Showing posts with label From the Publisher's Desk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label From the Publisher's Desk. Show all posts

Friday, December 24, 2010

Today is where your book begins...

It's Christmas Eve!! A celebratory song... I love Natasha Bedingfield's brand new song "Strip Me" ... but "Unwritten" has always been a bit of a publishing anthem in my mind.


Sing along with me for 2011... Today is where your book begins...!




I am unwritten, 
Can't read my mind
I'm undefined
I'm just beginning
The pen's in my hand 
Ending unplanned 

Staring at the blank page before you
Open up the dirty window
Let the sun illuminate the words 
That you could not find
Reaching for something in the distance
So close you can almost taste it
Release your innovation 

Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in 
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
The rest is still unwritten, yeah

Oh, oh

I break tradition
Sometimes my tries
Are outside the lines, oh yeah yeah
We've been conditioned
To not make mistakes
But I can't live that way oh, oh

Staring at the blank page before you
Open up the dirty window
Let the sun illuminate the words 
That you could not find
Reaching for something in the distance
So close you can almost taste it
Release your inhibitions

Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in 
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips 
drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins

Feel the rain on your skin
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
drench yourself in words unspoken
live your life with arms wide open
Today is where your book begins
the rest still unwritten

Staring at the blank page before you
Open up the dirty window
Let the sun illuminate the words 
That you could not find
Reaching for something in the distance
So close you can almost taste it
Release your inhibitions

Feel the rain on your skin 
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in 
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open *****
Today is where your book begins

Feel the rain on your skin 
No one else can feel it for you
Only you can let it in 
No one else, no one else
Can speak the words on your lips
Drench yourself in words unspoken
Live your life with arms wide open *****
Today is where your book begins

The rest is still unwritten

The rest is still unwritten


* * * 





Thursday, November 18, 2010

186!

I heard Martha Stewart the other day say her company had 36,000 SKUs (or products). Proportionally... I was so thrilled to see Wyatt-MacKenzie has 186 titles listed on Amazon! This is a combination of books, ebooks, and audios. Blows my mind. I remember when there were 4. And, I'm even prouder of the fact that the authors of all of these books had a great experience with Wyatt-MacKenzie.

This is a website where you can search for authors or publishers and view their list (on the day I checked it was counting ebooks and audios separately, it usually puts alternative editions under the paperback!): http://www.salesrankexpress.com. Our first page....



Wednesday, November 17, 2010

How To Get Your Book Into Bookstores - NOT!

I love Penny Sansevieri, she endorsed my book years ago and contributed to an author promotion CD Wyatt-MacKenzie produced. But, I just listened to this show "Getting Your Book into Bookstores":


As an indie publisher -- this show MAKES MY HEAD EXPLODE!!! 

I just wish the focus was: any store BESIDES a bookstore is good for your book!  An important point should be made too -- the guest, Elaine Wilke's book "Nature's Secret Messages," is a very relevant “green” topic, which in itself is “evergreen” (a book that keeps selling) and, it looks gorgeous.

Here are my thoughts on the show... forgive me if I sound bitter, I'm usually a very positive person. If I had listened to this 13 years ago I would have believed it, but having the experience of looking back over a decade from the other side of the desk, and how the numbers REALLY pan out... well, it makes me a bit bitter. =)

Calls to the publisher (me) saying, "My book isn't in such-n-such bookstore," drive me NUTS. Do authors realize how many books it would take to "blanket" ALL of the bookstores, and what it would take to move bodies into those bookstores to buy the book in the short time it will stay there? Years ago, when we were with a major distributor, we "pushed" 15,000 books out (ordered 6 months ahead by our distributor’s book buyers because of our great publicity plan) and that was a SMALL push. We even paid B&N $1500 for “end-of-rack displays” in 110 stores (just a few). I still got emails from the author that relatives in some town “couldn't find the book anywhere.” With a “successful sell through” and major media we still had 70% returns, leaving us in the red over -$35,000. WHY WOULD YOU WANT YOUR BOOK “IN” BOOKSTORES!? Without major publicity and droves of people looking for it, they will be returned if not sold in 2 short months. 

