Showing posts with label *Publishing: Help Indies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label *Publishing: Help Indies. Show all posts

Monday, 31 March 2025

eBook How-To Updates for 2025

Tablet with cover of "Cat's Call by Natasha Duncan-Drake" showing, on a wooden table, next to the title "eBook How-To Updates 2025"

eBook How-To Updates for 2025

So my pages on where to upload eBooks and how to format an eBook have needed updating for a while and I have finally gotten around to it. One has completely changed, since my methods for creating eBooks is now totally different, and the other has more information and some other changes. I hope someone might find the information useful, since when we're first starting out this can all be a bit of a mystery. 

Where to Publish eBooks

Updates include:

  1. the addition of what every site requires to upload an eBook
  2. swapping out Smashwords for Draft2Digital as an aggregate site to publish to all the eBook sellers after their merger

How to Format Your eBook for Kindle, Draft2Digital & Google Books (2025)

Whole new page with all the steps I now take to create eBooks for distribution to all major eBook publishers.

This includes:

  • a link to the Kindle Create plugin for Word that Amazon KDP no longer support, but that still works a treat.
  • example Word files using the default 4 KDP templates for eBooks for those not interested in the plugin
  • and step by step instructions on how I have found it most efficient to go about the whole process.


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Thursday, 16 February 2017

Guest: Creating an Alien Werewolf by Patricia Josephine + Abducted Life NEW RELEASE


Please join me today in welcoming Patrica Josephine (aka the lovely Patricia Lynne) to my blog to talk about alien werewolves and he new book, Abducted Life, which launched this week.

Creating an Alien Werewolf

by Patricia Josephine

The dream I had that inspired Abducted Life was about a vampire trying to escape aliens. He had the cliché vampire traits like fangs, but for Abducted Life I wanted Savannah and Evan's looks to reflect the fact that aliens messed with their genetics to make them less human––especially in Evan's case. Not so much for Savannah. I had some ideas in mind and there were a couple real life creatures that really inspired me. (There's going to be talk of some animal anatomy, so I guess I should warn of mature content.)

In Abducted Life, there is a scene were I describe the alien creature Savannah has been spliced with. She sees a bipedal animal covered in white fur with a dog-like snout. The image I wanted to portray was that of a classical werewolf. Although, this one doesn't turn human when there's no full moon. I also describe a certain body part that my beta readers said grossed them out. (That was intentional.) I had in mind cats and the fact that male cats have barbs on their penises for that scene.

For the most part, Savannah's looks don't change. Her physical abilities and mannerisms are what's effected. She's faster and stronger, and gets the urge to procreate during the full moon. Another thing that she hasn't really noticed, and it's not in the story, is she's developed an appetite for meat and often takes her steaks at medium rate to rare. Before she wouldn't be caught dead eating something cooked below medium or bloody.

About the Book

Abducted Life 
by Patricia Joesphine

Savannah Janowitz’s perfect life was destroyed the night she and her boyfriend vanished without a trace. When she reappears a year later––alone––she’s a shell of her former self. Robbed of her popularity and her boyfriend, she has no memory of what happened to her. Savannah struggles to move forward as strange, new abilities manifest.

Evan Sullivan never gave extra-terrestrials much thought until the night he and Savannah were abducted. While Savannah’s memory was wiped clean, he remembers every horrific detail. Constantly reminded of the experiments that made him less than human, Evan hides in the shadows and watches Savannah rebuild her life without him. But neither can let the other go.

When their paths cross, Savannah and Evan finally see a glimmer of their old lives return. As they face what happened to them, they soon discover they aren’t safe. There’s more to fear than what’s hiding in the stars.

Available for 99cents at Amazon

About the Author

Patricia Josephine never set out to become a writer. In fact, she never considered it an option during high school and college. She was all about art. On a whim, she wrote down a story bouncing in her head. That was the start of it and she hasn't regretted a moment. She writes young adult under the name Patricia Lynne.

