Saturday, December 8, 2018

2018 Was the Year of Overwhelm, 2019 Will Be The Year of Partners


In preparing the blog this year, I wondered what I said last year and if any of my predictions came true. I know 2018 was definitely the year of overwhelm for me. I hit the wall on technology, new marketing ideas, and keeping up with my fans. Keeping up with that and still getting out ebooks, print books, and audiobooks among the normal chaos of life made me realize I’ve gone too far into the weeds and needed to fight my way back to a “real” life that included time for writing, as well as engaging with family and friends.

I wasn’t the only one feeling this. I spoke with my editor and she said that 2018 was the year of missed dates for many of her clients. They were dropping out of her schedule, unable to get the writing done. Even the three most prolific author friends I have decided to drop at least one book in their 2018 schedule. I ended up dropping two books out of the six I had scheduled for 2018. But I made up for it in other products. I would have preferred to have finished all six books. It just wasn’t possible with all the challenges this past year presented.

So, what happened that so many long-term and professional authors were feeling so overwhelmed? Was it the chaotic political arena? For some that did play a role in their ability to focus. However, for most it was how fast the “rules” were changing. First there was the entire GDPR legislation in Europe. Then various big vendors did some buying of companies, selling of companies and partnering with companies—including aggregators.

Amazon alone did at least four major system renovations in the past year:
1) They tried to stop scammers and stuffers; and in doing so set up additional automated processes to do that. Some of those processes caught up innocent people as well. 
2) Amazon decided to change its Advertising backend and name. The roll out of that process was not smooth and not very well documented. Even support personnel weren’t quite sure what was going on. 
3) In the early Fall, Amazon decided to close CreateSpace and began switching all of those customers to KDP Print. It was a well-telegraphed move—if not in actual messaging. When KDP Print started to look more and more like CreateSpace it was obvious the move was imminent. However, as with other huge system changes it was not smooth and that caused great drama, lost sales for some, and certainly a lot of confusion for the less technically inclined authors. 
4) Without warning Amazon changed their buy pages to no longer reflect “also boughts” a way in which indie authors could work to build their discoverability in the algorithms by making sure that the cross-pollination of also boughts was as close as possible to their genre. Amazon exchanged the “also boughts” display for two rows of sponsored ads on most pages. It is still rolling out in full. This now means that to be discovered on Amazon you either have to be a bestselling author OR pay for advertising. What many people call pay-to-play. In the end, Amazon is a business that wants to make as much money as possible. Once authors realize that every decision is a business decision (not only at Amazon but also at other vendors), and has nothing to do with whether they value authors or not, they can plan accordingly. I see far too many people, instead, hoping that any vendor will suddenly become beneficent and run their business as a charity for authors because we are so valuable to them. In my view, that is not a realistic take on the business world.

The competitiveness of the market has grown exponentially in the last two to three years. In the U.S. more than 80% of people buy ALL their books online—ebook, print, and audio. This means authors must be web savvy, mobile-ready, and willing to make changes quickly without spending time worrying about the fact the change must be made. In 2018, already 2.4 million books have been published! http://www.worldometers.info/books/ According to Statista’s data on publishing, there have been more than a million books a year being produced for four years in a row now. So consider all those backlist titles. This is why discoverability is so important. This is why we can’t wait and hope the world changes so we can suddenly become competitive. We need to understand the reality of the market and PLAN how we are going to fit into that market and find OUR readers.

Old Posts and Predictions and How it Compares to Today’s Environment
I’ve been doing this “What’s New in Publishing” and/or Predictions for the New Year on Romancing the Genres since 2013. That makes this my sixth year of being proven right or wrong.  Here are the past six years posts with a brief summary of the primary discussion and what is still relevant in 2018 and moving into 2019.

