Sunday, September 29, 2013

AFTER THE SALE...


As some of you may know, I recently sold my debut, RUNNING ON EMPTY, to Tulip Romance—Spencer Hill Press’s newest imprint. (For more info on that journey, Bethany Griffin interviewed me here on YA Fusion a couple months ago.) The sale was finalized June 12, 2013 and the release date is scheduled for November 25, 2013. Yes—only 5 ½ short months from the sale date! Talk about a crash course!J

So for those of you who are pre-sale or have recently sold, I thought I’d offer some insight on what happens next…

 First of all, I advise anyone who is hesitant about joining the twenty-first century with the whole social media thing, to ease into this world BEFORE the sale!! I’m pretty sure I was one of the last hold-outs on planet earth to join Facebook and I still find it quite overwhelming. With the help and guidance of one of my amazing critique partners and my techno-savvy nephew, I now have a website/blogsite—on Blogger (still learning terms). I’ve also had to learn to maneuver Goodreads and link my blog etc. Thankfully, my smart writer friends wore me down and convinced me to join the Twitter-verse a few months before I sold. Oh, did I forget to mention that I’m one of the regular contributors to YA Fusion as well…
Needless to say, there’s a lot to learn about social media. If only I’d listened sooner to those who forged the path ahead of me… Learn from my mistakes; the sooner you master social media, the sooner you’ll have time for what comes next…

Second word of advice: it takes awhile to receive that first editor letter so use your time wisely. After you take a few moments to let the happy settle in—all those hours, months, years that it’s taken to turn your dream into a reality deserves to be celebrated—then jump back into work!
Start that next project if you haven’t already. It will keep you distracted from worrying about what kind of revisions you might be facing or imagining scenarios of your editor calling you up and saying they’ve changed their mind about buying your book, or wondering with each passing day that you don’t hear any news if all of this sale-business was just another story you’ve conjured in your head…

Third: the editor’s letter; deep breaths. When you receive round one revisions, take a couple of days to thoroughly absorb the good and the bad before you dive in. This can be overwhelming at first; I had no clue about how I was going to fix some of the things that needed to be fixed, or added. I started with smaller things and things I knew exactly how to fix while my mind worked consciously and subconsciously on how to fix some of the bigger problems.
Revising for an editor was incredibly hard work and I put in MANY sixteen-hour days over the course of my month-long, first round revisions, but I finally pulled it off. After many restless nights, lots of hair pulling, nail-biting, and random dry-heaving, I am happy say to that after adding approximately seventy pages, tons of revisions, and even cutting a character, I was happier than ever with my book and finally managed to push the SEND button, (not to be confused with the EASY button.)J

More anxious waiting, then came ROUND TWO… three more pages of edit notes that my editor lovingly called “minor”.  I could probably think of a stronger word…J After another grueling week of sifting through nearly a 400 page manuscript and stretching my brain until I thought it would snap, I finally managed to push SEND again...

The manuscript is off to copy editors now, so I’ll let you know how it goes from here. But honestly, this process has been amazing and nothing feels better than being able to work with an editor who loves and believes in your manuscript as much as you do, and to have a whole team willing to stand behind you and help push your book to that next level! :)

6 comments:

Kristin Lenz said...

Congrats on getting through the grueling editing process!

It was fun to see you on Facebook. Please don't make me join Twitter. :(

Amy said...

So interesting! Thanks for sharing- and congratulations on getting the hard work done. It will be worth it all I'm sure when you're holding YOUR book. Happy for you!

Kurt Hampe said...

Looking forward to seeing the changes, Colette. Give us a hint what we'll find in those 70 new pages!

Colette Ballard said...

Kristen, you sound like me about joining Twitter, but it can be quite useful...and time consuming if you let it. Proceed with caution:)

Thanks, Amy. I'm excited, and nervous, and simply terrified:)

Kurt, there is more character development, more explaining of some things, more action-y stuff... but the part you'll be most interested in is that there is more ROMANCE. ;)

Lisa Tapp said...

Congratulations Colette! I've heard the revision period can be daunting. How do you effectively use your social media outlets to maximize exposure without being just another advertisement?

Can't wait till your November release. :)

Colette Ballard said...

Thanks Lisa! The publicist at SHP told me she uses the 80/20 rule. Post personal things--anything from what TV show you're watching, to funny stories about kids/family (you don't have to use names)-about 80% of the time. And 20% of the time, post about your WIP or book news etc.
This allows readers to feel like they know you a little while you're not shoving anything down their throats. Makes sense to me--lots left to learn though. :)