Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Self Publishing. Time.


Self Publishing
Spending Time Writing

 

          This is an elaboration on #2 from my Writing Advice post.

 

            When you decide to write a book it is important to plan on taking a good amount of time to do so.  The more time you spend on your idea, the better your ideas become.

 

            The way I did it was to take ideas that I had been thinking about for years, then think of where to start the story.  After that, I took some time to plan out how the story was to unfold.  I found that I did this well by Using a large drawing pad (large paper) and different colored pens.  Each storyline/character received a certain color and I did a rough colorful outline, alternating blue, red, green, orange, brown…  If you do this, make sure to leave room by each section just in case you think of more stuff to put in…you almost certainly will.

 

            Once you have the ideas and the outline, then you can start writing.  You may be surprised, but writing actually takes a long time.  On a good day I think I finished about ten pages.  On a bad day…week…it took me a few days to think of the next page.  Don’t try to rush things, because the slower you go the more ideas you’ll think up.  I found that I would often think of great ideas for the chapter I was writing, right when I was about to go to sleep.  Other times ideas came to me was when I was showering, or walking.  It’s good to find a time when you can think of new ideas, and then to take some time each day to think.

 

            After you have finished your story, then you should take some time editing each page.  I found it good to read the book out loud, because I was able to catch a lot of my own mistakes.  Some of my reviewers say I didn’t edit and just rushed it, but that’s not true.  I spent a long time editing my book.  I actually edited it three or four times.  I think one of my problems was that I didn’t realize how difficult it was to edit my own book.  If I did it again, I probably would have more actively sought out outside help.  I had asked some people to read it, but hadn’t heard back and I was impatient.  If you don’t have anyone to read it, then you might want to hire an editor or join a writer’s group and get advice.  Just be careful doing so, many people have written ebooks and earned money and, with money always comes people looking to scam you.  Before you pay anyone or give you book over to anyone, do some thorough research into that person/organization.  A good way to do so is to use google.  Type *** reviews, *** scams, is *** good, etc. 

 

            Now, there are a few more things you can spend time doing at this point. 

  1.  You can spend time looking for an agent.  I’ve heard they are really helpful but, if you’re a first time writer like me, they can be very difficult to find.  I spent a lot of time doing research and writing emails designed to different agents’ attention.  After a couple of weeks of this I got bored of trying to write things to make people happy and decided to self-publish.
  2. You can find a publisher.  Though, this might be hard to do, most, if not all reputable publishers don’t take unsolicited publications.

 

If you self publish, make sure to spend some time getting your book into the proper format and designing a cover.  For my cover I did my own artwork and my wife did the photoshop magic.  You might want to hire someone to do something up for you if you’re new to everything.

 

Overall, planning to take a good amount of time writing is important.  I recommend a year or more if it’s your first time.  The major steps will be planning, writing and then editing, but there’s a whole bunch of little things that pop up and, if you’re in a rush, all the little things will probably drive you crazy. 

 

If you find yourself going crazy then take some time to breath. 

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Self Publishing. Reviews.


Self Publishing.  Reviews.

Good reviews.  Bad reviews.  Are reviews important?

 

            In the course of my self-published experience I learned a few things about this and that.  One thing that I learned to be very important are the reviews people write.  This is true for any industry, reviews can make or break a company.  Good reviews can really help, while bad reviews can destroy.  In a perfect world everyone would be honest about their reviews and wouldn’t do anything underhanded.  The reviewer would state their opinion, good or bad, and the person or company that was reviewed would take the constructive criticism and come away better for it.  I know I’ve written bad reviews (mainly travel reviews) and have had companies try and pressure me to take them down, so it’s not just the reviewer that does the underhanded…ness?   Yet, this is not a perfect world and the internet isn’t always a place that is full of honest, well-meaning people, so be prepared.  Here’s my story about reviews.

Quick Summary

  1.  Reviews are important.
  2. The time when you first publish is really important.  If you wait too long for the good reviews then your book may have missed its’ prime time in the spotlight.