2013 Focus on your TEAM It was true then and is still true now. Only now I think it’s imperative to have a good team. I call these “partners” because most authors are not in a position to have a company with employees who create their ultimate team. Instead, we partner with critical individuals or companies and pay them as we need them. And don’t be afraid to change your partner relationships when they aren’t working out.

2014 was the year the indie publishing movement became mainstream. So, I had two blog posts that year. Part 1 was a history of changes in publishing over a decade (2004 to 2014). Part 2 focused on what the indie author could do. My big advice was to Focus on the Long Game instead of short-term returns. Given all the angst online about every Amazon change and keeping the rankings up, I don’t think anyone listened to me on that one. J  I still believe that for a long-term career, one has to look at long-term investment of time and finances and grow consistently year over year. This is even more true in 2019 and beyond.

Can you become a six-figure author in your first year of publishing? Of course you can, some authors have done it. BUT it requires investing a good sum of money ($10K-$20K) and religiously following a plan for releasing a book every three weeks or so, that is straight down the middle of the genre, and creating discoverability with lots of advertising money. There are several people who teach this methodology and it can work. The question is if you can afford to do that year after year. Do you have the time to learn the process? Do you have the talent and energy to churn out 10-12 books in a year or the money to pay ghostwriters to do it for you? Do you have the funds to spend significant money on advertising?  And the biggest questions is, are you willing to do this year after year to maintain that income? Or is your desire to do it for the ONE book you plan to write and that’s it? Only you can answer that question.

For me, that system doesn’t work because I don’t want to spend the time to churn out 10-12 books a year every year. I already work too many hours doing 6 books a year. I do write genre fiction, but it’s not straight down the middle and I don’t want to write straight down the middle fiction. I know it’s a trade off, and I’m willing to take that trade off of earning less. Finally, I’m not willing or able at this time of my life to spend $10K-$20K in advertising.



2015 Top Three Markets: mobile domination (e.g., phones); foreign rights; and writing in series. In my top three markets for 2019 Mobile Domination is still 100% true. In fact, I used to believe that people would abandon e-readers for tablets. I was wrong, it appears they are abandoning e-readers for smart phones. It is even more important today than three years ago that an author’s business is mobile friendly. That means your website, your store if you are selling direct, and your engagement with readers whether via email or social media.

I think I missed the mark on the importance of foreign rights. They are important but that importance has moved down the list for me. Whether we like it or not, English has become a global language and many countries where English is not the first language have a sufficient population of English speakers to make selling English-only books viable. Can you make even more money with translations? Yes, you can. The question is if you can make a sufficient amount to make up for the cost of the translation OR the cost of shared rights with a translator. For me, right now the answer is still no. I suspect that in a few more years and books, the answer might change.

In 2015 I also missed the mark regarding the building importance of audiobooks. They weren’t even on my radar. To have pursued audio in 2015 would have been a good idea for me. I wouldn’t be trying to catch up now. But I’m not a look-at-the-past-and-feel-bad kind of gal. I know I can’t do it all or know it all; and there is still plenty of time to be in audio. I started into audio in late 2017. If you haven’t yet, and you have more than five or six books, 2019 MIGHT be a time for you to definitely consider it.

  
2016 post reflects that the top two trends were Mobile Phones and Audiobooks. So, two years in a row #1 was making sure everything was compatible with mobile phones.  I must admit, I am always surprised when now in 2018 there are still a number of authors who have not done two important things with their website. 1) Make sure it is responsive. In other words, make sure it looks good and works well on smart phones. 2) Make sure it is secure. Install SSL. It’s not expensive and it’s worth it! More about that later. Both of these are critical for search engines to pay attention to you AND for readers to find you and, once finding you, feel safe to be on your website.


