So. I've been doing this indie writer thing for a while now
(eight years) and I've gotten pretty good at it. Good enough that I quit my job
and went full time. It hasn't been all wine and roses, and there were
definitely some disappointments along the way. But I've learned the business.
I've also learned how to make money at it.
Writing to market (WTM) is where you hear of a hot market,
you immediate write a story to be published in the market and publish it, in an
attempt to sucker in, I mean, make quick money. Unfortunately ten thousand other people also heard about that
market and have raced in there as well, to dump their 'finely crafted' stories
in the same market.
The end result of course is that you and all the rest of
them just shit all over everything. People stop
buying anything in the market, unless it's by a name they recognize, and your
trash lingers on just stinking up the place and destroying the chances for any
truly talented people to make a name for themselves in that market, because you
chased everyone away. You end up with a few bucks (if you're lucky) and ten
weeks later you're chasing another market, where you are sure to 'make it this time!'
The fact of the matter is, you're never going to make it. Writing to market doesn't work. If you were good enough to drop a story in any market
and do well there, you would know this, and you would have already gone out and
found a place to make a name for yourself. Which means you wouldn't be writing
to market. When you write to market you are just endlessly chasing the golden
ticket, you don't know a damn thing about the market and it shows to everyone
who reads your book.
So rule number one, if you want to be a successful writer, don't write to market.
I have a little joke I used to tell people that the way to
be successful is to write to market, as long as you love the market and know
everything about it. The point of that is two-fold: The first is that if
you do not know and love the market you're writing in, it shows! People can tell
if you're a fraud and that you're just phoning it in. The second is that when
you decide you want to write something, pick a 'market' that you know and
understand and will enjoy writing in. Don't chase the trends! It's a waste of your
time and creativity, not to mention your reputation.
Let's look at Michael Anderle for a moment. What market or
genre if you like, do you think he writes in? Trick question! There isn't one.
Or rather there wasn't one until he
created it himself. That's part of why he's so successful. He took a bunch
of stuff that he knew, and he thought it would be fun to throw all of it
together in a way that's never been done before. Then: profit! And remember, he
was only trying to make fifty thousand a year, not what he ended up making. His
stories, when they first came out, suffered from terrible grammar, spelling
mistakes, and bad editing. But he still sold tens of thousands of copies.
Because he loved what he was doing and it showed.
He was having fun, so everyone reading had fun too. And wanted more.
I did the same thing when I started the Valens Legacy
series. I already had one successful series under my belt: Portals of Infinity.
But I wanted to try something different, and while I'd been having some
success, I wasn't doing as well as I wanted with some of the other things I was
working on. Until I sat down one night and decided to write something that
played to all of my strengths, using everything I'd learned to date. That's a
big part of it right there: everything
I'd learned. There were lessons I'd learned from the stories and series
that I'd written, lessons about sales and marketing, readers and genres, things
that I would never have learned by just constantly chasing the markets.
Of course now others are coming in and shitting all over
that market with their whole 'write to market' BS because of my success. And
they're not making much, if any, money. They've all but killed the field — if
you're not already a name; forget trying to write in it nowadays. Which is sad
cause there's some good stuff and authors out there not getting the exposure
they deserve.
This is why I tell people to get out of groups like the
'20K' one. First off, it is full of scammers, copycats, and write to market
people. If you go in there and say 'Hey, look at this! I just found a hot
market to make money in!' Thirty days later all of those people are going to be
doing their damnedest to put you out of business and take all that money for
themselves. Because that's their mindset: Grab the money and run. They're not
there to build a name or a successful career (most write to market authors
never use the same name twice), they're there to make a quick buck, because writing is easy.
Secondly; what are you going to learn from people who aren't
looking to build a career, who aren't looking to build a name, but who are only
looking to grab as much cash as they can and run with it? It's the 49er gold
rush all over again, mining (writing) is hard work, so let's find a way to
bypass that hard work and get our hands on some real cash!
So please, don't write to market, you won't be successful,
you won't make a name for yourself, you won't have a career, and you won't
enjoy what you're doing. Write what you enjoy and learn your craft. Rise to the
top and people will read you. And for
heaven's sake, if you do find yourself doing well, DO NOT go telling all those
other people where to go. It's not just you you're hurting, but the readers too
as a ton of crap gets dumped into the genre and, thanks to the way Amazon works,
it will be there until the heat death of the universe.
Don't feel bad if your first book doesn't sell well, or sell
at all. I've had flops; I've had some amazing flops. Written even after I'd
already found a good paying series (because I wanted to diversify a little).
You learn from your mistakes, you grow and improve. But as everything you're doing
that's 'write to market' is a mistake, you're not growing because you're not
learning. How many successful authors are there, who write in a different market
every time they put out a book? Zero.
Now if you desperately feel that you have to write to market, write porn. It pays well, even if it's
bad. You only have to write five to twelve thousand words per story, so you
have less time and effort invested. And you can charge more because it's porn.
Porn is probably the only field where WTM has a chance to work, because you
already know about, and (hopefully) enjoy, sex.