 

Sales and Reviews

 

                  Dates                   Books sold

April 18th to 24th                 22 sold

(April 26th my friend posted a 5 star review)

April 25th to May 1st         14 sold

May 2nd to May 8th           11 sold

(May 10th my mother posted a 5 star review)

May 9th to May 15th         53 sold

May 16th to May 22nd      107 sold

(May 25th a highly negative 1 star review posted)

May 23rd to May 29th      63 sold

May 30th to Jun 5th           65 sold

(Beginning of June, negative review was modified and became worse)

Jun 6th to Jun 12th             30 sold

Jun 13th to Jun 19th          26 sold

Jun 20th to Jun 26th          32 sold

Jun 27th to Jul 3rd               19 sold

July 4th to July 10th            13 sold

July 11th to July 17th         17 sold

July 18th to July 24th         15 sold

July 25th to July 31st         7 sold

Aug 1st to Aug 7th              7 sold

(Aug 7th a negative two star review was posted because I didn’t pay a person for his services)

Aug 8th to Aug 14th           5 sold

Lost the motivation to keep keeping track.  Pretty much sold a few copies per week for a while.  Two years later and I’m selling about a book a month.  Tried KDP Select at one point and had a lot of pages being read and some more good reviews, but nothing really panned out.

 

My Review Experience

 

                When I decided to publish I also decided to be honest and straightforward about what I did.  I read articles about people paying for reviews, and it working well for them.  I also had friends and other people offer to gives me good ratings and reviews, but I told them no thanks, unless they had read my book and it was an honest review.  Did I make the right decision?  Money wise, probably not.  Would I do the same thing?  Yes, I think of myself as an honest person, and would do the same if given the chance. 

 

In the following I will talk about the two reviews I received that really made a difference, and one that was just annoying.  To everyone that wrote me a review, I appreciate the time you took to do so…well, almost everyone. 

 

                Before publishing I sent my book to some friends and family in the hopes of having some positive reviews right off the bat.  Yet, my book is rather long, and I don’t think everyone had the time to read it, so I didn’t have a lot of reviews at the beginning…or even now. 

 

                I published my book on April 18th and, 8 days later, my good friend posted his review.  He was one of the people I sent my book to prior to publishing.  This first review didn’t seem to boost sales too greatly.  Between  April 18th and May 8th I sold 47 copies.

 

                Then, on May 10th, my mother posted a review (using my father’s ID J).  Both my parents had been reading, and liking, my book, which had really helped me in the motivation department.  I think my mother was hesitant about posting (being my mother and all) but I told her if the review was honest, then go ahead.  I didn’t try to hide the fact that it was one of my parents reviewing because, like I said, I wanted to take the honest road.

 

                My mother’s review was good and it really helped sales.  From May 9th to May 15th I sold 53 copies, May 16th to 22nd 107 copies, May 23rd to May 29th 63 copies.  I was really excited and thought, “hey, I can do this.”  J

 

                Then came my first negative review, and it was bad.  The title said “Don’t read this book.”  Ouch.  Apparently the reviewer didn’t like what happened at the end of my book and thus gave me one star.  I hoped that people would see that the reviewer became so connected with my characters that he or she took what happened to them very personally…which means that the story was well written…up until the point that made the reviewer sad for not “coddling” him.  Yet, I don’t think that’s what people saw.

 

                Anyway, this bad review came on May 25th, but it didn’t hurt sales too too much.  Like I said, I sold 107 copies between May 16th and May 22nd and 63 copies between May 23rd and May 29th.  So sales went down, but were still good.  The thing about this review was that, when it was first published, it had a reference to “Game of Thrones.”  The reviewer said that I killed a character and betrayed his trust by doing so.   Then said it was like Game of Thrones, and that’s why he didn’t like reading those books.  I think the Game of Thrones reference helped dull the blow of the bad review. 

 

                Then, the reviewer took down the review and sales went back up.  I thought the person had realized that they really liked my characters and were just upset that one had died and had thus rethought the negative review.  Yet, much to my chagrin, I was wrong.  The reviewer republished the review and this time it lacked the Game of Thrones reference.  After the republishing my sales went way down…Jun 6th to Jun 12th I sold 30 copies.  Jun 13th to Jun 19th I sold 26 copies.  

 

                Why did the reviewer change the review?  Maybe he rethought it and decided to get rid of the Game of Thrones reference because he/she didn’t like my book.  Maybe he/she was monitoring my book and saw that the ranking was still high after his/her review and thus changed it.  In my opinion, it’s the second option.  Personally, when I write a review I don’t go back and change things later on.  It seems like the only reason to do so is because you are trying to hurt the person or business, not because you’re being honest.  Yet, I had no proof, so just went with it.

 

                So, it was this review, after the modifications, that really brought down my sales.  I can’t say that it was the reason I failed because, if my book really was great, the many people that read it would have written good reviews or would have given me good ratings, but the reviews were not very plentiful.

 

                After a long stint of low sales I decided to put my book on a site where I offer it for free in exchange for some honest reviews.  I just wanted to know what people thought and get more information on how to improve.  I did get one really good review that really boosted my motivation, but I also got a bad review.  At this point sales were still low, and the reviews didn’t really change anything.  Yet, how the bad review panned out really made me annoyed.