2017 My #1 prediction was “things will continue to change more quickly.” Nailed that one. No wonder 2018 felt overwhelming. I’d forgotten that was my prediction. I’m sure I was already feeling it myself at the end of 2017 and it has been more powerfully true than I even imagined a year ago. Trends for 2018 were in the following order. You won’t be surprised by #1—mobile phones. #2 engaging readers. Still important but it’s getting more complex now. #3 Audiobooks. Enough said. #4 Direct Sales. I think this can be a game changer in 2019 for those who are ready to take advantage of it. #5 Blockchain. For me, the promise of Blockchain technology for authors is still too early for most authors AND for the systems that exist. I still believe in the promise, and it’s definitely a paradigm shift in terms of thinking about rights licensing and the economics of book selling. However, I don’t think the current platforms are ready for even the first wave of indie author early adopters to make a difference in sales for the time and learning required.


Okay, what about planning for 2019? For me 2019 is about the realization that if you want to have a career there are three things you MUST do.
1) Be willing to work with and pay for business partners. 
2) Have a brand and presence OUTSIDE of vendors like Amazon, Kobo, Apple, Google, etc. 
3) Mobile, mobile, mobile. Let’s look at each of these in a little more detail.

Partners and Investment of Money

I know that most indies start off with the idea of learning the ropes and doing everything for themselves. I think you COULD do that in 2010  and 2011; maybe even as late as 2013. By 2014 the tide had shifted and self-publishing was mainstream. It was already become extremely difficult to learn and manage everything one person needed to do. I don’t think you can do it now. Not only is the competition astronomically larger and more sophisticated, but it is also more professionalized.

When I started selling indie it was a mixed bag of professionalism. A lot of people created their own covers. A lot of people used their mother or best friend as their editor—actually as more of a catch-my-typos-and-grammar person. A lot of people did formatting however they could and lived with it if it wasn’t perfect and wasn’t pretty. In the early years you could get away with that because the competition was a lot smaller and being “indie” was cool. It’s not “cool” anymore. It is just the primary way the vast majority of authors are getting published.

Since about 2014, the professionalism has increased in leaps and bounds. The top sellers, those who began in earnest in 2010 and 2011 and made their first bestseller status, realized that it was important to have a great cover—a genre-specific cover that rivaled NY. These bestsellers were primarily people who had left traditional publishing or were doing both. They were willing to pay for professional editors, for cover designers, for formatters. Most important they were building their team so they could write more books and spend less time on the technology. If you don’t do that today, it is near impossible to move up and make any significant dent in sales.

Fast forward to 2018. We are ending this year in a pay-to-play discoverability universe. What I mean by that is that the competition is so stiff that your discoverability engine must be honed and used consistently. The fastest way to do that is through advertising dollars spent exactly right. Links to selling Landing Pages with great copy and a bang on mailing list developed for consistent growth. Can someone still do all of this? I know a few people who have all those skills AND write well AND write fast and are still holding it together. The other 98% of the population cannot but keeps pretending they can and are disappointed by the results after working so hard.

When you don’t have partners or funding to pay for partners, then one of two things happen. 
1) You become overwhelmed and you go in circles dealing with the technology and the sales aspects, but you don’t write the next book. That is a quick failing model. You need new product every year. 
2) You burn out because you are doing too much. You get sick. You get angry because no matter how much you do it’s not enough to move the selling needle. Then you give up. Maybe not forever, but I’ve seen really good authors give up for several years.

I’m not going to label giving up as failure, because I think some people SHOULD give up on being an author. Contrary to popular belief, it is not an easy profession. It is not a quick way to riches. It requires constant learning, improving, analysis, and doing it all over again. If you don’t LOVE writing first, you won’t be able to make the constant sacrifices you have to make for it to be a viable career.

If you are not intending on publishing books as an income-generating career, then ignore everything I’ve said. That is a different goal. That is a goal not based in business, but in bringing non-tangible happiness in the process.

Finding Good Partners and Determining Who/What You Need

The first step is deciding what you CAN do well, and what you WANT to do outside of the writing itself. The answer to this is different for each person. And how much you want to do or have the time to do is also different.

