Sentences with phrase «writers do»

What should self - published writers do to make their work more marketable whether pitching to a traditional publisher or DIY?
If writers don't value their own work — why should others?
Yes, number three, lack of self - confidence, I suspect it is the real reason why many writers don't give it a go — of course this may be simply because it was the real reason why I didn't.
And that's a good thing, but that does NOT mean that because a few dozen or a few hundred or a few thousand writers do this that traditional publishing won't still dominate that $ 39.9 million sales of ebooks in September.
Readers don't want to see information about your writing services and writers don't want to see information about your books, etc..
I have so many writing friends forcing themselves to work through upheaval simply because they think that's what writers do.
(We know: writers don't like to chit chat, but guess what?
Most writers don't want to take the time, or will give the work over to traditional publishers to do.
But many writers don't write.
You say that «vetting» doesn't have to be done by editors or agents, and vetting in writer's groups counts, so why would you assume that «most» self - published writers do not belong to a writer's group?
Most writers don't have the luxury of quitting their jobs and writing full time, certainly not at the beginning of their careers.
Though most college essay writers preserve their confidentiality for various reasons, our custom essay writers do not hide behind nicknames.
But I soon realized Scrivener was designed to help writers do exactly what I found myself incapable of doing when I discovered it — stay organized and finish your book.
Part of the problem is that so many of the books published today are substandard, and the sad fact is the vast majority of the writers do not even know it.
Lots of writers do do it, and use various methods to maintain the work and brand.
But in the end writers don't want much fuss and muddle.
Writers don't have, for the most part, huge buildings and hundreds of employees to spread out the overhead.
Oh, no, there are more things indie writers do to cause bad sales.
Or, as some of my favorite writers do, they write 300 really good pages and then they write a really bad ending.
Other more prolific fiction writers don't have fiction platforms for all their books, but do have writing blogs which they use to lead any interested readers to their works.
These tools and sites let writers do a miniature version of what more expensive premium versions of the products can accomplish.
Our writers do everything and even sometimes impossible to please you.
Writers don't write because books are sticks or food or shelter or things to be flung.
However, writers do not need vast cultural and political disruptions to write powerful fiction readers can relate to.
It's an alternative most writers don't consider, but in this era of upheaval, the small press is a strong choice for writers who don't feel they have the time or skills to run their own self - publishing business.
But it could be only a matter of time before the software starts taking over the work that journalists, non-fiction book writers, novelists, and other kinds of writers do.
Certainly, that's something that all professional authors and writers do.
As an example of how settings can get uncomfortably «exotic,» it's worth asking why more American fantasy writers don't use medieval Korea as a background for stories, as opposed to, say, Japan or China.
Some writers do get past that idea that they can game their way to success.
Some writers do game their way to success.
But writers don't have to work very hard to earn pseudo «Published by Penguin» status.
Though many indie writers do strive to break the stereotype, a majority fall well short of the standards established by trade publishers.
Because first off, new writers don't have a career and wouldn't really understand a writing career if it slapped them.
Newer writers don't bother about studying until they have survived for twenty years or so.
Randy sez: I'm not quite sure what it means, but one thing that is commonly done at writing conferences is to have a panel of agents and let writers do quick pitches to either individual agents or to the panel as a whole while the audience listens.
And that's what most writers don't do.
But some writers do get it all, the great collaboration with a great editor, the burnishing by marketing, a great cover... go for it!
Some newbie writers don't yet get the «pick a different pen name» paradigm, which is something many authors end up doing for all sorts of reasons.
Bookworms analyze differently than other writers do.
Read every day: The worst writers don't have respect for the craft.
Writers do a variety of things like this even now, from analyzing the kinds of clients agents have, to writing to order based on Amazon's bestseller algorithms.
A lot of writers don't wan na deal with the business side of everything.
These writers want people to buy their books (or borrow them for a fee, as in KU), but these writers don't care if the readers read the book.
In the meantime, you've given me the «argument» I needed for those who say, «professional writers don't use free email carriers».
Self - published writers don't have access to all the same channels of discovery afforded to other authors because of the quality level — and that's a problematic quality level that exists both in the books and in the demonstration of marketing and basic professional conduct.
If self - published writers don't deserve to be called authors, do «editors» with serious grammar and punctuation issues deserve to call themselves «editor in chief»?
About a tenth of the work real writers do to have their work published by a traditional publisher.
Many writers don't hire a graphic designer to do something really solid, instead they download images from Google and do it themselves.
It's nice to see the figures for someone who also has a day job, as most writers do.
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