 

                Like I said, I put my book on a site where people read it in exchange for an honest review.  One person that downloaded my book decided to contact me directly.  He started communications by posting a comment on my blog. 

 

                Daniel Matuzas, before I post a review I'd like to discuss it with you privately please contact me **** at **** dot com, [convert at and dot com to appropriate entries] I don't think you want me posting this review publicly”

 

            The comment seemed very strange…who writes convert at and dot to appropriate entries?...but I decided to respond.  I wrote an email saying hi, and saying that I was new to writing and wasn’t sure what to say.  I then got an email which used many intimidating words/phrases.  The person called my book a disaster, said it had no polish or editing, said that my blog posts (beginning writer) made it sound like I knew what I was doing.  All this he got from reading the prologue and 1st chapter.  In short, the person was politely trying to extort me. 

 

Yours went from final draft to "Self-Publish", I feel it my duty to let
buyers know not to waste their money on such an item.

Before I do that, I would like to get your take on what I should do.

We offer proofreading and editing services at reasonable prices should you
be interested.

If you are not, we recommend you remove this from sale until it has been
edited by a professional, since you seem incapable of doing it yourself.”

 

                The person was saying, pay for my services or I will publish my negative review.  Yes, the message wasn’t so straight forward, but it was pretty clear to me. 

 

                Yet, I tried to give the person the benefit of the doubt…maybe he was a well-meaning individual but didn’t know how to communicate efficiently.  Thus I went and did some background research.  I found that the person was a self-published author but used a different name.  His books had failed to succeed and, reading the sample Amazon offered, I could see why.  I didn’t want to pay a person to edit my book when it seemed like he didn’t know a lot about writing.  Further research led me to a website the person had created.  The website gave the appearance of a successful business, but looking around on it you find that only two authors work with the business.  One author was the person that had written to me and the other author was that person’s wife.  Researching the wife showed that she was an unsuccessful self-published author as well.

 

                After my research I came to the conclusion that this was definitely not a person I wanted to pay any sort of money to.  My research led me to believe that he was just a person trying to scam me for money, or he was angry that he was unsuccessful and was trying to find different ways to earn money, ways that were not the most honest.  I decided to ignore him. 

 

                I emailed Amazon about this person, but I did it before he wrote the review.  I didn’t want to be an author that was just complaining about a bad review, and so I included my evidence.  I received a message back from Amazon saying that they couldn’t do anything because the person hadn’t put his review on Amazon.  I waited for the person to post his review, then I emailed Amazon again.  Amazon never got back to me…

 

                The review by this person didn’t really affect me so much.  Sales were already low, so he was pretty much kicking a dead horse.  Even so, it annoyed me greatly…it feels good to write about it now.  Other reviews were posted, most were good, but I think my book had already drifted to the realm of the unknown.

 

                I read that sales might go up when you publish your second book.  I published my second book, but I accidently did it under a different name.  1st book: Daniel Glen Matuzas  2nd book: Daniel Matuzas.  I think this caused problems because the website may have viewed the books as published by two different people and thus it didn’t contact those that bought the first book.  I changed the author, but sales never really happened…I think maybe six people bought my second book.  Maybe my first book wasn’t good and that is why, but I like to think that my story was compelling enough to have readers want for more.

 

                In conclusion, a good honest review really boosted sales.  Then a really negative review, that was altered to hurt more, destroyed sales.  Reviews are important.  Maybe if more people had written reviews the highly negative one would’ve been drowned out.  I am smart enough to understand that I might not have gotten many reviews because people didn’t think too much of my book…I hope I don’t come across as a kid crying over spilled milk.  As I said before, I’m happy that I tried and I’m happy knowing that I can walk away saying I was honest and gave it a good go.           

Friday, January 20, 2017

Self Published Authors. Advice.


Self Publishing.  Advice.

What to do.  What not to do.

 

                Reader’s note:  I wasn’t successful with the sales of my book.  If you’re looking for "how to become rich self-publishing" (there are a whole bunch of those) this is not where you want to be.  But, only listening to success stories isn’t always the right thing to do (it’s what I did).

 

A couple of years ago, I set out to write my own series of fantasy books.  I had always been thinking of ideas and had always wanted to make those ideas into a book.  To be honest, I also hoped to make a career out of it.  I didn’t have to make millions like in some success stories, but I did hope to make enough to get by.  I started writing while I was working, but found it hard to do so.  It wasn’t hard to find the time, but it was hard to find the motivation and imagination.  I guess I have a somewhat one-track mind, so when I work (teach) I’m constantly thinking about work… how to make my lessons better and what not.  Also, while working a full-time job, sometimes you just feel like blah afterwards.  So, I took some time off and really put an effort into writing my book.  On April 18th, 2015, I published on Amazon and since then I’ve learned a few things.  I will summarize those things here, then write an article about each one later.