Patricia lives with her husband in Michigan, hopes one day to have what will resemble a small petting zoo, has a fondness for dying her hair the colors of the rainbow, and an obsession with Doctor Who.

Where to find Patricia online:

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Resources for Writers and Designers - compiled for TLWLexicon

Soph and I did a couple of panels at TLWLexicon this last weekend focused on Selfpublishing, and we put together several pages of resources and information. I thought I'd put together a post with links to them all so they are easy to find if you have missed them:

On the Wittegen Press Website:
On this blog:
They are also all linked in my tabs above, but I wanted to point them out as well.


Monday, 14 October 2013

How to change a B&N url into a Nook UK url to find your books...

I distribute my books via Smashwords and I thought several of them must have been simply refused by Nook UK because they didn't show up when I searched for my name. It turns out they are there, they just don't show up in searches.

It mostly seems to be my adult titles, but there are a couple of others that are simply not there. I have no idea why, but the only way I found them was by translating the B&N url into the Nook UK format. We link to Nook UK from Wittegen Press when we can so that Nook users can easily find our books. For my reference and for anyone else having the same trouble I thought I'd document how to do it.

Here is a B&N url for my latest book Cat's Confidence (it's on both sites which is what made it easy to use).:
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/cats-confidence-natasha-duncan-drake/1116968975?ean=2940045280310

here is the Nook UK URL:
http://uk.nook.com/ebooks/cats-confidence-by-natasha-duncan-drake/2940045280310

So to translate one to the other you have to do the following three things:

  • Replace www.barnesandnoble.com/w/ from the B&N URL with uk.nook.com/ebooks/
  • Add a by- before the author's name
  • remove the first number and ?ean= (e.g 1116968975?ean=) from the last part of the URL

That then gives you the correct URL on Nook UK for your ebook that is on Barnes and Noble. It doesn't seem to work with big name books because they have different ref numbers, but they'll show up in searches anyway.

Thursday, 28 June 2012

Wittegen Press Giveaway Games

Sorry for having been so absent lately, but this might explain why :). This is happening is July and Soph and I have been a bit mental getting ready for it. Actually we're still being mental, but you don't need to know that :).

Thank you to anyone who helps spread the word.

July 2012
31 days of competitions and giveaways.
COMING SOON: Wittegen Press Giveaway Games July 2012Wittegen Press are giving away one short story every day in the month of July 2012.
These tales will be from many different genres, fantasy through to crime and everything in between.
Each story will only be available for 24 hours, so make sure you visit the site every day.
What's more: rate a story after you've read it and you'll earn a chance to win a $50 Amazon Voucher in our month-long competition.
We're also running daily competitions.


This is also a shout out to all book peeps. We're looking to hook up with other book giveaways/competitions happening in July. If you look at our giveaway site you'll see we have a prominent section called 'Other Giveaways' that we would really like to fill. The idea is you tell us when your giveaway is, we pop everything in our DB and on the right days the right giveaways/competitions will show up.
The only thing we ask is that no giveaway info has adult language and if your button shows a cover that, that cover fulfils Amazon rules (i.e. no explicitly pornographic images).

Please spread the word to anyone you think might be interested. Thank you.

Giveaway Linkback the details
What we need from you (please send to competitions@wittegenpress.com):
  • A button graphic that represents your giveaway of 100x100px (if you don't have the capacity to make one of these, please contact us anyway and we'll see if we can help)
  • Your giveaway URL
  • The start date of your giveaway
  • The number of days your giveaway will be running
  • Your giveaway name
How to link back to us:
  • Copy and paste the following code and put it somewhere on your giveaway page.

This is what the button will look like.

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Smashwords, how I love thee.

Okay, so I've talked about Amazon and the fact it is not the only option for eBooks and now I'm going to talk about one of the other brilliant alternatives: Smashwords. All Wittegen Press books are available from Smashwords.

Smashwords is superb, not only for readers of eBooks, but for authors/publishers as well. It is a mine of Indie publishers and self-pub authors that all should check out.

