Mar 232013
 

Here it is, the new title and the new cover:

WB1_kl

A while ago, I pulled both the published eBook and paperback of Wiener Blut from the internet. The reason was that I wanted to relaunch it, with a new name – mine as well as the book’s – and a new cover. Although the Podiobooks version is still online, all the rest got a major redo.

The title Wiener Blut now belongs to the series – yes there will be at least one more book in the universe. I am working on the outline and have already a few words written on it.

The eBook versions are finished and also have a release date: April 1st, 2013.

There is an event on Facebook as well as Goodreads you can join or you just follow what’s happening on Twitter or on the book series’ website Wiener Blut.

 March 23, 2013  Posted by on March 23, 2013 Books, Wiener Blut Tagged with: , ,  No Responses »
Mar 082013
 

8522626462_a4e1af1b75_oThe Story So Far…

This autumn I’ll celebrate my 7 year podcasting anniversary. I started in October of 2006 with a Heroes podcast. The TV show jumped the shark before the podcast did. Three more entertainment podcasts later, I turned my podcasting theme to fiction. Since then, I’ve podcast a novel and am in the fourth year of podcasting short stories. I got into the whole podcasting fiction area after being introduced to Podiobooks. At that point I spent a lot of time listening to free fiction. The site has grown, I have grown into it and one day, I became a Podiobooks author myself.

When you get into a hobby as time-consuming as podcasting and writing, at some point you ask yourself if people make money from it. I think it was during listening to the old PotterCast, I first heard ads on a podcast. Obviously they had thousands of listeners, so that somehow made sense. Although much can be done for free or cheap, they did an amazing job and I thought ads would be a good idea to finance that. Of course, I thought myself how awesome it would be to be paid for podcasting. I haven’t entirely given that up yet, but more about that later.

Turning the focus onto writing, there were several people who started off as Podiobooks authors and ended up published authors. Some were able to continue to podcast, but most had to sign all the rights over. Self-publishing made this question superfluous. Suddenly you were completely flexible. You could podcast your book and give that away for free and sell the eBook at the same time. Now I thought more about money. Was this possible for me too?

I never wanted to turn it into a living – neither podcasting nor writing – but some extra money is always appreciated. But there are many people who did and I got to watch them through the ups and downs. Rising stars, struggling artists, passionate nut-cases, or all of the above.

Money Money Money…

Sometime last year, I think, JC Hutchins was the first to stop. Stop giving away his works for free as podcasts. It didn’t work for him, the advertisement and exposure wasn’t worth it. He got a lot of complaints, the fans who were used to getting his stories free were disappointed. Some in the community felt it was turning away from a higher goal. Yesterday, Jake Bible announced he was going to leave podcasting. This time, people were still disappointing but more understanding. Before it was easier to blame a big publisher for having to stop podcasting than justifying taking the step yourself.

Before I get into my take on it, I suggest you also read John Mierau‘s blogpost about podcasting, writing and the suffering behind it.

My Side

What about me? First and foremost, podcasting is a hobby for me and so is writing. At the same time, podcasting is a means of getting my writing ‘out there’. Now, would I love to get money for it? Of course. Who wouldn’t want to get paid for their hobby? Also, many people want to or try to turn their hobby into a job.

BUT: Pure hobbies don’t usually bring you money. They cost money.

So how is podcasting / writing different? Why do we expect money out of those – or even just hope for money out of it? No one thinks you can make money with hiking (unless you turn it into a job) or other sports. Not everyone who loves travelling thinks they can make money with their travel blog. Do we aim for it because we’ve seen it happen so often? Did we lose sight of why we did it in the first place?

Hobbies should be fun. Trying (or even struggling) to make money out of your hobby seldom is.

I appreciate every sale my book gets, every donation on Podiobooks. I would still podcast if it didn’t bring in a single dime. At the same time, I’ll be honest and say at the moment where it brings in the kind of money where I can get something I couldn’t otherwise, I’d be more motivated to write more, podcast more. Money is a good motivator, of course! But few people can live with it being the only one. I don’t know if my next book will just be an eBook or a podcast as well – it’ll be a question of time too. Or maybe I will just try something completely different. I am open to new ideas and really have nothing to lose either way.

