"Hoosier Ink" Blog

Showing posts with label publishing trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publishing trends. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Who Are Our Customers?

Tsunami-sized changes are sweeping through Great Britain’s publishing industry as they are through ours. It’s instructive to eavesdrop on what British publishing professionals are saying about this. I believe they are asking questions we should ask ourselves in this time of radical change.

The May 18 issue of The Bookseller (Britain’s equivalent to Publishers Weekly) featured an article by Hannah Macdonald of September Publishing, who challenges publishers to ask who their customers are. Twenty years ago, most publishers said their customers were retail bookstores. They thought that if they persuaded stores to carry their books, readers would find and purchase them. No more. The number of retail bookstores has shrunk radically and large store chains have disappeared altogether because fewer readers find and buy books through brick-and-mortar bookstores.

Publishers have responded with a variety of new schemes—free e-books with the purchase of print editions, special editions printed on demand, etc.—but none of these strategies have swept back the tsunami. So Macdonald reminds publishers:

Retailers are just a part of our customer base… Readers are the point of it. And authors are our partners in it, sales channels of their own. We should be rethinking all our processes, structures and ambitions—everything—through that new perspective. We sit at the centre of that glorious, electric, world-changing relationship between book and reader (or listener). That human creative exchange is our single most important purpose….

Note the main points of Macdonald’s argument, because she identifies some changes for all of us:

a Retailers are just a part of our customer base...Readers are the point of it. Publishers who try to cater to bookstores by imitating cover designs, popular characters, or settings of best-sellers, they may sell our books into stores but not through them. Readers spot knock-offs and avoid them.

a Authors are our partners in [publishing], sales channels of their own. Too often we are tempted to think, I’m the creative part of the publishing equation. I’ll do the writing and the publisher will do the selling. However, each of us has a network of contacts with family, friends, and members of the same congregation, alumni of the same college, etc. If we tell them about our latest books, we can start sales rolling.

a That human creative exchange [between book and reader] is our single most important purpose. We can take this cue from innovative publishers if we visualize our readers at each step of the writing process. We can imagine them asking questions as we write and listen as they respond to our stories. This will make readers our co-creators, not merely consumers of what we write.

Widespread change can be frightening, but loyal readers are loyal customers. If we satisfy them, they will come back for more of what we have to share. So take heart. It's time to recapture the principles that used to guide Christian publishing. They can determine where we land when the publishing tsunami passes by.

Joe Allison writes both fiction and nonfiction, and has been a member of the Indiana chapter of American Christian Fiction Writers since 2010. He lives in Anderson, IN, with his wife Maribeth.

Tuesday, June 6, 2023

What YA Readers Want
But Seldom Get

My current work in process is a young adult (YA) novel. This is my first book in this genre, so I’ve been researching what YA readers want in the novels they read.

Publishers Weekly and other trade publications report that more than half of the readers of YA novels are not young adults at all; they are middle-aged adults. Therefore, publishers usually orient these books to middle-aged tastes, and librarians say it’s difficult to find YA books that deliver what young adults truly want.

To corroborate these reports, I had a text-message dialogue with my granddaughter Jill, who turns 16 this month. When Jill told me the title of her favorite book, I asked what she liked about it:

Jill: …It’s really interesting. It’s got a super fun storyline and really likeable characters.

Joe: Do likeable characters need to be heroes, or do you look for other qualities in them?

Jill: They are relatable characters. They don’t always have to be heroes. I just like how they act and what circumstances they go through.

Jill made it clear that she wanted to read about teens like herself, dealing with problems like hers. (Think about the problems you and I faced as adolescents. Peer pressure. The generation gap. Racial prejudice, etc. Plenty of story material there!)

The YA category was created in the postwar period to help young teens make the transition from children’s picture books to adult fiction. YA fiction also bridged from child to teen protagonists, from foreign settings to familiar ones. Several of today’s best-selling YA novels still come from this time—books such as A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), The Lord of the Flies (1954), and To Kill a Mockingbird (1960).

On the other hand, recent YA best sellers tend to have adult or super-hero protagonists, not “relatable characters” that young adults like Jill want. Today's YA books also have violent or dystopian plot lines instead of exploring common problems in everyday settings. 

If YA novelists will return to the classic formula, I believe we can again help young adults make the transition from childhood to adulthood. I'm certainly willing to try.

Joe Allison writes both fiction and nonfiction, and has been a member of the Indiana chapter of American Christian Fiction Writers since 2010. He lives in Anderson, IN, with his wife Maribeth.