I’ve been a do it all myself person, and a bit of a control freak, my entire life. So, it’s no surprise that when I decided to make a career as an author I tried to do it all. I began indie publishing in 2011 while I was still working a full-time executive job—about 50 hours per week. I have a good technology background, so I felt comfortable with most of those aspects of creating and publishing. However, even then I knew there were two things I shouldn’t do myself. One was designing my own covers and the second was editing. I’m a decent developmental editor for other authors—though not a professional, but I knew I couldn’t do it for myself. I’m just too close to the work. I’m also a decent proofreader, but again can’t do it for myself. I always miss things. These are two big-ticket items that many authors choose NOT to pay for. But, in my opinion they are more important than any other aspect of the publishing process.

Maggie McVey Lynch
Because I have a good background in technology I did all the website design, social media, SEO, formatting, loading of books myself. That division of labor—using two professionals and me doing everything else worked for about five years. At twenty books behind me and putting out a minimum of six new products a year, plus marketing, it became too much for me last year. The first thing I did was hire a part time virtual assistant to coordinate a lot of things and keep me straight on due dates, timing, etc. I thought it would be enough. By summer, as I realized more of the importance of my author brand and presence on the web, I knew I had to let go of the one thing I was MOST sure of technologically—my website design.

I admit that aging has made me less astute at multi-tasking; however, I am still quite capable of learning. But the reality is things do continue to change rapidly and the depth of knowledge required for a complete understanding in EVERY area is just not doable. Sometimes that means finding a partner to do something you do well. For me I found that keeping up with website technology and SEO was the most time consuming task for me. I needed a major SEO update, a secure direct sales platforms, and a modernized look and feel for my buy pages that would provide more information for the reader without looking too busy or overwrought. For me to do that on my own would have been, minimum, a one year process. It’s likely by the end of the year I will need to make changes again. So, I broke down and found a good partner. Now nearly three months into the overhaul, I am soooo glad I gave that up. It was painful at first, and took some trust building on my part, but now it’s a huge blessing.

The more books I have, the more work I have to do to maintain them, manage them, market them. The more non-writing tasks I do myself, the less time I have for writing. In 2018 I probably spent at least a third of my book income on partners. Is that smart? I’m not sure. But I’m in it for the long term. I believe with the partners and systems I have in place now, I can write more in 2019. Having more product is the engine I need to move to the next level. I can only do that by carving out time.

My top 5 Things to Care About for 2019 are in this order of importance

1)    Individualized and personalized communication with fans. This continued building a good email list of true fans. Mailing Lists are STILL the #1 predictor of sales.

2)    Search. Everything having to do with visibility, discoverability, finding new people to love your books is related to search. This means you have to pay close attention to it and understand it well. Search includes the things we already do like keywords, categories, linking to related content. But it also has to do with structure. How to structure our website, our blog posts, our social media posts, and our buy pages across multiple vendors so that it is easily indexed and cross-indexed with critical searches.

3)    Audiobooks continue to trend up. The statistics point to a consistent 20%-25% increase. Definitely that market is growing faster than ebooks or print. My 2019 goal is to get all of my backlist fiction into audio so that any new book release is accompanied with an audio book.

4)    Direct Sales to Fans is What Orna Ross, of ALLi, calls Indie Publishing 3.0 I believe it can become a game changer in income and control of that fan relationship moving forward. My prediction about going direct to fans and cutting out the middleman by 2020 is starting to become a reality for many indies. I started putting in place the search, delivery, and banking linked processes for this in September of this year. For indies who have a good following, an established fan base of 20K or more, going direct can be a major income stream. For those in the midlist, like me (a 8K to 20K emails), going direct can generate income but it is a longer-term commitment to growth and training readers as to the value of buying direct.

