the answers, heck, so she’d know the questions. That control freak side of her served her (and now you) well, because she figured it out and now derives a six-figure income on e-book sales alone. Ride along with her as she navigates the storm-sieged waters of “What the heck do I do now?” to deposit you safely on friendly soil.

Take the SkipJack course on No Nonsense e-Book Strategy for $10, HERE. Or take another module from our growing list of learning opportunities:

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