Posts Tagged ‘smashwords’

Smashwords Titles Soon Available on Amazon Kindle

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Smashwords, the “people’s ebook publisher and distributor”, have announced another coup: a deal to distribute their titles through Amazon.com’s Kindle Store.

Smashwords logo

Smashwords logo

This is really freakin’ amazing given what is required by an author/publisher to get titles into the Kindle Store. See my earlier post for more info.

I worked for weeks, spending hours lurking on Kindle forums, figuring out Amazon’s Digital Text Platform, uploading dummy test titles, reviewing and testing uploaded versions until finally hitting the publishing button for my three titles.

Amazon Kindle E-Reader

Amazon Kindle E-Reader

And now, all you have to do is be an author in the Smashwords Premium Catalogue (not hard; just follow their sensible text format and conversion advice) and you’ll soon have ebooks available to Kindle readers!

Smashwords Offers Totally Awesome Service

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Just a quickie update on my previous post where I mused about what would happen to my publications, already carried by Shortcovers.com, now that Smashwords.com has inked their own distribution agreement.

Smashwords logo

Smashwords logo


I just emailed Smashwords founder, Mark Coker (amazingly, he not only gives out a legit email address, he responds!) to ask the above.

Within an hour I heard from Mark, who responded and cc’d a co-worker for followup. Minutes later, his co-worker emailed and provided sensible instructions.

I’ve been able to ‘opt out’ of the distribution to Shortcovers but am still opting in on all their other avenues, including Barnes and Nobles and the Sony Store.

Smashwords.com rules.

Smashwords.com Signs New Distribution Deal With Shortcovers.com

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Typical…just after my lengthy post on how-to submit your ebook to the nifty Canadian online bookseller, Shortcovers.com, I received notification that Smashwords.com has signed an agreement with Shortcovers to distribute their books.

Here’s a snippet from the press release (full version here):

“Our partnership with Smashwords represents a great opportunity for authors, publishers and readers alike,” said Michael Tamblyn, vice president of content, sales and merchandising at Shortcovers. “Both Shortcovers and Smashwords are committed to a more open, democratic, and innovative eBook experience. Our open platform allows readers to read on the device of their choice while Smashwords creates new opportunities for writers, utilizing free online publishing tools and community to connect with new audiences in new ways. ”

“This agreement dramatically expands the worldwide market for all independent authors and publishers,” said Mark Coker, founder of Smashwords. “A Smashwords author in the U.K. or Brazil can upload their book today and have it purchased by a Shortcovers customer next week in the United States, India, or South Africa. Under the Smashwords model of instant publishing, any author, anywhere in the world, can go from finished manuscript to worldwide eBook distribution in a matter of minutes or days.”

Smashwords logo

Smashwords logo

This is terrific news, though I’m not sure how it affects my publications which are already available on Shortcovers.com.

Bottom line: I continue to be impressed by Smashwords founder, Mark Coker, and his ongoing efforts to expand sales opportunities for Smashwords.com authors.

So, Mark, now how about getting us into booksonboard.com? :)

How To Publish an Ebook on Shortcovers.com

Friday, November 13th, 2009

My journey into the online publishing of ebooks has taken me into a number of bookselling domains, including Smashwords and Mobipocket. You may pick up this earlier thread here.

Most of the bookselling sites expect you to do the hard lifting. You’ve got to figure out their requirements, wrangle your manuscript into their format, upload and verify everything and then hope for the best (especially if you’re like me and don’t own a mobile device for testing).

One bookseller, Shortcovers.com, is a little different. This is the online bookstore for the large Canadian bookseller, Indigo Chapters, and their mantra is:

Shortcovers is not just for avid readers or technophiles. It’s for anyone who wants the convenience of accessing and reading their favorite books, content, anytime, anywhere, on the mobile device they already own.

Okay, not obviously so different from other booksellers, you think, BUT they have one cool advantage: they’re into selling short stuff (hence the name), like individual chapters, short stories, blogs, articles, poems, speeches, etc., as well as entire ebooks. I like this bite-sized approach to mobile reading.

logo for kobobooks

logo for kobobooks

So, in the early spring, I filled out a bunch of forms, submitted my carefully formatted manuscripts, images and blurbs, to climb onto the shortcovers wagon or at least I thought I had. Weeks went by and no word. A response to my follow up, though prompt, was disappointing. They had made changes to their requirements and now wanted the files formatted differently.

