KASIA RADZKA

Romantic Suspense and Thriller Author

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April Progress Report & May Goals

April Progress Report & May Goals

April Progress Report & May GoalsApril. Birthday month.

My son and I share a birthday. It’s awesome and annoying at the same time.

This year it fell on a Saturday, so the night before I went out with friends and on Saturday had a party for him. It was lovely. He was spoilt as usual. I was a little too. I even sold a few books this month and finished writing the third one in the series.

One of my goals for April was to enrol Lethal Instincts into KDP Select. The purpose is to giveaway as many books as possible and to get people to sign up to my email list (I’m still trying to figure out how that is supposed to work!) Check out below how many books were given away and how many sold and all my other monthly stats including queries and income.

The purpose of offering the first book in the series for free is to get readers onto my mailing list. More people on the mailing list means more readers buying my books. If platforms like Amazon, Kobo and the others change their policies, I still have readers to sell books to, directly.

By the end of May I’ll have three books available on Amazon, I’ll finally be ready to start doing some marketing. Many authors will tell you that it’s a waste of time and money if you don’t at least have three products to your name. What’s the point in spending a fortune when there’s a chance that people are going to forget you?

I agree.

We live in a fast paced society that craves content and wants everything right now.

I know I do.

I can’t remember what I read yesterday let alone what I did last month unless it really piqued my interest.

This tells me two things: it’s much harder to engage with readers because of the overload of content out there and that I need to slow down and enjoy the moment.

I need to take a breather and enjoy the moment. Well, there’s a holiday coming up so I’m looking forward to a bit sunbathing and cocktails by the pool and nothing but trashy romance and heart-stopping thrillers to get through in between building sandcastles, paddle-boarding and jet skiing. So much to do, so little time. I’m hoping to enjoy a few Espresso Martinis. Hmmm, yes please.

But before that happens, let’s get down to business.

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Business By The Numbers in April

Queries sent: 3
Responses: 2
Accepted: 1
Follow ups: 0
Income: $278.06 (this is from pitches that were accepted in March & April)
Books sold: 4
Books Given Away: 111
Income: $6.38 (almost double the previous month!)
Total writing income: $284.44 (+8200%)

May Goals

1 – Publish Lethal Aftershock – Book 3 in the Lexi Ryder Crime Thriller Series. Lexi’s world is turning upside down. She doesn’t know who to trust. The law is fuelled by bureaucracy rather than justice. The trajectory of Lexi’s life is taking a turn she didn’t expect but was inevitable. It’s time Lexi took the law into her own hands. Trouble is brewing. Trouble is her middle name. I’m excited that book three is finally coming out. I should have scheduled the editor earlier but these things happen. We live and learn. Lethal Aftershock is out mid May!

2 – Write and schedule two months of blog posts. I’m aiming to publish two times per week, so that’s 16 posts. I’ve got the ideas now just to execute them. I’m stretching myself very thin and I want to spend more time with my family so schedule posts and writing them in advance will ensure that I have more time and energy to be with my son throughout the week while still taking care of the business side of my personality. I’m a working/business mama and there needs to be a balance although sometimes there’s no such thing.

3 – Send out 30 pitches. Writing books costs money. Starting a business costs money. I want to earn a full time living writing books but before that happens I need to freelance my booty off. That means writing about personal finance, health and fitness, travel and anything else that tickles me fancy. I’ve worked that I have a 10-20% positive response rate so that means if I send out 30 pitches I should get 3-5 writing jobs. I’d prefer a regular one but I’m happy with one-off’s if they bring home the bacon!

4 – Affiliates. I need affiliates on my site to make extra income so that I can continue writing and producing. I’ve got a few project ideas up my sleeve and there are a lot of products that I love using and would love to share and recommend with you. They are making me a better and more productive writer and author-entrepreneur. Have you got an author blog yet? Check out my post on How to Start An Author Blog.

5 – Run more. I signed up for the Gold Coast Half Marathon in July. I’ve run a couple of times as well as the full but since having my son I’ve been running sporadically. Signing up for a half marathon changes that. I need to run a minimum of three times per week for at least 30-60 minutes. Writing is a sedentary activity unless you have a treadmill desk (does anyone use these? Would you recommend them?), so signing up for a half marathon is a great way to stay in shape, refresh the mind and work on story ideas in a productive way. Gotta love multi-tasking!

