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The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » Archives for 2016 » Page 20

Archives for 2016

The Bookstore is Outnumbered

By Steve Laubeon March 14, 2016
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We had a client ask why their book could not be found in the bookstores. It is a common question. One that I tried to answer last year in a post about logistics. Today I’ll approach it from a different direction. The sheer number of books that are being published.

Let me start with two sets of statistics. Barnes & Noble (B&N) is the largest retail bookstore in the U.S. Their stores are about 25,000 square feet in size and carry at least 100,000 unique titles on their shelves. I love walking into one of their stores hoping to find a new treasure.

Next let’s look at the largest publisher in the world, Penguin Random House (PRH). They have 250 imprints on 5 continents and publish 15,000 new titles per year.

Think about that for a moment. B&N carries 100,000 titles, but PRH creates 15,000 new ones each year. And that is just one publisher, albeit a really big one!

There are rough estimates that over 300,000 new books are published each year, in English. (Based on the number of ISBN numbers issued annually.) This does not include the other books published without an ISBN through Amazon’s Create Space service (Amazon issues an ASIN – Amazon Standard Identification Number) so it is possible we could add another 50,000 to 100,000 titles to that total.

When I was the national buyer for a large Christian bookstore chain our largest stores carried about 10,000 unique titles but I estimated that I saw 5,000 new books each year and had to choose which ones were carried in our stores.

You can quickly see the problem for you, the author. If your book is not going to get substantial exposure in the market, or your “platform” is not one that will drive people into stores or online to buy your book, it is likely your book will not be found on the shelves of your local store.

I remember one customer who asked me, “Have you read every book in the store?” I laughed and said, “I’m sorry ma’am but I’m a bit outnumbered.” It is the same for any store with limited shelf space.

This is one reason the Amazon’s of the world have an advantage because their shelves are limitless online. But I can understand an author’s desire to walk into their local store and find their book. Nothing wrong with that. However, one cannot or should not blame their publisher for not getting it on that particular shelf at the moment you walk into that specific store.

For all you know your book is actually in the store, just on the wrong shelf. I still remember seeing Charles Swindoll’s Improving Your Serve (a book about serving your church and your community) in the Sports section along with the other Tennis books. Another time I found a Janette Oke prairie romance in-between Max Brand and Louis L’Amour in the Western novels section.

As with our last post on this topic, we are not discussing whether or not bookstores are going defunct, or whether ebooks are superior to physical books. Merely a conversation on one of the challenges a bookstore faces.

 

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Category: Book Business, TrendsTag: Bookstores, Trends

Fun Fridays – March 11, 2016

By Steve Laubeon March 11, 2016
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This is the perfect illustration on the importance of “voice” in a book. The first version is the way it should be. The second version is how so many books sound to an editor’s ear. Beyond that, the video is simply a brilliant expression of what creativity sounds like! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLhJIFC8xkY HT: Trissina Kear

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Category: Fun Fridays

Turn Envy Upside Down

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon March 10, 2016
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Envy is one of the seven deadly sins and not easy to conquer. Who hasn’t felt jealous over someone else’s success, especially when it doesn’t seem deserved? Seeing an outright enemy succeed is even worse. It doesn’t have to be this way. Instead, take your feelings of envy and put them to good use. That is, make those feelings work for you so you can succeed. Here’s how: When someone in your sphere …

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Category: Career, Communication, The Writing LifeTag: Career, Envy, The Writing Life

What An Editor Does –Phase 1

By Karen Ballon March 9, 2016
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As we saw from the comments last week, editors have many tasks. As do copyeditors and proofreaders, but for the next few blogs we’re focusing on editors. I’ve been an editor for over 35 years, both in-house and freelance. And I’ve worked with all categories of books except Children’s books and academic titles. So here, from that perspective, is my take on what editors do. First, let’s look at what …

Read moreWhat An Editor Does –Phase 1
Category: Craft, Creativity, Editing, Writing CraftTag: Editing, Editor, Writing Craft

The Friendly Social-Media Purge

By Dan Balowon March 8, 2016
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How many friends do you have? I mean really close friends? My guess is any of us would name relatively few people you can consider in that category. If it wasn’t for social media, how many people can you recall their birthdays if asked? Social media gives the impression you can have thousands of friends. It’s lying. If you think you are close friends with all of the 600 people you are connected …

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Category: Social MediaTag: Social Media

Mistakes Writers Make in their Queries

By Steve Laubeon March 7, 2016
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The pile of unsolicited proposal, queries, and manuscripts (both email and physical mail) is an unending source of delight and frustration. Delight when an amazing idea from an amazing writer arrives like a special holiday gift. Unfortunately that doesn’t happen as often as I would like. Instead there is a litany of things authors do time and again. If writers would treat their query or book …

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Category: Book Proposals, Career

Fun Fridays – March 4, 2016

By Steve Laubeon March 4, 2016
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Does this hilarious song describe your day? Sing this tune the next time it happens to you…and it will!

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Category: Fun Fridays

The Truth About Criticism

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon March 3, 2016
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Last week I talked about limiting the amount of mean criticism you have to put up with. This week, let’s revisit that topic, only to learn from it. Yes, we can learn when someone is mean to us. We’ve all had unhappy feelings when attacked. Maybe it’s a twinge in your chest or gut, a reflexive desire to lash out, a sense of unfairness, of being misunderstood. Maybe it’s all of those. Everyone has …

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Category: Career, Communication, Social MediaTag: Career, Criticism

What Does an Editor Do?

By Karen Ballon March 2, 2016
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When I tell people I’m an editor, I get some interesting comments… “Wow, you must really know how to spell great!” “So, what, you fix commas and stuff?” “An editor, huh? Don’t you get tired of rewriting other people’s stuff?” “Don’t you get tired of reading?” “Wow, so you get to tell authors what to do, huh?” What’s especially interesting to me is that some of these comments aren’t, as you might …

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Category: Editing, Writing CraftTag: Editing, Writing Craft

No Comment

By Dan Balowon March 1, 2016
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A few years after the dawn of the internet in the mid-nineties, vision for the world wide web shifted to the “2.0” version, which involved encouraging audience interaction, viewed as significant progress by marketers and communications experts. Comment sections, message boards, chat and community discussion started off with great energy and excitement as we began to “engage” our audience. What …

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Category: Communication, Social MediaTag: Communication, Social Media
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