So, so many authors don't realize bookstores work on consignment, at a huge cost and detriment to the publisher. When I hear someone say, “They (a buyer, distributor, or store chain) ordered 3000 books!” -- that does not mean they have sold. That means they are in limbo. Publishers pay to print the books at the printer at one location, pay to ship them to the distributor, they send out to the bookstores, in 2 months the bookstores then ship returns back to the distributor, then the distributor will often ship backlisted titles back to the publisher. All of that waste, leaving a huge carbon footprint, and at a major cost to only the publisher. There is NO risk to the store or the distributor -- distributors take their commission on books they push to the stores but they do not give back their 15% when those books are returned.  

Imagine this scenario when contacting a “list of bookstores”...  So, you’ve called all the stores in the area and told them you’re getting publicity and you’ll mention their store on air. Ten stores agree to order 6 copies each. You’re on local TV, 50 or so people jump on Amazon and buy (Yea!). A few dozen buy it at a bookstore (Woohoo!). Three months later (or sooner) those at the stores that did not sell come trickling back in. You are now at negative 40 books returned (plus return shipping costs) and 50 books sold online -- so you are at ZERO for all of your efforts and your successful TV appearance. If you want to up this equation to national TV and a national bookstore push, see the example in the second paragraph above.

A few other notes: An autographed book does not stay in a store any longer, and in fact, is considered “damaged” when returned and is destroyed. This broke my heart when I realized an author we had touring Texas grocery stores, where they order 6000 books, and she signed as many as she could. We never saw those books again, on our statement from the distributor next to the huge negative number it read "HURT" (their term for damaged). And, on the subject of “reorders” -- bookstores often reorder after they have returned what did not sell the previous quarter. Yes, you read that right. An on-going cycle of the same book being returned and reordered, doesn't make much sense does it? But, so they do not have to pay for what has not sold, stores can avoid the bill by returning and then reordering thus giving the store 90 more days, and so on, and so on, for a well-promoted book all year. Over the months, returns negate the sales and shipping adds to the negative distributor statement.

My advice to authors: Spend your time selling to the actual end customers! Bookstores are great for visibility, but unless the book is very special (like Elaine’s) your efforts to get into bookstores should be viewed as a promotion cost. Major publishing houses work hand-in-hand with bookstores and the media in a very precarious balance that involves hundreds of thousands of books and advertising dollars. 

Bottomline: have your book with Ingram’s LightningSource for international distribution online and to bookstores if you make it Returnable and at a 55% Wholesale Discount . The returns in this “reactive” model are not as bad as pushing into stores proactively. Energy spent pursuing bookstores is a tragic waste; re-route that time and pre-returned copies into review copies, because that's what the returns will end up as! Here are the returns we got yesterday (timed so well with the radio show). Not so bad, 64 copies of a dozen different titles, about a $500 loss (ouch!).

ANY other stores besides bookstores though is brilliant, and I bet Elaine’s product (http://www.getyourbookintostores.comhas some great tips on that!

Monday, October 4, 2010

We Love Our Ducks! #3

Woohoo... Ducks Beat Stanford this weekend. (Sorry to all my crew at Stanford... haha!)





Speaking of the crew at Stanford!!!!!!!! REINDEER WITH KING GUSTAF featured on Stanford's Book Haven as Nobel Week begins.



I love my life. *huge smile*



Sunday, September 5, 2010

All our "Dubyas"


First, I've never been a cat person. "Book," as you all know, is my chocolate Lab and office assistant. MacKenzie's new kitten is spending a lot of time in the office though... and I loved this photo of her on my "pride shelf" above my desk. These are all signed copies of our books from the authors we've published. I remember ten years ago, when we had a handful of books, I used to visualize a long bookshelf with the Wyatt-MacKenzie logo on every spine. Tadaa!