6 – Sell and giveaway 500 books. Lethal Instincts and Lethal Disposal are both available on Amazon. Lethal Aftershock is coming soon!

7 – Get 20 email sign ups. Baby steps. I’m currently sitting on 7. So I need another thirteen. If you want a free copy of Lethal Disposal, all you have to do is sign up for my email list.

Did you achieve your April goals? What are you planning for May?

Writing Is Solitary, Publishing Is Team Work: Do You Have The Right People Working With You?

Writing Is Solitary, Publishing Is Team Work: Do You Have The Right People Working With You?

You are not alone

As an indie author it’s easy to get go into overdrive and work 24/7. The days stretch as you work well past sunset, burning the midnight oil, and giving your family reason to call for help.

Being an independent author is hard work. It’s even harder if you want to sell books and make a living.

I don’t believe in the overnight success story. It doesn’t exist.

We don’t see the gruelling hours, the lost sleep, the tears, the small wins and bigger setbacks that happen before we make it. What does ‘make it’ even mean these days?

Is it to be published? To sell 100 books per month? To earn $100,000 per year from your novels?

Making it, means something different to all of us.

Last year, I would have said publishing my debut novel, Lethal Disposal, was making it. I made it. I officially became an author. I guess that can be classified as a success. After twenty years of dreaming and hiding, I finally took the plunge.

My biggest worry was that I would stop. That once the book was published I’d be over it.

Fortunately, or unfortunately, it depends on your perspective, I want to keep on writing. I want to keep on publishing.

But it’s hard work.

So while it took me twenty years to publish my first novel, I’ve set a goal to publish six in 2016. I want this to be my business and the only way to do that is to write fast, write well, and publish frequently.

The good news is that I found that the faster I write, the better I write. Because I’m writing faster, I’m writing more which leads to improvements. As a writer, you want to continue improving for as long as you write. The moment you think you’ve got nothing to learn, nothing to improve on, is the moment you stop caring and start losing the passion.

Now here’s the bad news. Writing isn’t the only role of the independent author. Not if you want to be successful for the long haul.

You have to be a business person as well. Your books are your business and so you have to put on numerous hats. You are a writer, editor, proofreader, creative designer, logistics director, event coordinator, marketer, cheerleader, accountant – have I missed anyone?

Being an independent author-entrepreneur is hard work. If you’re not up for long hours, sweat, tears, head-scratching-wondering-in-the-middle-of-the-night why the hell you’re doing this? Well, you might want to reconsider what you really want.

Being a successful independent author is not for the faint of heart or for the lazy.

Being successful at anything requires hard work, time, passion, constant motivation when everything around is against you, perseverance and tough skin. If you want it, you will get it done.

Having a team in place can make the author’s life easier. But finding the right team isn’t a simple process. It takes time, trial and elimination.

Just as there are millions of authors out there, the market is also saturated with editors, proofreaders, designers and formatters who want to help you, but at a price. Nothing in life is free and you shouldn’t expect anyone’s service for free, but if you’re spending money you want to get quality service.

Cover Designer

A cover will help sell your book. While we should judge a book by its cover we tend to do it often. What makes a great cover from a mediocre one? It depends on your tastes. Some like simplicity, some business. Some prefer texts on colour, others want pictures to tell a story. You’re never going to please everyone but you want to please your target audience.

I’m happy with the cover designers I have used. I’ve used two and both do an excellent job although one is slightly outside my budget. The other I was surprised that I had to source my own images, but I guess that’s the price of wanting to spend less.

I recommend:
Ebook Launch 
Robin Ludwig Design

Editors

Editing wise, I’m still looking for the one. I’ve used an editor in Australia and a proofreader in the UK. Both at completely different price spectrums.

Finding an editor that meets your budget, has the right experience, and enjoys your genre isn’t easy. Editors are very valuable and necessary for an authors success. But does a higher price put a higher value on an editor? Will the editor you pay $2000 do a better job than the one asking for $500?

Not necessarily.

It’s all about word of mouth and trial and error in self-publishing. Each book is a new lesson learnt.

The process will seem frustrating when you do it the first time, but much easier once the second book roles around, and even easier when you’re on your third. That doesn’t mean the writing or selling gets any easier.

It’s still damn hard work. But if it wasn’t, everyone would be doing it.