You have to have bought a book to review it, which is also useful from an author and a reader persepctive. For the author, no spam reviews, for the reader, you know if someone reviewed it they bought it first.

For Readers

Smashwords provide every format you can think of when you buy a book. As long as the person publishing the book has not unchecked the option it will appear. For example, you're unlikely to find a picture book published in plain text format, it would be silly, but a novel will likely be in all formats. These are all the formats on offer with indications of what devices they are good for.
  • Online Reading (HTML, good for sampling in web browser)
  • Online Reading (JavaScript, experimental, buggy)
  • Kindle (.mobi for Kindle devices and Kindle apps)
  • Epub (Apple iPad/iBooks, Nook, Sony Reader, Kobo, and most e-reading apps including Stanza, Aldiko, Adobe Digital Editions, others)
  • PDF (good for reading on PC, or for home printing)
  • RTF (readable on most word processors)
  • LRF (Use only for older model Sony Readers that don't support .epub)
  • Palm Doc (PDB) (for Palm reading devices)
  • Plain Text (download) (flexible, but lacks much formatting)
  • Plain Text (view) (viewable as web page)
So, once you've bought a book you can even read it online if you want to, just as if you were visiting a fiction archive.

Unlike Amazon, Smashwords also has a beta of a gifting eBook system up, so that you can buy and eBook for someone else if you wish to.

For Authors

First of all, let's look at the numbers. Smashwords offer authors 85% royalty rate of net sales for all titles sold on their site and 60% royalty rate from their distributors (more about them later). This is a superb rate and does not rely on pricing like Amazon does (with them an author get 70% for books price $2.99 and higher but only 35% for books under that). When you publish a book on Smashwords they show you a pie chart for each book of how much you will earn per sale and where the other percentages are going. Very pretty and very useful. If you select the option they also email you for every sale you make on their site and tell you how much you made on it.

Smashwords allow you to upload free titles as well, which are distributed to their retailers as free titles too.

They also have a coupon system where you can create a coupon for money off your book, set a time limit on the code and use it as part of a special offer. Coupons can be any value, even up to 100%, so you can use coupons for giveaways, or to allow reviewers to download your book.

Non-US authors, please be aware you require an ITIN (individual taxpayer identification number) to be paid by Smashwords . They have useful info about ITINs at this link. I'm applying for mine now, once I am successful I will do a post to tell UK people how I did it, because I believe it can be tricky.

Smashwords is also what is known as an agregator. This means they distribute to other eBook sites, many of which are hard to get your books onto otherwise. There are opt in and opt out options for all distributors so it is not compulsory. These are who they distribute to at the moment:
  • Apple (iBookstore in 32 countries)
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Sony
  • Kobo
  • WH Smith (UK via Kobo)
  • FNAC (Fr via Kobo)
  • Diesel eBook store
  • eBook Eros (Diesel's erotic eBook partner)
Smashwords have two catalogues. 

The Standard Catalogue
The standard catalogue is all the titles published on their site, which is all titles that meet their terms and conditions (i.e. no publishing other people's work etc). All books go into the standard catalogue as soon as they are publised and appear on Smashwords' site.

The Premium Catalogue
This is the catalogue which is distributed to Smashwords' partner retailers. Your book has to meet certain standards to be published in this catalogue which include the Smashwords Style Guide. This is a free eBook that takes you step by step how to create you initial .doc file for uploading to the Smashwords engine which converts it into eBooks for you. You also have to have an ISBN for the book, but there are three ways of getting one:
  • You have your own which you have purchased from elsewhere
  • Smashwords will give you a free ISBN and all sites will list them as the publisher
  • You buy an ISBN from Smashwords (US only) for a premium rate and it will list you as the publisher.
Getting into the premium catalogue takes a while becaue Smashwords do check all the books, but it is worth the wait.