On this wall are some of the awards and media I've received. The frame with my favorite local articles are always a hoot to friends and family that stop by the office. They don't realize there are two huge bins hidden behind them of international media Wyatt-MacKenzie books and authors have received... from the NY Times to the Wall St. Journal and every magazine known to women and moms to newspapers of every author's local city, copies of awards, and most recently a bound book from the Nobel Laureate Ceremonies which our author inserted notes with each Laureate's comments on our book... utterly wonderfully fulfilling. I wish my dad could have been alive to see that one, and my bookshelf, sans cat. He despised cats. 

Saturday, September 4, 2010

For the Love of Publishing

I often joke with people that the best ROI on a book we've published... ever... was when a young mom who wrote a book about single motherhood gave a reading at a bookstore... and fell in love with the bookstore owner, and vice versa. They were married not long after (in one of the most breath-taking weddings it was featured in the pages of Essence Magazine!)


This week I witnessed another magical moment in a new author's journey. The moment a writer has when someone they've written about in a memoir is the first to get an advance review copy and sends a response like this...
"Sorry, but I just couldn't wait to finish before getting back to you. It's a fascinating read to say the least. Congratulations on a job beautifully done! And not for a moment do I think that my bias has colored my judgment; I am certain that other readers will find All the Pretty Shoes equally compelling.
I hope that you can forgive me one personal indulgence: From the first week or two that we met, I was fascinated by you and the story that I thought you should tell the world. By reading your book I feel charged and invigorated knowing that my judgment about you was spot-on. For that, I am quietly grateful—more, I think, than you are ever likely to imagine.
Over the course of my life, moving about as often as I did, I have had the opportunity to meet many interesting people. Some even had a book inside them. But only you had the courage, perseverance and skill to let it out. I cannot overstate my respect and pride in you."

When Marika forwarded snippets of these emails, from her many-years-past beau, I couldn't help but bubble over with happiness, and with my love of publishing.


Be sure to check out Marika's site I finished last week AllthePrettyShoes.com and read the compelling first chapter. View the photos which made it through the Holocaust and onto my scanner... Man, I love what I do.


Saturday, June 26, 2010

We're all atwitter... in Germany!


When I received a pitch for a book with the premise "what to expect when your spouse wins the Nobel Prize" I laughed and wondered, How big could this market possible be -- spouses of Nobel prizewinners? But I loved the idea, knew there was a bigger market for this extraordinary story and envisioned a beautiful gift book.

So -- who'd a thunk our book would be gifted to every Nobel Laureate this year in Lindau? Here's the first page of the programme, author Anita Laughlin gave a reading earlier today in Germany...


We're all atwitter!
I confess, I only recently learned how to really use twitter to communicate -- and this morning I am having a dialogue with participants in Lindau! One little #hashtag and one little @message and there I am on the Nobel homepage getting feedback about author Anita Laughlin's reading earlier today. Wow. 



We are awaiting photos from tomorrow's Opening Ceremony Dinner, where guests will all receive a copy. I'm doing a dance in my little ole office in Deadwood, Oregon... and today Wyatt-MacKenzie added our 116th title to Amazon!
  

