Let’s kick off reader question answer week with a real doozy. CDThomas asks:
I don’t have a website or blog. And I don’t know if I want one.
I understand if I’d create a blog for nattering on, but most of that itch gets scratched by Twitter. I’m not much of an essay writer, because I think I find others who say what I’m thinking better than I would.
That leaves self-promotion, possibly, of my fiction (plays, poems, short stories). If I don’t want to go the full Doctorow and Creative-Commons license everything, then how do I decide how much of my work to publish online?
I’m not going to be the type of writer who obsessively searches for online theft, but I need to find a way of talking about what I’m doing before I’m published regularly by magazines, online or otherwise — learning how to be part of a writing SF/F/H community, I guess, but without my questions getting lost on web boards.
First of all, I don’t think every writer needs a website or a blog. Anyone who says they do is probably selling something (to paraphrase The Princess Bride). Now, I sell web design services, but I would never try to sell a writer on a blog/website if they didn’t have any interest in maintaining or updating it. It sounds like you know what you like, and that’s Twitter. That’s great! You can do a lot to build a reputation and an audience with just that service. I tend to recommend a more comprehensive strategy. I think of it as being like fishing. You can fish all day in one spot if you want, and you’ll catch fish. You’ll catch fish if you change up your lure and move around too. Now, readers aren’t fish, but potential readers/fans can be found in a lot of different places. Unlike fishing, you can be in multiple places at one time. So it’s more like having a couple of poles in the water.
Okay, that metaphor is stretched to the breaking point. Moving on.
I used to blog rarely, thinking basically that I didn’t have anything unique to say. But I don’t think that’s true of anyone, especially anyone who writes. Why do we write if we’re not compelled do to do so by a need to share something we feel is unique? Everyone has something unique to say. Maybe not on every topic or issue, but everyone has within them, in my opinion, the potential to write a great and gripping blog. Sometimes this involves living a very public life, sharing your deepest embarrassments. Sometimes, it means sharing the little bit of knowledge about writing you’ve garnered. But if you’re sure, no big deal. You don’t need to have one. Nobody’s going to order you to have one.
Now, how do you decide what fiction to release online if you don’t want to go the full Creative Commons route and release absolutely everything? My opinion is, unless you’re really, really certain of it, don’t release it online unless it’s been published somewhere. I’ve written possibly a hundred short stories. But only about a dozen are available for anyone to read outside of my close friends and family, and only one of those was self-published online.
It’s hard to build authenticity as a self-publisher. It’s not impossible, but the thing is, there is a lot of stuff to read online. People are looking for reasons to key in on things to read, and just throwing your writing out there all on its own can be a very hard way of building authenticity. I’m not saying it’s impossible, but I personally wouldn’t want to go that route.
Now, say you’ve sold a couple of stories. You might want to release some of them online, but let’s backtrack and remember that we don’t have a website. How do we release fiction online and get it out there to be read if we don’t have a website? Well, you can throw up a quick free website with a service like Blogger or LiveJournal. Or you can sell your fiction as downloads with Fictionwise. Or you could upload it to Scribd and take your chances. There are a lot of ways to put your work out there without having a website, but you take your chances with each one of them. It’s really, really hard to get people to pay attention to you online.
I find that it’s best to try online reprint sales first. Might as well get some money from it, right? That’s more respectability than just publishing it online yourself. Most sites will archive it for a long time. The podcasts like Escape Pod, Drabblecast, and Starship Sofa are another great way to get your fiction online in basically a permanent fashion. The main difference here is that someone else is lending credibility to your work by selecting it for their publication, as opposed to you putting it up on your personal website. If one place liking a story gives cred, imagine that two places means even more cred. Same principle behind the Year’s Best anthologies, I think.
As to how much of your work should you get online? That’s up to you and I can’t give you a satisfactory answer. I personally try to get every single story online via the ways I’ve listed above. If I can’t sell something as a reprint or podcast, I’ll format it nicely on my website and throw it up myself. Especially if I want to do a cool illustration to go along with it. Once you’ve made all the money you can from a story, why not put it out there for free? Stories are disposable most of the time. If you write a story so great that you can resell it dozens of times, then, well, someone will post it online for you whether you want them to or not. Try Googling the title of a classic SF short story, and you’re likely to find a bootleg copy online on some poorly policed .edu site as much as anything else. Might as well be the person to be in control of it, right?
The last aspect of the question above deals with how to become a part of the community and take part in a conversation without being lost amongst the noise. This is very easy. I’ll break it out in bullet points.
- Pick four or five blogs or forums and haunt them. Check them every day if you can.
- Provide helpful answers to questions. Key word here is helpful. Don’t be negative or critical unless it’s asked for. Talk about yourself and your work only if it relates directly to the topic at hand. Be positive. Try to find a unique perspective on the posts you comment on.
- Do that over and over again. You’ll get a reputation quickly.
There are other ways, but I think this is the easiest way. It involves putting in a lot of time, but being a part of a community isn’t easy. I have a really hard time keeping up with all the writer blogs and forums I would like to read in an ideal world. I try to stay on top of a few specific ones as best I can. I’m not very good about my second point of advice, so bear that in mind, but I think if I could do things over again, that’s how I would approach it.
I hope some of these answers prove helpful. If anyone else has any advice for CDThomas, please share it in the comments.
I just checked fictionwise, and it seems new authors can’t sell their writing there. You need to have 10 fiction publications, and they only take reprints, not original fiction.
A pity!
Personally I’m going for the “give it all away for free” method. That reminds me, I must look up how to format Epub versions for easy embedding of “book cover” image.
Thank you!
Silly me, I didn’t even know there was such a thing as an online reprint market. Thought everyone wanted the right to publish a thing first, no matter the medium.…
I’d like to have a body of work first before having a website talking about it, but will keep thinking about your advice.