The Magic Bakery: Copyright in the Modern World of Fiction Publishing: WMG Writer's Guides, #13
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About this ebook
USA Today bestselling writer Dean Wesley Smith helps writers understand the very nature of their business, how to sell more, and make more money from every story.
Using the metaphor of a magic bakery, copyright becomes easy to understand, and the writing business makes far more sense.
This book functions as a guide to help writers gain more from every story they write, protect their property, and understand how to expand their business into the future.
Clear, easy to read, and full of insights from a forty-year-career writer who understands how every story contains magic. Want more sales, more money from your writing? Come on in to The Magic Bakery.
Dean Wesley Smith
Considered one of the most prolific writers working in modern fiction, USA Today bestselling writer Dean Wesley Smith published far more than a hundred novels in forty years, and hundreds of short stories across many genres. At the moment he produces novels in several major series, including the time travel Thunder Mountain novels set in the Old West, the galaxy-spanning Seeders Universe series, the urban fantasy Ghost of a Chance series, a superhero series starring Poker Boy, and a mystery series featuring the retired detectives of the Cold Poker Gang. His monthly magazine, Smith’s Monthly, which consists of only his own fiction, premiered in October 2013 and offers readers more than 70,000 words per issue, including a new and original novel every month. During his career, Dean also wrote a couple dozen Star Trek novels, the only two original Men in Black novels, Spider-Man and X-Men novels, plus novels set in gaming and television worlds. Writing with his wife Kristine Kathryn Rusch under the name Kathryn Wesley, he wrote the novel for the NBC miniseries The Tenth Kingdom and other books for Hallmark Hall of Fame movies. He wrote novels under dozens of pen names in the worlds of comic books and movies, including novelizations of almost a dozen films, from The Final Fantasy to Steel to Rundown. Dean also worked as a fiction editor off and on, starting at Pulphouse Publishing, then at VB Tech Journal, then Pocket Books, and now at WMG Publishing, where he and Kristine Kathryn Rusch serve as series editors for the acclaimed Fiction River anthology series. For more information about Dean’s books and ongoing projects, please visit his website at www.deanwesleysmith.com and sign up for his newsletter.
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Book preview
The Magic Bakery - Dean Wesley Smith
Introduction
Indie writers make great money these days with their small and medium-sized businesses. Some make millions, while at the same time others sell few books.
The writers selling few copies tend to look for reasons why they are not selling. I could spend a lot of time listing all the reasons writers find for a book not selling, but almost always the reason is a very simple business reason.
Inventory.
And a complete failure to understand what they are selling.
But that seemingly simple answer has a vast universe of issues around it. And understanding inventory in publishing takes an understanding of copyright.
So for this book, I am going to extend the metaphor of a Magic Bakery far past its breaking point. Over the years, as I have used this metaphor to help people understand how the business of publishing works, the metaphor seems to help.
And it helps writers understand copyright, the very thing that generates the sales and the money for the business.
So here goes.
Let’s open the door to the Magic Bakery, let the wonderful smells of baking bread and fresh doughnuts flow around us. Ignore the racks of cookies sitting in one case and the counter full of wonderful cakes with chocolate frostings.
Head right for the vast cases in the center of the bakery full of pies of all types. All cut and ready to be served either whole or by the slice.
Welcome to your writing business.
The Back Room
Back behind the main counter, beyond that swinging door, is where the magic really occurs.
Flower and flavoring and fresh fruit. Then add sugar and other ingredients and it all comes together in a certain way to create a pie.
A magic pie.
Skill is involved to make the pie, to have it look right, smell right, and most importantly, taste right to the customer.
Years of practiced skill.
Yup, I’m talking about your creation of story. Novel or short story, doesn’t matter.
Just like a pie, you take things from the world and combine them in your own unique way to create a wonderful product, a story, for your customers.
Some stories are similar to one another as in a series. Others are as different as a chocolate cream pie would be to a Dutch apple pie. But the customers don’t much care.
Sure, each customer has a favorite. Some like the chocolate cream, others go for cherry. But if you have a regular, a true fan, they will try most everything eventually.
A Few Things This Book Will Cover
So in this book, as each chapter goes on, I will talk about opening your bakery when you are still learning how to bake. (Yes, you should, to answer that basic question right off.)
You are learning how to make your pies look like a pie and have a unique taste that customers will return for over and over. That takes time and work. Learning any skill does.
Also, this book will deal some with how the presentation to the customers in your bakery is critical as well.
And how to even get your customers to the front door of your bakery and then what do you do when they walk through the door to help the customer stay, buy, and return later.
All critical aspects to any business.
Real bakeries or magic. Hardware stores or bookstores.
All businesses worry about those exact problems.
But mostly this book will talk about the magic in the pie itself.
You see, just one element of your magic pie is that when you remove a piece, if you do it correctly, that piece can make you money with a customer and yet the pie will remain whole.
The piece of pie that just made you money magically is back in the pie and ready to sell again.
A magic pie.
And that is only one small aspect of the magic.
So stay with me for some chapters here as I extend this metaphor to the extreme in order to help you understand the value, the importance, and the magic of copyright in your writing.
And also help you understand some real reasons why your work isn’t selling many copies in this new, crowded world.
You might not like the reasons. But at least you will know how to fix the problems.
And by the end of this book you will know how to have a bakery where lines of customers form out the door to buy your wonderful work.
That is what this book is all about.
Onward.
1
Digging down into all the vast areas of how writers sell books and the business of selling fiction, I figured the best way to start this would be on the surface, explaining some real logical, but forgotten (by writers), business concepts.
So an example: A young writer (not in age, but in experience) writes and finishes a first novel. And somehow manages to avoid all the traps of rewriting and letting a peer workshop kill the book. Fantastic!
This is a real event and once published should be celebrated. First novels are important to every writer. Get copies out to family, tell friends where the