Why I do it

I need to get back to why I do it. The fun. Whatever else comes out of it is a bonus.
If you want to make it your living, it’s just as legit as wanting to make hiking a living, or photography, or any hobby one can have. When you go down that road, of course you will have to make tough decisions to make it worthwhile and earn an actual living out of it, not just a few coins in the piggy bank.

Unless I get bored, I lose my motivation or run out of stories or ideas about things I’d like to podcast about, I don’t see a reason why I would stop podcasting. At the same time I’ll have to honestly say that no imaginable amount of money coming in from podcasting/writing would make me want to stop being a lawyer. That doesn’t make me stop thinking about podcasts though – after all, I’m writing my doctoral thesis about legal information requirements for podcasts in EU law ;)…

Support

I will support those who want to make a living and those who do it as a hobby. I support the stories I love and the people I admire.
As John Mireau said in his blogpost, nothing shows more support than buying someone’s product. Spreading the word, reviewing, shouting it from the rooftops is super too, but one can formidably argue over how much that translates into sales. I don’t understand enough about stats or economics to have much of an opinion. Yes, there are more downloads of my book as free podcast than there are sales. If the ratio is normal or not, I don’t know. Maybe some marketing stats business person can answer me that, I don’t know. I also won’t enter into the “to kickstarter or not to kickstarter” discussion.

Support the artists however seems right to you, however much money or time you can afford or want to spend on someone.
Think about the small, local shop around the corner or the craftspeople you see at a market…
And then support the things you enjoy to get people to make more of them! :)

 March 8, 2013  Posted by on March 8, 2013 Every Photo Tells..., Podcasting, Wiener Blut, Writing Tagged with: , , , ,  8 Responses »
Nov 142012
 

Every once in a while, Evo Terra of Podiobooks.com sends out an email to his writers, telling them if and how much money they got from donations. On every podiobook’s individual site, you have the chance to donate some money, since downloading the podcasts is free. Part of that goes to Podiobooks.com, and part to the author.

I was very lucky to get some donations into my PayPal account from the last payout for my novel Wiener Blut. Since I haven’t gotten around to using my PayPal account for anything, it took DanDanTheArtMan to give me the nudge to start spending the money I got. He released a collection of his short stories “Danthology” for 99c on Smashwords. Since Smashwords takes PayPal, I just used my donated money to get his collection.

This was what prompted my idea. I was going to use the money that I got from donations to support other authors and their self-published eBooks. Not only that, I also wanted to share which books I got and by whom. The list might not be complete yet and there could also be some money left over, but I wanted to take this chance to promote some authors.

 

Here is the list (not complete yet):

Other things I supported:

 

Oct 272012
 

All the way back in 2010, I first took part in the challenge that is known as NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month). The outcome was, as you might know, Wiener Blut. It is now available as Podcast, eBook and in Paperback. In 2011, I had only just started a new job with too many working hours a week to take part in NaNoWriMo again. To be honest I was very tempted, but it just wasn’t possible. At the same time I knew, I wouldn’t be able to resist in 2012.

Now I’m in the comfortable position where I don’t work all waking hours, there was only the question of what to write. There was always the option of writing Wiener Blut 2, for which I already had an idea and a tentative title short after I had finished the book. But there was something else I wanted to write. After finishing law school, I signed up for the doctorate. I have done most of the research, so all there was left was a question of sitting down and writing it.

I am aware that NaNoWriMo only includes works of fiction, but I decided that this time I will use the hype and the challenge to my advantage. I want to write 50 000 words, but I will break a few rules along the way. It’s not as bad since you can’t actually WIN more than a badge for your website. I might have to write a few short stories as well since I doubt I can achieve that amount of words with just  non-fiction.

For anyone who always wanted to write a book, I can warmly suggest NaNoWriMo, if nothing else to just get into it and do it. There will be a word count widget on this page etc, and you can befriend me on the NaNo page to follow my progress. I am quite curious how it’ll go and if nothing else, next year I’ll try to obey all the rules again…

 October 27, 2012  Posted by on October 27, 2012 Books, Wiener Blut, Writing Tagged with: , , , , , ,  No Responses »