I was ticked and said so, ever so politely. To my amazement, a week or so later I received an apology and an offer I couldn’t refuse: Shortcovers generously agreed to cover the cost of the new conversions!

And they did, though it took weeks and weeks but eventually three of my works (two mysteries and one short story) went live. By this time, I had written a non-fiction primer on writing mysteries and decided to pony up the conversion fee (about $35 CDN) and have shortcovers handle this manuscript as well.

That was over a month ago and still no sign of Youdunit Whodunit! on shortcovers.com. I’ll follow up and I’m sure my little primer will soon appear.

In the interim, check out shortcovers. They’ve got a ton of great stuff available.

Publishing an E-book using Smashwords (3)

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

I ended my previous post (Publishing an Ebook Using Smashwords (2)) on a classic cliffhanger: click Publish.

So, then what happens?

It may take awhile for the famous meatgrinder to convert your file. You’ll probably see a screen that tells you that “Your book has been received and is #X in the queue”. Over time, the page will refresh and the queue number will go down until your publication is ready. I’ve never been higher than 14 in the queue and that conversion only took about 7 minutes.

You don’t have to sit and wait, you may upload another file or leave altogether, returning later to visit your “Dashboard” (on the blue toolbar) to determine the status of your uploaded file. You’ll receive an email from Smashwords letting you know your publication is online and offering marketing suggestions.

If you do hang around, you’ll eventually see a new title “Your book is converting” and the status of each listed format changes from “converting” to “complete”. Finally, a new page appears saying “Your book upload and conversion is complete”, and you are encouraged to review the publication and check for any conversion errors. You do so by clicking “Proceed to the New Page for your Work”.

You are now taken to your publication’s “home” page, which offers information like title, rating, category, publication date, description, categories, tags and available ebook reading formats. This is where you test your publication. If you are like me and lack a mobile reading device, you are only able to test/view a few of the formats, such as HTML, PDF, RTF and plain text. If you own a Kindle, other e-reading device, you may check other formats.

So, first off: test your new publication’s format by clicking VIEW beside “Online Reading (HTML)”.

You’ll be taken to a new page where you should see the first page of your spanking new publication! Click your way through it to make sure the conversion is successful. Pay CAREFUL attention to formatting issues like indents, bullets, spacing, etc. Reviewing page by page is a drag but essential, especially if you wish you and your publication to be taken seriously (not to mention purchased).

Now, have a quick look at another format like PDF or RTF to find similar or other formatting gremlins.

Reality is that you’ll probably have a few issues but making changes is easy. Go to your “Dashboard”. This is command central for your publication so spend some time getting introduced to the toolbar and reading this entire page. It contains a lot of information and offers a variety of options.

As an example, you’ll note that there is an opportunity to have your work listed with other distributors, like Barnes and Nobles and the Sony Store, or to create affiliates or sales coupons. More info in the How Smashwords Distributes E-books.

So, presuming you have a few changes to make to your newly launched publication, click “Settings”. This new page gives you an overview of this publication, from publication status to sales figures. Click “Operations” for modifications; you may upload a new version or a new cover and/or make changes to any/all of the information you previously provided. Just remember to click “Save” at the very bottom when you’re finished.

You may also unpublish your work but note: this doesn’t completely remove it. This is an interesting quirk of ALL digital publishing; once published, an e-book will remain available for download to anyone who purchased it.

Smashwords logo

Smashwords logo

So, there you have it: your own published work, now available in a variety of ebook formats on Smashwords.com, just waiting to be read. Congratulations!

Now, review the excellent tips in the Smashwords Book Marketing Guide and start selling.

Over the next few posts, I’ll review my exploits in ebook publishing on mobipocket.com, shortcovers.com, iTunes and the granddaddy of all, amazon.com.

Publishing an E-book using Smashwords (2)

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

As I mentioned previously (Publishing an Ebook Using Smashwords (1)) getting my two published mysteries republished as ebooks became a consuming goal.

Smashwords logo

Smashwords logo


After being stymied at Amazon.com for lacking necessary account criteria, I gave Smashwords.com, the ‘people’s ebook store’ a try…and was pleasantly surprised.

