Tal M. Klein liked the forum thread, How I got to 250 orders in 10 days
Reminds me of the 5 Ps of Success – Proper- Planning- Prevents- Poor- Performance. OR “One who fails to plan, plans to fail.”
like · liked by Travis and 2 others

People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, How I got to 250 orders in 10 days

    Tal M. Klein liked an update for Storm Song

    Good afternoon, Sailors!

    The race for the Geek & Sundry contest is heating up, folks! I need your help now more than ever. If you’ve pre ordered (first of all, thank you!), I need you to find someone else in your social circle to convince to pre order as well. If you haven’t pre ordered, I am asking that you take another look at my project and pre order today! I’m really excited to share Thoster’s story with the world, but the only way I can do that is by building on this fantastic campaign. 

    Right now, we’re tied for 2nd place. We need to stay in the top 3 to win. There’s still a lot of time left in this contest, but every day and every pre order is extremely important. 

    August was a whirlwind of a month for Storm Song. I’m hoping to make September just as exciting- or even more so! I really need your help to make that a reality, guys. Get the word out. Text your friends. Call your mom. Convince your coworker. There are 137 of you standing behind me right now. If you can each find one person today to convince to spend $10 on this project, we can turn this whole thing around. 

    Thank you again, everyone. From the bottom of my heart. Everything you’ve done to help me with this project so far is just above and beyond anything I could have ever imagined. 

    - Allison

    like · liked by Erin and 5 others

    People who have liked this reader update

      Tal M. Klein followed Sparked
      Sparked
      A gripping mystery with supernatural twists, Sparked hauntingly portrays the complex relationship between sisters and the lengths that one will go to save the other.
      Tal M. Klein followed Bad Medicine: Slay it queen!
      Bad Medicine: zombie slaying queen!
      The Walking Dead meets Ru-Paul’s Drag Race. An up-and-coming drag-queen faces a poorly timed zombie apocalypse. Can she wield a machete and still look good in Jimmy-Choo?
      Tal M. Klein liked an update for Deus Hex Machina

      Today is a big day, one that I have been dreading and anticipating in equal measure. Today, I officially start editing Deus Hex Machina and building my second draft.

      Here’s what the process looks like. Staples is now my spirit animal: 

      For the next 30 days it’s my plan to implement the changes I have noted down on those little blue cards, honing my first draft into a stronger, more coherent second. When that is done, I will be more than ready to move from alpha reading into beta. As before, let me know if you’re interested.

      Once I have the second draft returned from beta readers I’ll hash out a third draft, and then I should be ready to submit to Inkshares by the end of the year. For those that like timelines (and so that I have some accountability for my process) here is what I have planned for the next year:



      Like any plan, this will probably change around a bit. Generally though, I am planning to write two books a year, and fund one novel in each series. This doesn’t include other projects I want to be part of, collaborations like Too Many Controllers and Makhaira, so my schedule is going to need to be a little fluid should something awesome come up that I want to take part in. I’m also toying with the idea of funding Shadow of the Owl again before I  fund the sequel. There is just something very appealing about having the entire series under the Inkshares publishing umbrella. 

      Speaking of series, for those of you curious minded folks out there, Deus Hex Machina is a trilogy, and Shadow of the Owl et al is a series with six books planned.
      So if you look at that calendar, you’ll be able to extrapolate out and figure out what I have planned for the year after that. 


      TL;DR: Lots of writing will be happening, mostly in my two main series so if you’re eager to find out what happens to Mylena or Isidore, fear not, books are coming.

       If you have any questions, comment here or hit me up on Twitter @amandaorneck.

      Enjoy the silence!
      like · liked by Erin and 16 others

      People who have liked this reader update

        Tal M. Klein liked the forum thread, change in author royalties? when?
        Thanks Amanda, 
        Reading that article was fantastic, certainly answered my questions and more - as @JF Dubeau noted, the company only owes us so much transparency and that is more than most would give, which is something I appreciate (especially when profit sharing, which makes sense and should be fair but also has a rough history in publishing and music!)

        I guess there will be quite a few of us who came in because of the G&S contest after the announcement of July 31st but before the ToS and Publishing Terms had been changed on the site (I came in an Aug 3 and got the old ones), so I only heard about the changes through other avenues, not here, which made it seem like a red flag. Had the ToS and Publishing Terms had the current numbers in place when I signed up, I would have still signed on (though I wouldn’t want to go any lower than 35%) even without reading that post by Adam (who I’m now following on Medium, so as not to miss anything else!) 

        Very happy to be moving forward and diving into this lovely community without continued concern. :D 
        like · liked by Tal and 3 others

        People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, change in author royalties? when?

          Tal M. Klein liked the forum thread, change in author royalties? when?
          @Mike Mongo could not agree more! And by the way, LET’S SCIENCE! 


          Sorry could not help myself! Took that picture last week after my live FOX News Interview  (thank you Inkshares!) and have been waiting for the right time to post it. But as another fellow Inkshares author @Rick Heinz says, "THE TIME IS NIGH!" or something like that...  Hard to understand him through that thick "Chicago Dude" dialect.

          Buuuut back on topic. I’m stoked about the new royalties. When I saw the details of the old royalty model (and credit system) I knew for a plain fact it was unsustainable. But this new model will let Inkshares print more copies of Rune of the Apprentice and get them into even more bookstores across the country, and dare I say, WORLD! (Wink, wink @Adam Gomolin got my fingers crossed.)

