finance

Plan to get rich from your book? Read this first

Plan to get rich from your book? Read this first

Recently a couple of people I've known for a short time learnt that I am a 'published author'. Immediately I felt a glow about me as my reputation in their eyes went up a couple of notches.

The aura didn't last long. Unfortunately I knew the truth: that my newfound esteem was misplaced. My new friends had fallen for the Great Author Myth.

There's always been a strange glamour associated with being an author, particularly a published author, i.e. a writer who a so-called 'trade' publisher has recognised as being worthy. It's this glamour that gives a book its power to bestow immediate credibility on its creator – something that also applies to a well-prepared self-published book. It also generates, in the minds of many, the notion that publishing a book is a good way to make money.

Here lies the myth, on both counts.

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Why I don't write for free – and nor should you

Why I don't write for free – and nor should you

The unedifying topic of artists and ‘creatives’ working for free has raised its head again this week. It was reported on the weekend that professional dancers were recently invited to perform in the taping of a music video for Kylie Minogue, “unpaid but [a] great opportunity and fun”. Apparently the budget didn’t allow for payment, but the producers promised “to feature as many faces as possible” and it would be great “exposure”.

There have subsequently been denials that anyone appeared in the video without payment, along with contradictory reassurances that: “The atmosphere on the set was amazing and everyone involved was thrilled to be part of it”.

Whatever the truth in this case, the general issue of people being asked to work for nothing but ‘exposure’ comes up all to often...

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