The Smashwords steps are pretty simple, understandable and achievable:

1. Go to www.smashwords.com, click “Join” on the blue tool bar & complete the form
2. Click “How to Publish” on the blue tool bar, make sure you own the copyright and follow the instructions…

BUT WAIT! BEFORE YOU PUBLISH, grab a tea, some cookies and a spare hour or so to:

3. Read the free “Smashwords Style Guide”; it very clearly and simply explains what document formats are accepted and how to format them so that they convert into ebook form with the fewest problems, and then
4. Read the Smashwords Q&A.

Sounds like a lot of reading. It is but it’s well worth it; otherwise you’ll upload your precious ebook and wonder why it looks like it was written in elf language.

5. Now, BEFORE you return to the home page, log in and click on “Publish” in the blue tool bar, be ready to provide:

• a title
• a brief synopsis (a marketing blurb similar to what is on the back of a published book)
• the language of publication
• whether the book is finished or a partial and whether it contains adult content
• a price in US dollars
• how much free sampling to offer
• the category and sub-categories that classify your book
• the tags that buyers may use to search for your book
• the manuscript file
• a cover image file
• which ebook formats you wish to have your book available in (Go for the default; everything), and
• an authorization to publish with Smashwords.

Now, armed with the info needed, go to the home page, click “Publish”, sumbit all the above info and then…

click PUBLISH!

So…what happens next? Stay tuned.

Publishing An Ebook Using Smashwords.com (1)

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Many months ago, it occurred to me that ebooks were a huge hit waiting to happen…and I, as an indie author, could join the party. If Japanese commuters were downloading millions of these electronic reads to their smart phones every year, the platform had to have a rosy future.

I own full copyright on a couple of my previously-published mysteries so I figured, why not turn them into instant cash as ebooks?

That was the original idea; how it played out is another story.

My ultimate goal was to have my work available on Amazon’s Kindle e-reader. Right from the get-go, I was blocked. The Kindle market is open only to those publishers who own the lucky trifecta in electronic publishing: a US address, a US-based bank account and a US tax number.

Temporarily stumped, I decided to publish where I could and work on getting the Amazon info.

To create an ebook, first you need your manuscript in digital form. Makes sense, however, my two mysteries were published a decade ago and both former publishers had gone under…so I had to get my printed books back into digital files.

Thus began hours of scanning (kinda like photocopying forever) and then correcting the scanned pages, for my two books Teed Off! and A Hemorrhaging of Souls.

Boring, time-consuming but essential. Eventually, I had the digital files in Microsoft Word, and was ready to tackle e-booking. After researching online ebook sites, I choose one that seemed straightforward, simple and open to indies like me: Smashwords.com: the ‘people’s ebook site’.

It took some study, a lot of tweaking and a few hair-pulling incidents but amazingly, I was able to upload my work and soon had ebooks for sale online at smashwords-nicola-furlong.

That was pretty cool and I’ll explain how I did it in my next post.

My Excellent Ebook Adventures: Geronimo!

Monday, September 28th, 2009
Teed Off! cover

Teed Off! cover

I love the idea of ebooks. Many reasons but for now let’s just say: as a author because they offer a variety of new marketing opportunities and ease of updating and as a reader because they provide simplicity, portability and availability.

So, months ago I decided to republish a pair of my novels as ebooks.

Even though I’ve never touched one, my main goal was to have my mysteries available for Amazon’s amazing Kindle ereader.

Simple, right?

No such luck BUT through a peck of perserverance and a dash of digitizing, I now (or shortly will) have ebooks available:

- in the iTunes.com App Store
- on Smashwords.com (the ‘people’s ebook site’)
- BarnesandNobles.com (through Smashwords agreement)
- Shortcovers.com (Canada’s Indigo Books’ online bookstore),
- Mobipocket.com (one of the Internet’s biggest ebook sellers), and
- Amazon.com’s Kindle store (waiting approval/fingers crossed).

So, how did I do it? Well, I’d love to say “Elementary, my dear Reader”, but it wasn’t. However, neither was it rocket science.

You might want to give it a digital whirl. So, over the next few weeks, I’ll blog you through it.

Geronimo!