          Oh, and by the way, @Mike Mongo SUPER excited to read the comic, watch the TV show, and HOPEFULLY wear the super cool space suit pajamas you all better be making! Like seriously, I don’t need a full bedspread (but that would be cool!) I just want a pair of super comfy astronaut suit flannels!

          SO, LET’S SCIENCE (AND WRITE SOME GREAT BOOKS!)

          Oh, and p.s. @Tal M. Klein you can science, too, if you like.
          like · liked by Tal and 3 others

          People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, change in author royalties? when?

            Tal M. Klein liked the forum thread, change in author royalties? when?
            First time poster, long time lurker. As many of you may know, I am author of The Astronaut Instruction Manual. Seeing as this change in author royalties has a rather profound affect on me, I feel qualified to interject on this topic.

            Essentially, the change is active immediately. And in nearly all cases–including for the larger part my own–this will be consensually retroactive.

            Meaning, new terms have been created for authors and funding writers and they are going to affect new deals as well as established successes.

            So you would think I’d be upset about that, right? Well, surprise, I’m not upset. In fact, I’m thrilled.

            In a past life I did businesses. Lots of them. Some losers. Some winners. Some even lucrative. All–and I mean all–were great learning experiences.

            When I got my deal with Inkshares I thought this is crazy. It was literally too good to be true. You cannot run a company on those margins. It is impossible. After the process of creating my funding book, I knew I was right. There is no doubt in my mind, Inkshares put around $30-$50k into my book while pulling only about $10k in funding and pre-sales. I’m no math genius but I’m a whiz at addition and subtraction, and those numbers don’t match up.

            Retrospectively, even now, going into our third printing of The AIM, I know Inkshares hasn’t made its money back. Yet.

            Of course, if I were an evil genius I’d being going BWAA-HAA-HA-HAA-HA right now. However, I’m not an evil genius. I’m not even a genius. I’m an astronaut teacher and author and Inkshares is my publisher who has done an absolutely astounding job of impacting the marketplace with my book: Third printing, audiobook deal with Penguin Random House, and of course the tv series deal with Legendary. Plus the creative freedom and rights I retain as writer and creator? Plus we are now working on THE COMIC BOOK (!!!)? 

            Wow.

            To quote from Kurt Vonnegut, "If this isn’t good, I don’t know what is."

            Without Inkshares, I would have none of this. I LOVE INKSHARES. I WANT INKSHARES TO SUCCEED EVEN MORE. So if I have to make fair adjustments to secure and guarantee even more and greater success, I’ll tell you what I told  @Adam Gomolin:

            “Count me in.”

            And Adam had made it very clear. If the deal didn’t look good to me or if I thought I could find a better deal somewhere else, he’d help me with an exit strategy. 

            PFFFFFFFFFT. Me exit Inkshares? Yeah right! No sir-ree-bob, I’m here to stay. I love the culture, I love the attitude, I love my fellow authors (@JF Dubeau, @Jamison Stone, @Gary Whitta, @Jim McDoniel I’m talking to you), I love the camaraderie, I love the community, and most of all I LOVE BEING AN INKSHARES AUTHOR.

            The most telling fact I can share is everyone I know and love is staying put. What more, last week I think Inkshares had over 1000+ new book campaigns started. That means even more new awesome authors to share in this wonderful new model. ("Traditional publishing with crowdfunding front-end" I tell my friends.) We started Inkshares together. We have succeeded together. And we are now evolving together. Yes, I’m staying.

            Heck, where would I go that is any more fun (and profitable and empowering and authenticating) than Inkshares? Like Montgomery Scott says in JJ Abram’s 2009 Star Trek reboot, "I like this ship. It’s exciting!"


            –

            PS one last thing. Speaking of awesome new authors, while I’m here I just want to shoutout a book and author being funded that has caught my (generally behind the scenes) attention. It is @Evan Graham’s Tantalus Depths.
            Being an established author around here means you get to call the actual Inkshares’ Head Honchos and say, "Hey, I think you should take a look at this project." Which I did today about Tantalus Depths.
            And like I told Adam, and while it may be early and maybe I’m wrong what do I know but in my opinion I think Evan writing and dialog is terrific and I think Evan has what it takes to win a Hugo.
            We’re Inkshares. Like a big extended family or even a non-sucky high school. Let’s see what we can do about getting Tantalus Depths funded, ok? He’s close! Back Tantalus Depths and then spread the word on FB and Twitter. 
            Alright. Thanks and keep up the good work, everybody!
            like · liked by Tal and 10 others

            People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, change in author royalties? when?

              Tal M. Klein followed The Fairy Stepmother, Inc.
              The Fairy Stepmother Inc.
              If the world were fair, Evelyn Radcliffe would be a successful businesswoman. Instead, she’s got two dead husbands, two teenage girls obsessed with marrying princes, and not a single fairy godmother in sight.
              Tal M. Klein liked the forum thread, What am I missing?
              What @Tal M. Klein said here:

              Good old fashioned hustling - At least 20 hours a week was dedicated to outreach. Emails, texts, snaps, DMs, there are always people somewhere in your network that have still not pre-ordered your book.

              I cannot second this enough. One on one outreach is magic. And not just to family and friends you’re regularly in touch with, but anybody you’ve ever had a positive interaction with. If you message it right and make that message personal, they’ll appreciate your reaching out more than you realize. And you’ll be continually surprised who immediately buys after getting your message.
              like · liked by Erin and 7 others

              People who have liked this comment in the forum thread, What am I missing?

                More items