 

  1.  Reviews are important.  My advice is to have some good reviews ready before you publish.  Have friends, family, and maybe even writers’ groups look over and review your book.  If the reviews are positive, publish and ask them to post their reviews.  If the reviews are negative, you might want to take a second look at your book.  Good reviews give your sales a strong boost.
  2. Take some time.  Make sure that you take time to write and think over what you wrote.  The more time you spend thinking about what you write, the better your writing will be.  Don’t try to force it, wait for that perfect solution to your writer’s block to come along.
  3. Have some money ready.  You can read stories about how people became self-published millionaires without spending a dime, but I’m guessing that the majority of people didn’t share this experience.  Publishing costs money.  You have to pay for an ISBN and other technical stuff.  Then there is advertising and other avenues you may want to pursue.  You may also want to pay for an editor, a good one…don’t go cheap because there are some scammers out there.  If you don’t have the money to spend, you might stress about what could’ve been.
  4. Editing.  It’s important to have your book edited, I found this out the hard way.  I thought, “Hey, I write great essays and anyways, I want to keep my book like I imagined it, so I’ll edit it myself.”  I spent a lot of time editing, but editing a 620 page fantasy book is different from editing a ten page essay.  There are also things that you might need to here from another person.  For instance, I had trouble thinking of names and thus used names that weren’t the best.  I knew it wasn’t a great idea, but thought the names of the minor characters would be overlooked in favor of a good story…not all readers agreed.
  5. Support.  Writing is a long and tough road, especially if you haven’t done it before.  Getting good moral support really helps.  My wife always listened to me talk about my stories, and this encouraged me.  My parents really liked the story, which also really encouraged me.  Having someone read or listen to you and like what your saying is a good encouragement. 
  6. Take a breath.  There are so many articles, so many words of wisdom, that you can read about how to be successful.  You should have an agent, you should get a whole bunch of reviews, you should advertise on facebook, you should have a blog, you should have other bloggers review your book…the list is endless.  If you do a bunch of research, that’s good, but don’t let yourself be overwhelmed by the advice.  I’m guessing that, for most people, most of the advice doesn’t work.    
  7. Be happy.  Hey, you sat down and wrote a book, not many people can say that.  Be happy about that ;)     

 

Overall, I’m glad that I took some time to write.  I didn’t earn any money, I think the money I spent and the money I earned balanced out, but hey, I gave it a go.  I do hope to write again in the future, but for now I’m going back to a full-time job and will be putting most of my thoughts into that for the time being.  When I do come back to writing it will be more as a hobby, which I think might be the good way to go. 

Sunday, January 1, 2017

How to save money on razors

Razor blades are expensive, anyone that shaves with them knows this.  If you don't take care of them, then you have to replace them or else suffer the nicks and ingrown hairs that result from a blade that hasn't been well cared for.


So, how do you take care of your blades so that you can use them for around a month or more before replacing them?  Here's what I found to work...






If the blade has a strip (like aloe) use it once, then take the strip off.  If you keep trying to use it then the strip dries out and gets bumpy and then ruins your smooth clean shave.


After using your blade to shave, put it in a cup of clean water (filtered or bottled) until the next time you shave.






I believe this works because, if you leave your blade out to dry, then white stuff will appear on it...by white stuff I mean the calcium or metal that comes from the tap water...It's the same reason the glass of your shower or mirror gets dirty after getting wet and then air drying. 
So, your razor blade dries, but the white powder remains on it and hardens, then your blade is bumpy and results in a bumpy shave that cuts your skin and results in more ingrown hairs. 


I use my blade for a month or more, without any problems.  I might be able to use it longer, but I eventually see a little rust development on the edges and decide that it is time to replace the blade, I don't want to get tetanus from shaving. 






This is an example of the glass I keep my razor in.

This is a close up of an old razor.  The blades have white build up on them but it has lasted over a month.

Here's a pic of a new razor so you can see the difference.

I scratched off some of the white stuff so you can see what I'm talking about.  I rarely ever clean the handle.



Tuesday, July 12, 2016






 
Something I found while looking through old boxes.  Fun times digging through memories.

Monday, July 11, 2016


Always used to get funky haircuts before shaving our bodies for the final swim meet.