Publisher Accounts
They also have publisher accounts, so if you publish under several names and want seperate identities for each you can still deal with all the money centrally. Soph and I have a publisher account for Wittegen Press and we publish all out book under our personal accounts (which have biographies etc) and then assign the rights to the publisher account. That way all the royalties are dealt with in one place. Publisher accounts can also have what are called ghost authors, these have profiles, but can be used by the publisher account to publish the book directly without having to reassign rights though another account.

There is also very clear reporting and author friendly services to help you track how your books are doing. Much easier to see everything than on Amazon.

Smashwords is a superb site and the staff are incredibly helpful if there are any problems. For example, when we first started publishing on there, Soph and I thought we should keep Penny Dreadfuls 21 and Wittegen seperate, so we set up those books under a different publisher account. Then we decided that we actually wanted to have them all under Wittegen after all. Most of the books we just transfered back to the author accounts and then used our author accounts to assign them to Wittegen. However, a couple of the books were under a ghost account. For some reason when we tried to reassign to another author it didn't work. Smashwords looked into it straight away and found a bug and fixed it. That simple and then everything worked fine. No red tape, no black hole of no response, just a very helpful support staff.

Monday, 2 January 2012

Ways to help promote a book without, necessarily writing a whole review.

Reviews are wonderful things and undoubtedly help a book sell, but the modern world is a very busy one and sometimes readers just don't have time to sit down and put sensible words together to write a full review. Hence here is a list of other things readers can do that will help a up a book's profile that take seconds to do.
Quick promotion options
  • Agree with all the tags on Amazon.

    Just under the Product details section on an Amazon UK page for a book, or just above the Customer Discusions section on Amazon US page, is the tags section. These tags help a book appear in search results and the more people agree with a tag the higher the book should come in the listing. It looks like this:


    Most authors will have already tagged their book with the tags they believe it should have and there is a link next to the tags which says Agree with these tags?. Click that and you will up the tag count for each of those tags and hence help the book be found by those searching Amazon.

    Apparently "Agree with all these tags" does not actually help the book, you have to click the tick boxes next to the actual tags. Trust Amazon to make it difficult. However, this still only takes a couple of seconds. Thanks.

    If you have time, please do this for all Amazon country sites because tags are country dependent (yep, silly I know).
  • Add your own tags on Amazon.

    If you think that the book should have a tag it does not yet have to reach a wider audience, add a new one. Just, please, make sure the tags apply or Amazon gets upset.
  • Like the book on Amazon.

    At the top of each book entry, just under the title and author there is a little like button. Click it to let the world know you liked the book. This is what it looks like when you have clicked the button.


    If you have time, please do this for all Amazon country sites because likes are also country dependent (yep, silly I know).
  • If you know a book is being given away on other sites for free (long term - i.e. it is a free title by the author), encourage Amazon to price match. Amazon only allow authors to put up books for a min of 99c, not give them away like other sites, so the only way to have a free title is for Amazon to price match, which they won't do without prompting.

    There is a link in the Product Details section which is called "tell us about a lower price". It will cause a window like this to come up:

    As you can see you will need the URL of the site where you saw it for free, for example Barnes and Nobel, and the price you saw it for.
  • If the book has a G+ page, circle it and share it with your friends.
  • If the book has a Facebook page, like it and share it with your friends.
  • Tweet about the book with a link to where it can be bought.
  • Rate it on Goodreads - you can add a star rating without adding a full review and you can always come back later and add the review when you have time.
  • Just mention the book to your friends. :)
Big name publishers really don't need a lot of help promoting their books, they have huge marketing machines behind each title, but when it comes to Indie Publishers and Indie Authors a minute of your time can mean so much. Upping a book's profile can mean the difference between ten sales and thousands; price matching on Amazon can mean the difference between twenty downloads and two thousand all of which will up the profile of the author and help them sell their other books.
We live in a world of social networking and the independent book producers rely on these networks. The truth is good titles deserve to rise to the top, but the world has to hear about them first. Indies are fighting against the huge corporate machines that promote books like Harry Potter and Twilight, so please, if you have a minute or two to spare, help out the little guys.