Posts Tagged ‘Causes’
Today is My Birthday
Written by Scath on November 11, 2009 – 10:02 amI am totally awesome because today is my birthday and it’s the most awesome day in the year.
Do you know why it’s the most awesome day in the year?
Because it’s Superhero Veterans Day!
That’s right: yours truly was born on the day set aside to honor the warriors upon whose backs this country was built and is kept safe.
Our superheroes – the real life kind.
Let me tell you, real superheroes rock far more than the comic book types because they became superheroes the hard way, and by choice. No radioactive spider bit them; they didn’t suddenly develop super powers during their angsty teenage years.
Nope, it was all the hard way for them. Saying ‘thank you for your service’ doesn’t seem like quite enough, though I know they appreciate it.
My personal superheroes include two grandfathers (both deceased), an uncle who fought in Vietnam and a brother who currently serves in the Navy.
I’ve made a wish for my birthday. Grant it and help those who’ve served.
More ways you can honor and help our warriors:
Soldiers’ Angels: Project Valour-IT (Go, Team Navy!)

Tags: Babble, Causes, soldiers, war, warriors
Posted in Blog Entries, Causes | 2 Comments »
Valour-IT
Written by Scath on November 8, 2009 – 8:18 pm I’m in for Team Navy, or my brother would probably disown me.
From the Soldiers’ Angels website: Project Valour-IT helps provide voice-controlled/adaptive laptop computers and other technology to support Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines recovering from hand wounds and other severe injuries. Items supplied include:
Tags: Causes, warriors
Posted in Causes | No Comments »
I May Write for a Living But That Doesn’t Mean I’m Earning One
Written by Scath on October 23, 2009 – 10:18 am
In my last post, I said “Ultimately, regardless of legality, it’s the reader’s decision to ‘lend’ an e-book out and to my fellow authors: dudes, there’s not really anything we can do about it.”
I was wrong, because there is something we can do about it: educate people on how little we actually make.
I don’t mean cry, whine, rant or rave like idiots about it. Just plop it out there so they’ll know.
Following Dhympna’s suggestion, here I go doing just that.
First, a bit of background information I feel the need to share in order to give a clear picture.
A smart independent (or self-publishing) author does research before coming up with a pricing structure for her work. She needs a price that will cover PayPal fees and/or distributors’ splits, while earning her a bit of profit from each sale.
She also needs to keep in mind that e-books are extensively marketed as a cheaper alternative to print books and that readers have no idea who the hell she is because she hasn’t yet built a reputation as a writer.
Now despite the fact I’m perfectly capable of pulling some real boners, I do try to pretend I’m reasonably intelligent, so I researched.
Roughly three dozen small presses later, I’d learned fiction e-book pricing based on word count was pretty standard. I averaged out the prices I’d seen for each word count tier to create my own pricing schedule.
I’d say, based on the fact that I have sold e-books, that I’ve set reasonable prices.
My next hurdle was to decide where to sell them. After all, slapping them up on my website wasn’t going to result in millions of readers rushing to buy them.
No one had heard of me as a writer and I had neither the knowledge nor the time to aggressively promote myself and my titles. The logical conclusion was to go where the readers were buying books.
I chose Amazon and Lulu as my first sales venues, and that’s when I questioned my pricing schedule. While Lulu only collects 20%, Amazon collects 65%. But believing I’d settled on sound pricing, I stuck to my schedule.
I sold 2 e-books to friends, and two months after putting the one title I had up on Amazon, I received my first sale from someone I didn’t know. Earned a whopping 88 cents. I was thrilled (and still am at every sale!), because a stranger had paid for something I wrote!
Of course by then, I’d twigged onto the fact that more titles would hypothetically equal more sales. So I made sacrifices, as did my family in putting up with me, so that in 2008 I was able to write my ass off almost every single day.
More titles did result in more sales – and in regular sales every month. Pretty awesome, right?
Let’s take a look at those sales and my earnings from them:
2007 – 2 e-books sold, $ 4.30 earned.
2008 – 60 e-books sold, $ 94.97 earned.
2009 – 239 e-books sold, $386.20 earned (as of this morning)
So with 691 days of being a selling author, 301 e-books sold for a total of $485.47 in semi-gross profits. I say ’semi-gross’ because PayPal fees and distributor splits are taken right off the top and I don’t see that money.
In 2008, determined to polish my writing skills, I paid someone to tell me things like I was misspelling ’separate’, dangling participles all over the place and using words like ‘very’ too much. This year, I discovered a couple of causes I really wanted to support.
Take $439.57 out of those semi-gross profits for editing expenses (which have been totally worth every penny!) and my paltry portion of proceeds earmarked for donations from three titles to those causes.
My net profit, for almost two full years as a selling author, is $45.90.
Which means I’ve earned 70 cents daily before expenses, and 6.6 cents daily after them since deciding to become a writer.
I’m not whining about it, but it is a pretty stark realization of how little an author earns. I’d hazard the guess my experience is probably shared by 50-65% of other independent authors.
This is likely the reason why some authors foam at the mouth like rabid weasels about piracy so much.
We spend hella hours and effort on our stories to earn pennies a day. It has a tendency to make you very protective of your e-book babies and what people do with them.
You likely see every instance of a copy going to someone who hasn’t paid for it as money lost, whether that’s the truth or not.
On the whole, we’re pretty much poor people just trying to earn a little extra income by sharing our imaginations and trying to entertain people.
‘Little’ being the operative word.
Tags: Amazon, Babble, Causes, e-books, word counts, writing
Posted in Writing & Pubbing | 18 Comments »
Operation Ebook Drop
Written by Scath on October 20, 2009 – 1:14 pmI just learned about this via Twitter and think it’s an awesome way to show some support for our warriors!
You can get the information here.
I opted in, as has my buddy, JC Montgomery.
Will you?
Tags: Causes, Operation Ebook Drop, warriors
Posted in Causes | No Comments »
Sponsers Needed for NaNoWriMo 2009
Written by Scath on October 5, 2009 – 1:34 pmThis will be my third year to participate in National Novel Writing Month, which is a crazy thirty day attempt to write a 50k novel during November. It’s run by the Office of Letters and Light, who also have other free creative writing programs for kids and adults in classrooms, communities and libraries around the world.
I did ‘win’ in both 2007 and 2008, meaning I met or surpassed that 50k word count goal. I fully intend to do so again this year!
Sponser my effort this year, and your donations will go directly to the Office of Letters and Light to enable them to continue their work such as the Young Writers program. They’re a 501(c)(3) non-profit, so your donations are tax deductible to the full extent allowed by law.
My goal is to raise $250 for them this year. I’ve kicked it off with a small donation. More information can be found here, and you can keep an eye on my progress for NaNoWriMo 2009 by returning to my blog.
Thanks!
Tags: Causes, NaNoWriMo, writing
Posted in NaNoWriMo | No Comments »