5)    Focus on one thing at a time and make it work really well. If I’d paid attention to this rule earlier in my career (say five years ago) I might be in a better place instead of throwing money and energy at the next “big” thing. I’ve always known this rule as a business person in software, in education, in psychology. However, as an author entrepreneur I ignored this rule by buying into the belief that a “creative” business needed an approach that reached out to every unicorn reader and catered to them. Not true. Unicorn readers are outliers. The focus is to find the larger middle of your fan base and focus on them. The unicorns will decide on their own whether that is enough to keep them.

So, what is your focus for 2019? Which ONE area is the one you know you need the most? Do you see yourself adding a new partner for any part of your writing and marketing process? I’d love to hear your feedback and experience. Of course, I’m also happy to respond to questions with my thoughts.

Maggie Lynch is the author of 20+ published books, as well as numerous short stories and non-fiction articles.  Her fiction tells stories of men and women making heroic choices one messy moment at a time.

After careers in counseling, the software industry, academia, and worldwide educational consulting, Maggie chose to devote her time to her career as a full time author. Her fiction spans romance, suspense, fantasy and science fiction titles. Her non-fiction focuses on guiding authors to business success in their career through planning, distributing, and marketing their completed work.

You can purchase Maggie's newly released Author Secret's boxed set here:
https://maggielynch.com/book/secrets-to-becoming-a-successful-author-boxset/

Contacts: 


  




12 comments:

  1. Thanks for having me, Romancing the Genres. This was a fun post to write because I'd never taken the time to go back and read my previous predictions. It helps to see how the industry really does telegraph the trend well in advance. We just have to pay attention and prepare. :) Happy to answer questions, hear feedback, and differing points of view.

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  2. Hi Maggie,
    I am so grateful to you because you succinctly summarize the trends when I do not have time to keep up with all the news and changes in the publishing world.

    I did not realize indie publishing took off merely 4 years ago. It seems longer.

    I do think a peak has been reached - I'm hearing of indie and trad-published midlist authors who are dropping out because of low revenue or no new contracts. Discoverability and revenue are so difficult when a million plus books are being published every year, and so many of those are free. Readers need not actually buy a book anymore to feed their thirst for romance novels.

    I did NOT know that Amazon had eliminated Also Boughts, another "free" marketing perk lost to authors. :(

    Making money sure takes big bucks and huge dedication. By only publishing a book a year, I already knew I'll never join the ranks of the uber-successful authors pumping out several a year and spending a small fortune on marketing. However, I don't think that can possibly be a sustainable model due to burn-out and changes in readers' tastes. How can an author maintain that pace year in and year out, and still produce fresh, quality work?

    I predict the last couple of years of this decade will separate out authors with staying power and resources for the long haul from those who thought they'd be able to make some easy money. Even an excellent cover, great editing, and a wonderful story are not enough anymore.

    Lots of food for thought in this post. Thanks, Maggie!

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  3. Fantastic summary, Maggie! Really fantastic!
    Let's see, my 2019 targets...
    1) Have a life. I wasn't headed to burnout, but I could certainly see that road lying out there in wait. I'm walking more, doing more activities with my lady, even helping a friend rewire a house for 1 day a week.
    2) Quality, quality, quality. Striving to make each story better, richer, more true that the one before it.
    3) Quality marketing. Redoing covers and blurbs because after 8 years in indie (with a 5-year trad. overlap), I've learned a lot!
    4) Improved fan connections: subscription service, on-site store, better and more frequent communication, fixing my on-boarding process...big time!
    5) Audiobooks. I started really leaning into that last year and while the payoff isn't huge, it's growing fast and I like that.
    6) Follow my writer's voice. There's an attraction to writing what I think the fans want from me. I'm actually struggling right now to separate that from where I think my voice is going. That will be the hardest, and longest term project for me for 2019...I think. Though the list above...Whoosh!

    Thanks again and best of luck,
    Matt

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  4. Madelle, I think you can have a career and some income with one book a year. It's just a much slower build. I do agree that people are dropping out because it's not easy money. And I think that's a good thing because they weren't in it for the love of writing.