I’ve used:

Jewel See Editing (AUS)
Helen Baggott (UK)

Cheerleaders

You need a cheerleader too. Someone in your life who will push you through the tough moments. It can be a partner, a best friend, a parent. A person who supports you and believes in your dream.

If you have a family, you’re going to need a person to do more than their share of the house chores. Just because you’re at home writing your novel doesn’t mean you’re not working.

I’m fortunate to have three main cheerleaders in my squad and they know who they are. It’s nice to know someone is anticipating my new book and will definitely read it. They also tend to give me feedback that I trust.

Readers

You need readers. Without them, you’re not going to make any money or get any feedback. But finding readers isn’t easy. Nothing seems to be in this field. But it’s not impossible either.

Start with your immediate circle of family or friends. Can you find 20, 50 or 100 potential readers? They might buy your first book. The second time around only half will. By the third, you’ll find that maybe 10-20% of your family and friends will buy the book – you can’t rely on them forever. Hopefully if they’ve enjoyed your book they will pass it on to family and friends of their own.

Word of mouth is a powerful marketing tool.

Then you need to start promoting on social media through word of mouth, anywhere and everywhere you can. It’s hard work but it’s worth it once the sales start trickling in.

Writing itself is a lone activity but there’s a lot going on in the background that requires a team of awesome individuals to make the writer shine. Each one plays their role, each one is a piece of the puzzle in the writer’s life.

The Optional Extras

As you progress in your business you’ll find that you need to outsource some of your activities – unless you’re super pedantic, organised, and a control freak and need to do everything yourself. You might find yourself looking for reliable contractors for website management, accounting, and marketing among other things.

These people can help make or break your business. Be sure to find people that you can rely on. Word of mouth is the best form of advertising. Talk to family and friends. Check out other authors websites. Ask around on social media. Build a team that will help you create an awesome writing business with your books.

Writing itself may be a solitary activity. Once you make the decision to go public and publish, you need to start building your team. Remember, this is your business, your future, your image. Make it the best it can be.

Who makes up your writing and publishing team?

March 2016 Progress Report & April Goals

March 2016 Progress Report & April Goals

Why You'll Never Be Successful And What You Can Do About It-4The first quarter of the year is done and dusted. How did we just get through three months of the year? I’m not ready for quarter two yet. The fact that we’re in April already is a scary thought for more than one reason, it’s birthday month, which means I’m year older and my son turns two. We share a birthday. It’s pretty awesome and annoying at the same time.

Did March go according to plan? Not exactly.

One of my goals was to send out pitches. And I did. Whilst I haven’t earned any money from them this month, April is looking good, so hopefully I’ll have more to report on the financial front then.

I applied for some writing jobs through Problogger and was surprised to get responses from a couple of them. I’ve written an article for one on health and fitness and am waiting for a response – feedback or payment would be nice. Another health & fitness site offered me a writing position but after responding to them for some clarification they went silent on me. I’ll follow up to ensure my email didn’t get lost in their junk mail.

One of my pitches was to a personal finance site, I received a response that at present they don’t pay writers but are happy to exchange guest posts. I’m definitely up for that. A little bit of cross promotion and writing for a different audience. Then, I never got a message back. Another follow up is in order. If I don’t get a response I’ll be moving on.

Why didn’t Lethal Aftershock get published you ask? Hmmm, well, in part budgetary constraints may have played a factor, exhaustion, a busy social calendar and mixing up priorities. Shit happens. I’m still on track to publishing 6 books this year. One down, five to go.

Freelancing By The Numbers

Queries sent: 21
Responses: 9 (38% response rate!)
Accepted: 4 (19% success rate!)
Follow ups: 0
Income: $0
Books sold: 3 (USA) – I haven’t done any promotion.
Free Books: 0
Income: $3.42
Total writing income: AUD$3.42

April Goals

April, my favourite month of the year. If things don’t happen in April then there’s a good chance I might slack off for the rest of the year. That’s not allowed. It’s time to shift gears and work smarter.

A) Publish Lethal Aftershock
B) Enter Lethal Instincts into KDP for a 90 day trial – use free promo on day 2 (2 days), and day 30 (1 day) and day 60 (2 days). The purpose of this is to get sign ups for my email list.
C) Send out as many pitches as possible – really push myself (I’d love it if writing paid for my Hawaii trip in September)
D) Clean up one of my blogs and figure out how to monetise it
E) Strike a balance between working and living. I spend way too much time working, really I do. My family is starting to notice. So in April I need to start being more present, more active. It’s about finding a balance and working smarter not harder.

