Most authors start off self-publishing as a purely creative endeavor, with little expectation around writing more books or earning a great deal. But if you get the bug of writing, you may find yourself with a lot of intellectual property assets that earn you a decent income every month. At that point, you might well be running your own author business!
In today's show, Helen Sedwick talks about how to turn your writing hobby into a business.
In the intro, I mention some of my highlights from London Book Fair (more on that later this week on the blog), which coincided with the launch of the new
Amazon Kindle Oasis at the premium end of the ebook device market. Remember also to check out the sessions from the Indie Author Fringe, which presented a 24 hour online summit that you can still access on the
Self Publishing Advice site. It includes the recording of the session on
Sell more books in more formats in more countries with me, Mark Dawson, Orna Ross and Toby Mundy.
The corporate sponsorship for this show pays for hosting and transcription. This podcast episode is sponsored by
99 Designs, where you can get all kinds of designs for your author business including book covers, merchandising, branding and business cards, illustrations and artwork and much more. You can get a Powerpack upgrade which gives your project more chance of getting noticed by going to:
99Designs.com/joanna
Helen Sedwick is a California attorney with 30 years' experience representing a diverse range of businesses and entrepreneurs. She writes historical fiction, and is well known in the indie author world for
The Self-Publisher's Legal Handbook and has also recently co-written
How Authors Sell Publishing Rights with Orna Ross (which
we recently discussed on the podcast here).
Her latest product is
Publishing Business in a Box, which we're talking about today.
You can listen above or
on iTunes or
Stitcher or
watch the video here, read the notes and links below. Here are the highlights and full transcript below.
* The maturation of the indie author community.
* What an ‘author business' means, and the point at which authors should start thinking about their writing as a business.
*
The mindset benefits for authors around thinking about their writing as a business.
* The challenges of the indie author business.
* The two types of record-keeping that author entrepreneurs need to be conscious of, and the software available to support an author business.
* Pen names, publisher names and imprint names, and what name your books should be copyrighted under.