By
Debbie Young, Indie Author & Ambassador for the Alliance of Independent
Authors (ALLi)
A year ago, who could have known how 2020
would turn out?
Certainly not me when this time last December I shared with you
my predictions for indie authors for the new year. I take comfort from ALLi’s
Twitter Chat host Tim Lewis, who says, “Predictions are usually wrong, but they
tell you about the current zeitgeist”. So here goes for a new round of
predictions for 2021, inevitably many of them connected in some way with the
impact of the Covid-19.
Despite the turmoil wrought by the
pandemic, ALLi Director Orna Ross reminds us of the positives for indie authors:
“All the indications are that 2020 was a bumper year for sales of
author-published books, eg aggregator PublishDrive noted a 58% increase in book
sales in October 2020 compared with the same month in 2019.”
But as she acknowledges, it was hardly plain
sailing. “While some authors found lockdown led to inspiration, with fewer
distractions and less travel giving them more time for writing and publishing,
others had less time, due to caring for dependents. Still others had a hard
time focusing and found the turbulence and constraints destabilising.”
Writing Priorities
I believe that having had more time and
solitude to reflect on their writing lives, more authors will now be
reconsidering their priorities. We all feel more mortal now than we did a year
ago. Will those used to spending every spare waking hour writing have a change
of heart and spend more time with their loved ones? Might those writing to
market start writing from the heart instead? (Of course, there are some lucky
souls who can do both with the same book!) I predict we’ll see more passion
projects in 2021 – the kind of books we don’t want to leave unwritten when we
go to our graves. “I’d like to think that 2021 will be the year that quality,
not quantity, takes priority,” says Carol Cooper, hybrid author of fiction and
non-fiction.
Writing Trends
Earlier this year, there was much debate on
author forums as to whether we’re about to see a spate of Covid-inspired
fiction. The possibilities are endless, from the hospital romance of pandemic
medic and patient, to dystopian apocalypse in a world where the virus mutates
faster than vaccines can be found. More importantly, will readers want to read
them? I back Tim Lewis’s prophesy: “The 2020s will be similar to the 1920s in
having a great (but ultimately temporary) reaction to the Covid crisis, just as
those in the 1920s reacted to the Spanish Flu after the First World War, so
expect a revival of light, fluffy fiction towards the end of 2021 as the Covid
event subsides.” I’m not saying that only because I write upbeat, feel-good
fiction myself!
Orna Ross predicts a different kind of change
in readers’ tastes. “Consumers will seek out more mindful and personalised
experience online and off. Independent authors will source and take such readers
with them into their publishing adventure, through patronage, crowdfunding,
premium products and other ways, in addition to making and selling books.”
Marketing Trends
Although independent publishing has stood
up well during the pandemic, with many authors selling many more books than
every before, few will have taken their eye off the constant imperative to
market their books. However, there is a growing disillusionment with marketing
courses that propose a one-size-fits-all solution. In one of ALLi’s recent
Twitter Chats, run weekly under the hashtag #indieauthorchat, ALLi’s News
Editor Dan Holloway identified as a prevailing self-publishing myth “that there’s
a template for it [book marketing] you can find in a course and copy and paste
into making sales. I think as indies we look far too much to a few superstars
and assume the answers they found for them will work for us.”
With most live events cancelled in 2020, online
advertising became very much more competitive, inflating bid prices and decimating
returns. More and more authors asked themselves whether it was a waste of good
writing time. In my own circle of indie author friends, many are turning their
backs on Facebook and AMS ads, instead planning that the focus of their 2021
marketing strategy will be monthly reader newsletters underpinned by a strong
mailing list magnet, plus occasional paid newsletters such as Freebooksy and
BargainBooksy, with Bookbub still the Holy Grail.
But first and foremost, writing and
publishing more books will be their priority, in whatever frequency works best
for them as individuals and for their particular business model. The old maxim
still holds, especially when you are starting out, that the best marketing
strategy is to write the next book.
Indie Author Business Trends
With so many people everywhere struggling with
the long-term financial impact of Covid, more of the general public may turn to
writing in hope of building much-needed income. Sadly, they will quickly
discover that it’s not a get-rich-quick scheme, nor even a get-solvent-quick
scheme. I just hope they manage to avoid the vultures ever hovering on the
edges of the industry, picking off naïve newbies by telling them what they want
to hear, before fleecing them for false promises.
ALLi’s Watchdog John Doppler concurs: “As
the pandemic puts pressure on the market, ALLi’s Watchdog Desk is already
seeing an increase in scams, exploitative schemes and unqualified publishing
services being pitched to authors. Chief among these are marketing services
that are unlikely to yield a return on the investment. Authors must take great
care to ensure that services they hire are vetted, competent, and stable, even
more so in the coming year.”
