The Five Book Plan
There used to be an idea in traditional publishing that new authors didn’t start to earn any money until they had three books published. Taking on a new author meant taking a loss until that threshold was met, so publishers were keen to have a long term relationship with authors, knowing full well that for the first three years weren’t going to be solvent.
Now, that number has jumped from three to five. With some
editors even claiming the magic number has moved to seven. This is why
publishers are even more wary of taking on new authors and why self published
authors often give up after a book or two. There are a lot of strong opinions
on these topics—none of which I am going to go into here. Instead I want to
focus on what you can do as an author to best utilize this information to build
your career.
This is where we put the information in previous blog posts
in this series into practical use. You have some idea of your brand now and who
your fans are/will be. You also, hopefully, know how you want to use your time
and what method of publishing is best going to suit your interests, so it’s
time to look at your five book plan.
Your first five books in any brand (pen name) are about
building, and keeping, your audience. So it’s a good idea to have some sort of
structure in place. There needs to be a flow between books, elements that will
keep the same people coming back. As I mentioned when in the blog post about
your target audience, different people have very different interests. So if
your first book is a YA romance about vampires and your second book is about a
fat, middle aged detective solving a series of violent torture rapes, fans of
your first book are going to be deeply unimpressed with you second book. And
even if your third book is a YA romance about were-ocelots, those first fans
probably aren’t going to come back. Once burned, twice shy.
So it is generally a good idea to stick to similar themes,
similar genres and a similar target audience for the first five books. If you
really want to write both children’s picture books and hardcore fireman
erotica, do so by building two separate brands (pen names), but keep in mind
you need to write five books for EACH BRAND before you can expect to see a
decent income coming in.
Obviously this five book rule is not a hard and fast one.
Some authors do very well with their very first book. However when you look at
‘overnight success stories’ they are usually 5-10 years in the making. By the
time you hear about most ‘overnight success stories’ you will notice they
actually have 3-5 books out. Harry Potter, for example, really started to make
the news right before the release of book 4.
Publishers really love series for this reason. If readers
like a book, it makes sense they will like another book, set in exactly the
same setting, with exactly the same characters they already like. So if you
already want to do a series (or two trilogies in the same setting) your five
book plan is very straightforward.
However if you don’t want to do a series, you have to put more
thought in. Most authors have plenty of ideas for stories they want to tell,
but can you organise them into a more effective, streamline order? Can you see
a flow between them that will hook a reader into buying the next book? Can you,
for example, start with the ideas that are a bit more commercial before you
branch into the more uniquely bizarre? Or do you want to open with something
specialised and niche, then build outward?
I don’t claim there is a right or wrong order to publish
books, however it is still worth giving it some thought. If you want to be
traditionally published, editors will be looking for evidence of the next five
books and if they are going to fit together in a way that will keep fans
returning. (At the same time, don’t include your entire five book plan in your
query letter either, wait until they ask or you have a signed contract before
talking long term. It’s like talking about marriage on a first date,
otherwise!)
Exercise time!
Write a list of all the books you ever hope to write. For
some of you, that will be dozens. For others, maybe only a few.
Separate those books into brands (or genres, if you haven’t
got that far or only want one brand).
Pretend you have nothing else in print (or don’t, depending
on where you are in your career) and list three different possible ‘first five
book plans’. It doesn’t have to be anything but five titles, in order from
first to fifth. Consider the strengths and weaknesses of each of your three
plans.
Obviously if you only have a series planned, this exercise
isn’t going to be very useful to you. However hopefully, overall, this post has
given you something to think about when you are deciding what to write next.
One more thing!
This month I released a short story on kindle. It would mean
a lot to me if you read it and reviewed it. Reviews = sales.
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