    For you, I would say that your number one goal is to build your email list and keep in contact with your readers. That is not something that costs a lot of money. But it does cost time and organization, and it takes consistency. In the end, no matter how much you put into advertising, it is your loyal readers that are going to buy the next book.

    There are authors who HAVE built a following on one book a year. It's just that it took five to eight years (e.g., 5-8 books) to get there. As long as you realize that's the tradeoff for you, you are golden.

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  5. I love the post, Maggie. Printed out and also saved to my hard drive for the links. Okay, I have my first three books out. My plan for this next year is to see if I can get two more out and one more drafted. Four is written and needs a lot of editing. Then I go from there to write five and publish, then draft six. I'll see if I can write and publish two books a year. To go with the ones already out. I may start a new series in 2020 or 2021, depending on sales of these books. Getting my newsletter up and running is a major goal for early in the New Year. My revamped website is now live and only needs a few tweaks. That will be finished, maybe tomorrow. For me, the New Year looks bright.

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  6. Matt, Thanks for your comments. I consider it high praise when I can offer you something to think about.

    Everything you listed is right on target. I love that you included many non-writing things that are so important like exercise and spending time with your wife and friends. I believe that non-writing time informs story in ways we don't get when we stay in our heads, at our desks all the time.

    I'd like to address your last point though as it has been a personal struggle for me for the past four years. You said: "There's an attraction to writing what I think the fans want from me. I'm actually struggling right now to separate that from where I think my voice is going."

    I know that those who are going for the $100K per year and reaching toward a million quickly believe strongly in the write-to-market way of doing things, and putting out a book every month. And it works. It really does because there are millions of readers who are voracious but not picky about the nuances of story and craft. However--and this is a BIG however for me--those same fans want the stories cheap. Free up to $2.99. $3.99 is even a stretch for them (most of them are novellas). And they aren't loyal because there is an entire cadre of people (and often even ghostwriters) churning out these books. They are loyal to a specific reading experience, but not to the nuances of a particular author.

    However, there IS another group of millions of readers (and some of them are parts of both groups) who love books outside of the box, who love books with more complexity, character building, following those characters from one book to the next. And I honestly believe this second group is bigger than the other one. This is that group who may download the freebies but never read them because Author A drops a book, who they love, and they will pay whatever is necessary to get that book $5.99, $6.99, $7.99 or even in paperback or hardback.

    The problem is this group who wants the particular books we write are not easy to identify like the write-to-market group. But once you do identify them, they are loyal and steadfast and will buy from you every time because they like your books. They like your voice. They like the way you construct story. You are doing all the right things to attract that group. Now you just have to work your plan. Discover the few who are like that and identify what makes them YOURS. Then find more through other authors who are most like you, and through your current fans friends.

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  7. Barbara, Sounds like you are doing everything right. You can do certainly do more at two books a year than one.

    I just took a look at your website. It's nice and clean. The one thing it doesn't have right now that is really important is links to buy pages. If you don't want to list all the vendors where you distribute, you should generate a Books2Read Universal Book Link and connect that to a buy button for each of the books on your website. If you are a D2D person, they generate that link for you right after upload. So, you can give that to your web designer to create a nice button for you for people to click.

    It's great to have pretty book covers and nice descriptions, but people need to be able to get excited and then go buy the book without having to do a search on whatever vendor they prefer (e.g., Amazon, Apple, Kobo, B&N, etc.) and sometimes not easily finding it.

    Feel free to ping me privately if you need a few more instructions about this process.

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  8. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and insights, Maggie. You and Matt both talk about Audio Books and next Saturday we welcome Will Dages from Findaway Voices! Rededicating myself to putting up at least my non-fiction in audio if not one of my fiction. Will be spending some time in the next week or so working out what I want to accomplish (beside audio books) in 2019. I've some leads on ways to expand my visibility which can lead to greater discoverability.