Even some experienced authors were caught
out this year, because their risk was not sufficiently spread across sales
funnels, especially those whose incomes are dependent on physical bookstores
and live events. They would do well in 2021 to broaden their operating base,
taking their books wide and making sure they are well represented online.
On the other hand, the cancellation of
conventional events compelled indies to build valuable new skill sets.
Award-winning author Jean Gill predicts: “In 2021, more and more authors will
reach new readers and market books using audio-visuals with Zoom etc as we
apply the new IT skills Covid isolation has forced on us. The must-haves will
be good quality headphones and microphone, recording and slideshow software,
and – to update Virginia Woolf – a home studio of your own.”
Overall, however, there is an air of
digging in for the duration. Award-winning thriller writer Alison Morton
suggests: “2021 will be a year of survival and consolidation when we can gather
again in real time, recover our speaking gigs and meet up with our genre
colleagues. My instinct is that ebooks will still be the most consumed formats
and that indie authors will turn away from time-sucking marketing to writing
more books.”
Consolidation
As 2020 draws to a close, one of the big
news stories in the world of independent publishing is was “Audiblegate”, as it
became clear that Amazon had been actively encouraging Audible subscribers to
return used audiobooks for credit at the expense of the authors’ royalties. As
yet unresolved, this scandal has shaken the trust of many indies, particularly
those whose audiobooks are exclusive to Amazon via its ACX audiobook publishing
platform. It’s inevitable that in 2021 more authors will be reluctant to commit
to ACX exclusivity and will publish their audiobooks wide. I suspect whether this
development will also encourage more indie authors whose ebooks are in KDP
Select will also take those wide as a point of principle.
More radically, will 2021 see more indies
at least flirt with trade contracts for at least one book as a kind of
insurance policy? Will that come to be viewed as another means of going wide?
While it wouldn’t surprise me, let me remind you that the big publishing houses
have struggled to cope with a pandemic that closes bookstores. Think how many
books due to be launched back in the spring had their publication date put back
till September. Any indie author considering this route should sign only any
contracts that offer them something they can’t do as well or better as indies.
The divide between trade and indie grows
ever more blurry. ALLi Advice Center Blog Manager Sacha Black elaborates: “With
yet another merger on the traditional front just announced (Penguin Random
House and Simon and Schuster), I won’t be surprised if there’s another big
influx of previously trad authors into the indie market.”
Another way of bolstering your business
against whatever new shocks 2021 might bring is to make your books available in
as many formats as possible to maximise the earnings on each piece of
intellectual property; licensing selective rights (translations, film, etc);
and direct selling on your website. It’s much easier to write and publish one
book in half a dozen formats than to write and publish six books in a single
format.
Strengthening Foundations
But before we get too carried away with
ambitions to turn our books into Hollywood blockbusters, it’s a good idea to
treat the start of a new year as a timely opportunity to take stock of where
you are now and to fix any problems. Sacha explains: “Of all the lessons I’ve
learned in 2020, it’s that in order to keep your business stable during global
crises like coronovirus, you have to make sure your business foundations are in
place. Indies are at an advantage because part of our ethos is to be independent.
But it’s even more important in times like this. It’s vital we own as many of
our assets as possible, that we’re up to date, our reader funnels are slick and
that we have a mechanism of selling our books and products even if the big
bookstores go under. Do you have a mailing list? And are your autoresponders up
to date? Are you selling direct? Do you have other streams of income? Is your
website clean, tidy, up to date and fitting in with your branding and current
content? This year I’ve gone back to basics to ensure that the foundations I’m
growing my business on are solid, and I’d recommend others do too.”
Opportunities in Audio
Notwithstanding Audiblegate, 2021 bodes
well for the audiobook market, so make sure you’re ready to roll with it. Over
to ALLi’s Multimedia Manager Howard Lovy: “Last year I urged everybody to read
their drafts out loud to hear how they would sound in audiobook form, since
more and more people are consuming books through their ears rather than their
eyes. After all, what could possibly interrupt our busy lives on the go,
between our commutes to work and trips to the gym? What I did not predict, of
course, was that a pandemic would force most of us back into our homes for the
duration. Yet, even under lockdown, audiobook sales continue to rise. Not only
that, we’re downloading more podcasts as we settle into semi-permanent home
life. The move to audio appears to be pandemic-proof, so I’d advise all authors
to think about how your book’s ‘voice’ sounds when paired with your literal voice
(or that of an actor). Also, how can you turn your book or your author brand
into a podcast? Your readers would love to listen.”
Audio isn’t the only technical area that
will see a flurry of activity in the new year, as Orna Ross explains: “2020 was
also notable because of technological audiences that are making the writing,
publishing and marketing of books ever easier and increasing distribution
options for the self-published authors
around the world. And the Covid crisis accelerated trends that were new to
other parts of the book business eg digital bookselling, online events, but
already long-established practice for indie authors.”