Monday, June 21, 2010

Soul to Soul Publishing

Last week our new title SOUL TO SOUL PARENTING, by Annie Burnside, officially released! It's a powerful book with a big message. When someone asked me this weekend, "How do you find the books you take on your traditional roster?" The thought "soul to soul publishing" flashed through my mind. Annie writes about connecting soul to soul with people, not role to role. And, as much as I question my role in this world (as do the big literary agents!), for some reason I can't question the way the Universe delivers amazing souls and their manuscripts to me which resonate in a way that is beyond the marketing plan and author's platform. That's the answer to how I get our most amazing titles... Wyatt-MacKenzie authors who have enjoyed their journey become the catalyst to new connections... soul to soul to soul! A new connection we made a few weeks ago was with one of the strongest, most resilient souls I have ever met. I received the email below from one of our authors...
"I also want to tell you about an amazing autobiographical manuscript I read, All the Pretty Shoes by a very unassuming writer, Marianne R. Klein who, at 12, saved her life from the Nazi's by inserting herself into a pile of her executed neighbors and friends. As an orphaned fugitive of WWII, she was exposed to rape and murder. On the way to America via Montreal Canada, she became a teenage mother, a dance instructor and a fashion model. What's extraordinary about Marianne is that through all this turmoil, she never stopped believing in and looking for true love. How many people could hold such an ideal in their hearts given the life she lead. And yes, she found her soul mate! Against all odds and reason! It's a lovely book, not grim at all and about so much more than war and oppression. Only a valiant and determined woman could keep ideal love as the goal of her life. It's well written. Marianne has studied creative writing at UCLA where this ms has been very highly praised and has, lately, done UCLA's Writer's Boot Camp for Screenplays. You'd be the perfect publisher for her, Nancy. Your insight into the writing of women would make her very comfortable. As I said, she's unassuming. And funny, and still beautiful."
I read the manuscript the Friday night I received it... brought it to bed with me and fell asleep after closing the last page, with tears in my eyes. I signed her immediately as our first 2011 release, and found a brilliant UK artist's painting for the cover. 

This weekend I received the author's photos. I was breathless, and actually shook as I flipped through generations of sepia photos, the actual photos. I smelled them, I held them, I can't believe the Universe brought this experience to me, this writer, this book, this journey...



Thursday, May 27, 2010

Nobel Laureates to Receive Wyatt-MacKenzie Book!


“The Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings provide a globally recognised forum for the exchange of knowledge between Nobel Laureates and young researchers.”

The 60th Meeting of Nobel Laureates will take place in Lindau Germany in June and... Wyatt-MacKenzie books will be there! Laureates in Chemistry, Physics, Medicine/Physiology and the scientists, leaders, researchers and students who attend will receive the gift of REINDEER WITH KING GUSTAF by Anita Laughlin!

I am beside myself excited to imagine one of our books in the hands of these phenomenal minds.

This year the Lindau Meetings will celebrate its 60th anniversary and therefore about 70 Laureates will come together at Lake Constance in Germany to meet, interact and discuss current scientific themes and challenges with more than 650 young Top Talents from all around the world.


“Having seen and read the book by Anita Laughlin about her expectations and the life-changing results of her husband winning the nobel prize we would love to give it to the guests at the festive dinner on the opening day.” 
Foundation Lindau Nobelprizewinners Meetings at Lake Constance


Anita and her Nobel-winning husband Bob will attend the event, with book signings scheduled for Anita! REINDEER WITH KING GUSTAF was recently named a finalist in the ForeWord Magazine Book-of-the-Year Awards.


As they say, "SKOAL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"



The book is currently being sold at the Nobel Museum in Stockholm, it was there for the Nobel Festivities last Fall. It was also endorsed by King Gustaf himself!














Saturday, May 15, 2010

Nancy Cleary included on "List of Powerful Mothers"


I teach my authors to build their "googlability" -- and every now and then I will google myself to see what comes up. Just found this article "List of Powerful Women" which surprisingly included me with some big names... Angelina Jolie, Sharon Osbourne, Mia Farrow, Katie Holmes, Gina Lohan, Dr. Laura and Madonna... how bizarre!

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Wyatt-MacKenzie Options Two Books for TV/Film!

A recent article in Hybrid Mom magazine asked Where Have All the Good TV Moms Gone? http://bit.ly/bmZOra Wyatt-MacKenzie aims to help Hollywood by signing Options for two of our amazing books with phenomenal mom roles!


Picture this: Mom CIA -- caring for five kids at home while fighting terrorism at work. Jack Bauer move over, you've got nothing on this mom! Real-life terrorism analyst, the first one to write about bin Laden, brings us into her life -- from the Situation Room briefing the President on national security threats to handling teen angst at home. Turns out -- bullies are the same in every arena, be it high school or the United Nations.  


