A little story for you…
Once upon a time there was a little girl. We’ll
call her Emma. Emma wanted to join Facebook, but she was a long way under the
required age and her mum said no. Emma begged and begged, but her mum wouldn’t
budge because, she said, people were not always what they seemed and Emma was
not old enough to know who was nice and who was not. Emma wasn’t happy. Her friends
had Facebook. What do mothers know?
Then she had a great idea. She took her iPod
into her bedroom when Mum wasn't watching, downloaded the Facebook app and joined up anyway. She used a
different name of course, so her mum wouldn’t find her in her list of ‘possible
friends’. She wasn’t that silly.
Of course the whole idea of joining Facebook was so
that she could talk to her friends. So she told her friend at school, swearing
her to secrecy so that word of it wouldn’t get back to her mother. But the
friend proved to be no friend at all. She didn't keep secrets. Within days, Emma’s whole class knew.
Worse, they used it against her, making her do things for them - with the
threat of telling her mum if she didn’t do it.
Fortunately, Emma’s teacher worked out what was going
on. She advised Emma that the best solution was for her to tell her mum what
she’d done. Emma was scared, but she did as her teacher said. Of course, she
lost her iPod for a while as punishment for doing what she’d been told she
shouldn’t, and she no longer had Facebook under any name. But she had a clear
conscience, no one could force her to do anything any more and she had learned
a couple of big lessons: 1.Mum does know best 2.People are not always what
they seem.
The second of those lessons is one that a lot of
writers would be better off to learn before they publish. In fact there are a few lessons that many
writers seem not to have even thought about when they launch themselves as
self-published authors. Let's look at some. The first bears repeating –
© K.Stewart
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1. People are not always what they seem.
Don’t misunderstand me. There are some absolutely
wonderful people out there on the internet. I’ve been privileged enough to ‘meet’
quite a few of them. But there are also some who are out to dupe the unwary, by
pretending to be something they are not. Scammers and shysters. They might do
it just for the sense of power it gives them, they might do it to forward their
own cause at the expense of others. Either way, the new author needs to check
and double check before jumping into any scheme that looks too good to be true
(because it probably is). They also need to sit on their hands and be patient
when they think someone is ‘out to get them’…see the next rule.
2. The laws of physics relating to action/reaction
don’t necessarily apply on the internet.
There has been a lot of discussion lately about
arguments that have blown up between writers and reviewers. Apparently some
authors, irate at what they see as a personal attack have reacted to reviews
and started a flame war that got out of control. Readers run to the defence of
reviewers, authors run to the defence of authors and pretty soon it’s like a
couple of gangs in the schoolyard throwing stones at each other. The author
needs to remember a couple of things before reacting to any review. Firstly,
everyone is entitled to their opinion. What seems like an attack may be a
perfectly honest opinion given in good faith. Nobody can write a book that will please everyone. Secondly,
if they have given a bad review in order to annoy the author or to promote
another, the very thing they probably want him/her to do is to react. So
writing a comment after a review is ‘feeding the trolls’ – never a good idea.
3. Nobody owes you anything.
As I’ve said, there are some incredibly nice people
out there in cyberspace. They give their time generously to help authors –
giving reviews, tweeting links, advertising books on their sites, buying books. Unfortunately
their generosity is sometimes taken for granted. Authors ask for reviews and
become annoyed when they’re turned down, or worse – react badly to anything but
a five-star review. They put their book on a site and get annoyed when the site
is taken down due to lack of time to maintain it. The truth is, the
self-published author needs to work hard to get ahead and can’t expect others
to constantly give them a leg up. Give and take is a wonderful thing. Arrogance
will get you nowhere.
4. Mud sticks for eternity on the internet.
If I look on Google, I can find articles and snippets
of information about my favourite entertainer from before the internet even
existed. Once a piece of information is there, it is there for good. It is
almost impossible to have something removed. So, just as youngsters are warned
not to put photos of themselves on the internet that will embarrass them in
twenty years, an author must learn not to do anything that will come back to
haunt them in years to come. That big negative reaction to a review will never
be forgotten. That rude remark about another author will be held against you
forever. It’s about never letting down that professional front. It’s about not
giving the trolls ammunition.
5. Separate you-the-writer from you-the-person.
The internet is like a huge window with the whole
world looking in. In a way it’s great for an author to be able to interact with
their readers so easily, but at the same time, some distance has to be kept for
your own privacy and that of your family. While I love my family and would love
to show them off, those people who are not what they seem make me wary of doing
that. So I have a page on Facebook for me, mother of my children and a page for Katie W. Stewart, author of fantasy books. Even within my private page I have things that are
shown only to some. It seems the safest way to go, hidden away from the trolls.
7 comments:
About the professionalism of self-publishers, it is important to add that professional means editing a book before publishing it.
Unedited books do get bad reviews...
About the professionalism of self-publishers, it is important to add that professional means editing a book before publishing it.
Unedited books do get bad reviews...
Hi Patricia, and welcome. I totally agree with you. That's why I wrote about it here -
http://kates-scribbles.blogspot.com.au/2012/04/self-publishing-is-easy-isnt-it-part-1.html
There are so many pitfalls out there - it is difficult to spot them.
I think the greatest danger is the desire to take short cuts. They never seem to work out.
True. Again, it comes down to being professional, doesn't it?
Nice piece. You would think people would understand these sorts of things, but...
Ah, but that would require common sense, Christopher!
Actually, I think most people do already understand all this. There's just a few who get carried away.
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