Conclusions
Despite the optimism and excitement
surrounding the new vaccines, we still have some way to go before we can return
to normal life – or whatever the new normal may prove to be. Says ALLi’s
Outreach Manager Michael La Ronn, “2021 will look more like 2020 than 2019.
Authors will still benefit from people staying at home, at least for much of
the year. As more people emerge from lockdown and return to daily commuting,
we’ll like see a resurgence in audiobook and podcast listening again.”
John Doppler concurs: “As always, changes
in the industry bring challenges and opportunities. Authors who can adapt to
that shifting terrain will see an unusually profitable year.”
Last word to Orna Ross: “In a year of
unprecedented difficulty, self-publishing has proved itself to be not just
resilient but ahead of the curve, and we expect that to continue in 2021.”
Whatever surprises 2021 may bring, keep
writing and self-publishing!
Here’s to happy and healthy new year for us
all.
|
Author Debbie Young |
BIO
Debbie Young is UK Ambassador and Special
Projects Manager for the Alliance of Independent Authors, the global nonprofit
for professional self-publishing authors. She is also a prolific indie author, writing
warm, witty fiction set in the English Cotswolds countryside where she has
lived for most of her adult life. She has two series of cozy mystery novels,
the Sophie Sayers Village Mysteries, starting with Best Murder in Show,
and the new Staffroom at St Bride’s series, starting with Secrets at St
Bride’s, shortlisted for the 2020 Selfies Award for the Best Independently
Published Adult Fiction in the UK. She also has a new series of quick reads, Tales
from Wendlebury Barow, which starts with The Natter of Knitters. A
free short novella (11k words), The Pride of Peacocks, is available exclusively
to members of her Readers’ Club, which you can join via her author website at www.authordebbieyoung.com. She also
has three collections of short stories, including the Christmas-themed Stocking
Fillers. Each April in her home village she runs the Hawkesbury Upton
Literature Festival, showcasing dozens of indie authors, but sadly it is now postponed
until 2022 due to the pandemic.
Debbie Young’s Author Website: http://www.authordebbieyoung.com
ALLi Self-publishing Advice Center Blog: http://www.selfpublishingadvice.com
ALLi Membership Website: http://www.allianceindependentauthors.org
5 comments:
Debbie, Thank You for sharing ALLi's perspective on 2020 and 2021. My 2020 plan had included at least one audio book. You, M.L. Buchman and Maggie Lynch, our other December guests, have all pointed to the importance of having our books available in as many formats as possible with emphasis on audio. Now to find a good headset and microphone without leaving the house - lol.
Debbie - a lot to take in. Thanks for the concise round-up of this year and into next. Here's to a happy, healthy, and productive new year for all writers (and readers.)
A very interesting look back at the past year and look forward to the new year. There's plenty of food for thought there. Many thanks, Debbie.
Debbie, This was a wonderfully thorough look at what happened this year and its impacts on next year. Thank you for taking the time to put it all together. I particularly liked how you brought in other ALLi folks opinions.
There were three things that really stood out to me.
"I’d like to think that 2021 will be the year that quality, not quantity, takes priority." I pray this is true because I have not been one who likes more of the same plot, characters, tropes. That's not to say that authors shouldn't write in series. I think they should. But I'd like it to me deeper characterizations, interesting twists, and something to warrant spending the time. Your books are like that, Debbie. So, thank you for that.
"I think as indies we look far too much to a few superstars and assume the answers they found for them will work for us." I soooo agree with this statement. I know so many authors who have spent thousands of dollars on courses or marketing plans or PR from someone who is a huge seller. Often that huge seller writes in a genre not like that of the author. Often that huge seller had a financial leg up to start that most indies don't have (high paying job, spouse with high paying job, a mix of course delivery and speaking engagements that pay more than the books). Unfortunately, I don't know if this will change because most newbies I meet want that magic "easy button" to fame and riches. Who else to get it from than someone who has made it.
This is not to say that all big celebrity authors are crap at teaching courses. There are some people who have done a great job. But most of them don't have the time or inclination to help individual students craft a plan for their unique writing style, budget, genre, time constraints.
Finally, I agree 100% that spending the time (often years) to get a traditional contract is more often doomed to disappointment than learning how to be a better indie writer and business person. Far too many people still believe that if they get a traditional contract all their desires will be met. They will have the perfect book, marketed well, and won't have to do anything except write. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
Thanks again, Debbie. I'd like to make a plug for everyone to check out ALLi membership. It is a great organization with a track record for advocating for indie authors and their books. ALLi is well-organized, has a supportive community, and the member benefits are outstanding. These include free self-help books, good blog posts, discounts on services from vetted vendors, and access to all virtual events and recordings as well as many others.
Thanks for a most informative blog post!!! It contains so much great information.
Alli sounds like a good professional group. I will check in to joining ALLi in the near future.
Happy Holidays!
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