Not exact matches
Here at Prime
Publishing, we love it when we
get to try new projects with some of the brands we
work with!
«I think the quality of my science has not changed, but the
work that I have to do to
get my science
published or funded is multiple times harder
here.»
Here's what Facebook tried to
get away with in 2009 (a public backlash forced it to tone down the language): «You hereby grant Facebook an irrevocable, perpetual, nonexclusive, transferable, fully paid, worldwide license (with the right to sublicense) to (a) use, copy,
publish, stream, store, retain, publicly perform or display, transmit, scan, reformat, modify, edit, frame, translate, excerpt, adapt, create derivative
works and distribute (through multiple tiers), any User Content you (i) Post on or in connection with the Facebook Service or the promotion thereof.»
Here, Teacher contributor Hedley Willsea draws on his own experience to offer insights to fellow educators hoping to
get their
work published.
The investor is making a bet that they'll recover their investment, plus generate a profit, and the investee uses that capital to fund their business, either by paying their cost of living, paying themselves a salary, hiring a publicist, or
working with a branding expert to build their author brand, etc. (To learn how to build your author platform and
get published, start
here.)
N.K. Jemisin wrote a liberating blog post about how writing exactly what she wanted to write propelled her to success: «I think The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms became my «breakout» novel (i.e., the one that actually
got published, as opposed to the ones still sitting in my harddrive) because I stopped caring about what the market wanted... [conclusion] The lesson
here is obvious: trying to write what the market wanted didn't
work for me.
The Easiest Way To Find Kindle Reviewers See How It
Works Get it
Here For The Lowest Price One of the hardest aspects about book
publishing is
getting reviews.
We can all use some creative writing tips to
get our latest
work off the ground, so click
here to
get a free book and some self -
publishing tips.
Margaret Harrison [00:02:07] Oh thanks, well so, yeah, I've
worked my whole career in
publishing and I started out on the ebook side
working for OverDrive, a major distributor of ebooks at public libraries, and focusing on ebooks, so much of it is about the metadata, not just
getting books into channels but also making sure those books, as Justine said, can be discoverable, can be found, and so I started spending a lot more of my time on metadata, and I'm a curious person so I
got to know a lot and
here I am
It's
here the two paths separate, and while a writer intent on a traditional
publishing deal can submit her
work to potential agents or publishers and take a well - earned siesta, the self -
publishing author has to
get busy.
But
here's the catch, in the eagerness to self -
publish, some writers are being pulled in by scams that claim to assist them in
getting their
work out there to the masses, for a sometimes very substantial fee.
The way I
got into self -
publishing myself was through the cooperation with self -
published British author and blogger Joanna Penn on a split - royalty basis, because I knew I could learn a lot about the process by doing this and
here is a link to an interview she did with me regarding my
work.
Joe Konrath constantly talks about
getting up more
work, Locke didn't even start
publishing until he finished five novels, I push writing more and more
here all the time.
Here is where things
get confusing around the word «margin» to writers who want to be indie publishers, meaning
publish their own
work, or join a group
working to
publish their own
works.
We haven't written a post on upcoming reading, writing, and author events throughout Arizona in a while, so we figured it would be a nice time to spread the word on where to «
get your write on» this spring in Phoenix.Midnight
Publishing is an award - winning, local book editing and ghostwriting company that has
worked with a variety of clients over our nearly ten years
here in the valley.
Let's be real
here: there are more authors trying to
get their
work published than there are slots available for them.
And I think the other point between distinguishing between self -
published author and author publisher is, you know, the author publisher isn't doing it alone, that there's an approach
here about partnership and about involving a whole range of professionals in the process of
getting a
work from the desktop or the paper and pencil to the actual
published final document.
Here at Indies Unlimited we
work hard to help you make good
publishing decisions without
getting scammed.
Antiguan writer Joanne C. Hillhouse shares
here the effort of
getting her
work «out there» through the lens one whose hometown is remote from the traditional
publishing world.
Here's an idea from Self -
Publishing Relief: Although it's not right for everyone,
getting your e-book into the Kindle Unlimited program is one of the options you should consider when researching the best marketing strategies for your
work.
The links I have provided will explain how to convert your text into books, (either in print or eBook), but if you struggle to do this I would then suggest using Sandy Spider (also linked to
here) in order to
get your book of poems converted into a format that
works for
publishing.
Imagine if you will, someone like me arguing evidence for AGW coming to CFACT and citing an article from, not a top - tier journal, nor even a second - tier, but more like a third - tier journal like the Asia - Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences (which people generally
publish in when they can't pass the more rigorous peer review of the more reputable journals), and if that paper were written by a person who's
work has had to be corrected by others, not once, not twice, but FOUR times to my knowledge, and every correction takes it back in the opposite direction of what that person was arguing, and if the paper I was citing was this guy making the same old tired argument he's been corrected on before, and if this paper already had evidence of data tampering to
get it's conclusions... just imagine the uproar from the usual crowd
here.
And Parker also continues to use the name Alberto Boretti when
publishing in his day job so Parker continues to be a nom de plume, perhaps used to build a firewall between the responses he
gets to his purile writings on climatology (which «would be unacceptable in an undergraduate lab report») from his more serious Mechanical Engineering
work (eg
here).
I also want to acknowledge Law.com Executive Editor David Snow, who gave me the freedom and encouragement to blog on whatever I wanted; Law.com Vice President Jill Windwer, whose vision and hard
work have made Law.com a leading destination for legal professionals on the Web; Jennifer Collins, the former Law.com editor who first invited me
here; and ALM CEO Bill Pollak, one of the few corporate leaders in
publishing or in any industry who truly
gets social media.