    Partners? I'm taking a look at who I'm partnered with now. I tend to stay connected with companies and professionals a long time even when I know it isn't as good a match as it could be. My first thought is what can I do to strengthen it...not always the best direction when I'm paying them for the services they provide.

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  9. Hi Maggie,
    Yes, the write-to-market method is so not me...or at least I like to think so. On the other hand, that income stream is an interesting puzzle, as I'm now the sole provider in the family. And just to make everything else less clear for myself, I already write in 5 genres...and I enjoy them all.
    I started in my 2 true loves: Science Fiction & Fantasy.
    While trying my hand at my second love: Thrillers
    I sold, launched my career, and have made my living for 6 years in: Military Romantic Suspense.
    And when I decided to shift a little sideways, only about 1/3 of my readers followed me into: Contemporary romance.

    I've done almost no discounting: $2.99 short story, $3.99 novella, $4.99 novel, $5.99 release price of any major (80k+) novel.

    So then I look and think, "Contemporary romance, while amusing (and much easier to write than Mil. Rom. Sus. which is very research intense), just doesn't earn the income I require...though it's a very nice supplement with 13 titles out there." But I don't think that it's because I write poor contemporary. I think it's because my true voice may well lie on the other side of MRS, over in thrillers. True thrillers make MRS look easy, but I do love the challenge as a writer.

    However, and here's the real catch, with a footprint of only 3 thrillers (the latest 4 years ago), I have no market draw and no income in the genre. Is my "true" writer's voice actually a best fit in thrillers? Is that why my income has plateaued (at a very nice level, no complaints, but it's not breaking out to the next level at all). Now the publisher steps in and begins debating required income and long-term career planning. (Because you're right, I'm absolutely playing the long game in my career.)

    Wrestle, wrestle, debate, wrestle. My decision has been that I'm going to hit a couple of strong books in a row (1 MRS, 1 Contemporary), then duck down and see about cranking up on thrillers for a pair of titles and see if I can't wake up that income stream at the same time as seeing if we're a good fit for each other. Then, duck back into MRS with a hot trilogy. (2019 gonna be busy.)

    So, not write-to-market, but write-to-income BY writing-to-voice is perhaps a better description...and a challenge. I guess it's one of those next-level problems that guarantees that a writing career will never be dull. :)

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  10. Matt, I love your redescription of "not write-to-market, but write-to-income BY writing-to-voice." It is a challenge, and I'll bet you can write great thrillers. Also, I suspect that more of your military romantic suspense readers will follow you to thrillers than you think. There are several examples of people who moved from romantic suspense to thriller because their voice was darker and the romance started taking a secondary and then a tertiary role.

    People who come to mind are: Karen Rose, Lisa Gardner, Lisa Jackson, and often Suzanne Brockmann and Linda Howard are marketed in both romantic suspense and thriller categories. I definitely remember watching Lisa Gardner and Lisa Jackson move more distinctly into the thriller ranks about ten years ago. Both of them had a similar story that their books kept getting more into the psychological thriller side and that part of their voice and story took over until after two or three books, there was no longer a romance plot at all.

    So, you stand with good writers and whatever direction you go I know you can make it work. Do keep us posted so we can wave the flag for you.

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  11. Thanks Maggie, Your latest comment really factored heavily into our conversations and thinking over the last week. Just incredibly helpful, as always. We're not 100% sure, but after the next RS novel, I may leap back into thrillers for a couple book test. My thriller voice isn't dark, it's gonzo. (The Dead Chef thrillers are actually light-hearted, political, foodie thrillers. The heroine is the head of the largest food network, where chefs keeping dying on camera, and it's up to her and her team of misfits to solve the massive political problem for which that is only the tip of the iceberg.) There's a freedom to that level of fun that my beta readers think really complement my voice. I'm thinking that we're going to find out this year. Thanks again.
    Whee!

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