Or this: It's 1977, an alcoholic mom writes a book about her stint in a mental institute; rights are purchased by biggest movie star at the time and she stars in the made-for-TV movie. Flash forward to 2010 -- the mom, now 40-years-sober, reflects back on her prolific career as a TV writer/producer that her first movie deal spiraled into and writes part two of the 1977 classic. A "Who's Who?" list of unnamed celebrities and industry-insiders are woven into lesson-laden biographical chapters and eye-opening AA meetings.


NATIONAL SECURITY MOM and WOMEN'S GROUP, have been "optioned" -- which simply means screenplays are being written and avidly pitched to producers. Two fantastic screenwriters have optioned our CIA book, and the author of WOMEN'S GROUP is pursuing her own TV/Film deal.


It's a long, long way to a "Sale"... but it sure is exciting to imagine! And, the thought of smart, heroic mom characters, balancing great careers and family life, is even more exciting. As Jennifer Rawlings asks in her article: "Wouldn't it be wonderful to see a sitcom that does what millions of moms do every day -- strive to find the balance between family and work?" Yes Jennifer, it sure would, especially if they were based on Wyatt-MacKenzie books! 



Monday, March 29, 2010

Spring Break's Over... and Another Award Nom!

Wyatt and MacKenzie went skiing -- at Willamette Pass -- for the first time over Spring Break! Watching the video of Kenzie going down the hill faster than fast, in an unswerving straight line, reminded me of the first few years of publishing. You fly by the seat of your pants, optimistic you'll make it to the end without getting too badly injured. To hell with the snow plow, who needs to stop? But now, if I were skiing instead of publishing, I think I'd be gracefully slaloming down the hill, avoiding pitfalls only visible to the keen, experienced eye, and not choosing hills that look too good to be true. Okay... so there's my segue.

Meanwhile, back in the Wyatt-MacKenzie offices we are thrilled to announce another ForeWord Magazine Book-of-the-Year nomination! Deb Dunham's (self-esteem guru!) TWEEN YOU & ME. It's one of MacKenzie's favorite books we've published -- the first specially for the tween market.


2009 ForeWord Finalist Juvenile Nonfiction




Wednesday, March 10, 2010

My New Book Nook!

So often I am inspired by the authors I publish. I spent last week working with Annie Burnside's manuscript for SOUL TO SOUL PARENTING and was left with an undeniable desire to nurture myself and my space. As I read Annie's beautiful book, I kept recognizing books she mentioned that I have loved over the years, and I was compelled to collect them all together after two decades of being boxed, stored, or forgotten, and create a space for them, and for my kids and I to discuss why they have meant so much to me. This past weekend we made my new Book Nook!
This space in the corner of my office used to be filled with boxes and boxes and boxes of RETURNS. (Bookstores work on consignment - books spend two months on the shelf and if they do not sell, they are sent back.) The difference in the energy of the space now is absolutely unbelievable – and it has worked to attract my kids to hang out while I work, and inquire about the books I have been collecting since high school.

It was a "Sell This House" project – one of my favorite weekend joys is watching Tanya Memme and Roger Hazard spend $200 and two days to make a house look amazing. Taking their lead, we painted the walls and an existing white bookshelf in a luscious moss green. The old bricks, which were originally on the outside of our little farmhouse and looked pretty bad, were painted with "Boston Brick Red" and I pulled out a wonderful old poster from 1992 signed to me by cartoonist Jim Borgman. We hung some inexpensive shelves and found a gorgeous wandering jew for $4.99. The seat is an Ottoman from an on-sale sectional for a fraction of the regular price and the reading light was $11.99. Pillows were from St. Vincent DePaul (6 for the price of one from Pier One) and a new dogbed for "Book" also from St. Vincent (helping homeless families). We did it!

So this is where you can picture me... reviewing book proposals, sketching cover designs, and brainstorming branding campaigns... or taking Wyatt and MacKenzie down my own memory lane of books that have shaped their mom's life.