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Little and often?
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Alp
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Dec 19, 2014 06:45AM

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I absolutely agree with you ...

I absolutely..."
I've also heard that but in a different guise - as an example; after submitting an application for a job, someone once explained to me the advantages of contacting the HR department and asking a few simple questions such as, if they're received your application and how the process was progressing, even if it's for no other reason but to keep your name fresh in their mind.
Maybe the principle is similar, and if it works, then I think that's a good thing.
I am published three times a year by one publisher and twice a year by another, it's a way of growing one's readership. They are not novellas. The three books per year for the women's historical market are 100,000 words plus each, the crime mysteries are only around 73,000 words each.

I think that for some people, trying to publish little bits here and there will take away from their "real" work, and you don't want to reduce the quality of the thing that really matters. If you are publishing short works, little and often works better for you. If you are writing an epic, does it make sense to serialize it or not? There is lots of advice about breaking big stories into smaller bits and then bundling them when you are done, but I'm not sure about that. Publishing often may mean putting out a blog once or twice a week, or sending out a monthly newsletter even though you haven't published a new book recently. Maybe you're writing some industry news.
Pam (big and often)



I think you have to be careful not to alienate your readers by publishing before you are ready, over-pricing your work (though under-pricing is dangerous, too) and blasting your social media followers with 'buy me!' posts.
I read somewhere (from several sources) that writing and gaining a following takes time. It can take years before you see a steady income. Even and especially in today's instant gratification society. You might make a flash in the pan, but true longevity must be nurtured.
My plan is to write, and put out as many high quality works as I can each year (I'm currently publishing romantic suspense) and continue to build my web presence, my online brand, so to speak. Eventually when I have enough work out there, readers who 'discover' my work will have a good selection of titles to choose from, and the word will spread, and all my patience and hard work will pay off. Or it won't. But I will have been true to my craft and put out the best work I can, and as a writer who writes because I can't NOT write, that will be enough.



