Of course it differs from one writer to the next, and you certainly  shouldn’t move to ePublishing only if you’re already traditionally  published and earning a living from your traditionally published work.  However, I have noticed there’s a reason why your ebooks aren’t selling  as well as they could be, a reason that you’ve apparently overlooked and  that can be easily remedied. 
EPublishing is a great option for  writers who haven’t been able to find a traditional publisher yet, as  well as traditionally published writers whose books are out-of-print.  For most of those who choose to epublish, the choice isn’t between  self-publishing and traditionally publishing a particular book: it’s  between self-publishing and not publishing that book at all. 
It  goes without saying that a game that allows anyone to play would have  many players who don’t know what they’re doing, so of course the average  self-published writer would earn less money than the average  traditionally published writer. Traditional publishing has a vetting  process that self-publishing doesn’t. 
However, if you’ve been in  this game as long as I have, you know the vetting process isn’t  perfect. Christopher Moore—my favorite writer—supposedly sent out a  hundred query letters to agents and received nothing but rejections. He  only got an agent through a connection in show business. The writer of  the Pulitzer Prize winning A Confederacy of Dunces committed suicide because he couldn’t get  that book published while he was still alive. Great writers are looked  over by agents and traditional publishers all the time. In fact, it’s  the norm. And we’ve all seen terrible writers who have somehow managed  to get their books traditionally published. (Of course, it doesn’t hurt  to have your own reality TV show, like Snooki on Jersey Shore.) Luck  plays a huge part in the traditional publishing game—more than talent,  hard work, or anything else. In Self-publishing, however, luck only  plays the smallest role. Success is determined by talent, writing the  kind of book people want to read, marketing it well,  and learning from  those who have successfully epubbed their own books, like Amanda  Hocking, J.A. Konrath, and John Locke. 
As for why you personally  would have a 66% drop in earnings if you decided to only epublish your  books, I checked out your books on Kindle and discovered that you’ve  priced them out of the market. A book you sell on Kindle for $7.99 can  also be bought on Amazon used in hardcover for $.01 plus $3.99 for  shipping for a total of $4.00. It doesn’t take a genius to realize  people aren’t going to pay twice as much for the Kindle edition as the  hardcover. If you reprice your books on Kindle so that they’re less than  $4.00 ($2.99 is the price recommended by both J.A. Konrath and Amazon),  you should see a significant rise in your sale of books on Kindle. Keep  in mind that you don’t earn a dime on the used copies of your physical  books that Amazon is selling, but you could be making $2 for every  Kindle edition priced at $2.99 that you've epublished yourself.
Monday, April 04, 2011
Response to a Traditionally Published Writer Regarding eBooks
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Friday, April 01, 2011
Google search of book bloggers who review fantasy
Ebook bestseller Amanda Hocking credits reviews from book bloggers for her successs. To find them, use the Google book-bloggers search engine. Type in the genre, and you'll get a list of people who review books in that genre.
http://www.google.com/cse?cx=017997935591651423304%3A5fpbgt6-tou&ie=UTF-8&q=fantasy&hl=en
Once you have your list, email the reviewers with Smashwords coupons for free copies of your book: http://www.smashwords.com/press/release/4
http://www.google.com/cse?cx=017997935591651423304%3A5fpbgt6-tou&ie=UTF-8&q=fantasy&hl=en
Once you have your list, email the reviewers with Smashwords coupons for free copies of your book: http://www.smashwords.com/press/release/4
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