I have a goal to sell/giveaway 10,000 books this year (my dream is to sell 100,000!). Want to help me out? Lethal Instincts is available for $1.99 and Lethal Disposal for $2.99. Buy Lethal Instincts, sign up for my reader email list and receive Lethal Disposal FREE! Plus regular updates and future freebies. Interested in being a beta read? I’ve currently got an opening for 5 beta readers – you need to enjoy the crime/thriller/mystery genre. Shoot me an email if you’re interested!

How did March treat you? Any big plans for April? 

Friday Link Love

Friday Link Love

friday link loveIt’s been a busy week. A cold week. The Gold Coast felt the cold snap with temperatures reaching 5C in the early morning. Ok, so it’s not as cold as some parts of the world but when you’re used to winter temperature hovering around 10C-15C anything less and you’re feeling frostbite on your fingers and toes.

There’s been lots going on in the world wide web. Here are just a few articles for some weekend reading if you’re interested. Writing, motivation, marketing and more.

Why Smart People Don’t Quit on Horkey Handbook. Gina’s blog is awesome and she always has useful information for freelancers and writers in general. I think this one is a worthy reading for anyone considering quitting their dream.

How To Be A Freelancer While Working Full Time on Fulltime Nomad. There’s some great advice there for anyone trying to juggle freelancing and full time work.

Marketing Advice from a Publishing Pro: Jane Friedman Shares Her Best Tips on Social Media Just for Writers. This one is about a year old but I stumbled on it in search of marketing advice for authors. There’s a wealth of information out there and this one is a worthwhile read.

7 Things Writers Should Stop Wasting Their Time On at Carly Watters. Literally Agent. Procrastination comes with the writing territory and there are some things writers can’t help themselves with. Here are are seven that we probably should give a rest. I know number 3 held me back for years.

How Freelance Article Writers Can Find Facts Fast – And Make Sure They’re True on Make A Living Writing. You want credibility as a freelance writer and that means getting your facts straight. The article gives you the basics and a good place to start when you’re researching your article.

Have you seen anything interesting around the online community? Share it in the comments!

Self Publishing is hard work

I’ve written the book. Edited five times. Trashed several chapters. Rewrote numerous scenes. Gave in to giving it two readers and thought I was done. Get an editor, make a cover, and hit publish.

Call me delusional, but that’s exactly what I thought would be happening and my mid February release date would be oh so awesome.

Epic fail.

I should have realised that there was still a ton of work ahead of me. From copyediting, to cover design, to proofing, and promoting and figuring out the little things in between, I was no where near ready to hit that awesome publish button.

While Google is your friend and these you can find an answer to just about any question, from what to eat for breakfast (oats, eggs or fruit with greek yoghurt are my favourites), to how many self-published books are on Amazon? (Apparently in 2012 over 391,000 were published). I felt lost, confused, and on the verge of swapping writing for drinking.

Then I happened on a fantastic blog. Catherine, Caffeinated. I wasn’t expecting much at first. Then she blew me away with all the useful information her blog provides. It was like someone holding your hand throughout the entire self-publishing process, paving the way for your future as an author or writer of any self-printed book. Without giving you any false hope, in fact, she’s more likely to bring you back down to earth before you go on dreaming up the New York Times bestseller lists, foreign rights, six figure book deals, and Hollywood knocking at your door. Hey it can happen, but she lets you know to hold your horses and be realistic. You can dream later.

If you’re interested in self-publishing, buy Catherine’s awesome book, Self-Printed. It’ll answer pretty much every question you have from the stab yourself in the eye with a fork simple to the more complex like organising a US tax number for a foreigner. Now, I purchased it as an ebook which is great but I think the paperback copy would be even better so that you can put post its in all the relevant sections and make notes about your next steps in the self-printing world…and there are a lot of steps.

One thing I have realised, self-publishing is not for the faint hearted, or for the lazy, or for those who are cash poor. It will be painful at times, it will be damn hard work with late nights and long days, and it will cost you money. But with perseverance, many bottles of wine, lots of good coffee, several books, successful promotion, sweat, tears, and a shit load of editing, you can make a living as a published author.*

Each person will have their own definition of making a living: for some it’s $20k per year for other’s it’s $200k.

Lethal Disposal available in May 2015.

Are you self published? What has your experience been?