On Velocity Models and Leading With Your Backlist

Back when I pulled together the Brain Jar Press writer guidelines, I specifically called out that we use a backlist driven model of publishing. It’s one of those phrases that generates a lot of questions from new authors, and there’s been a project where the author in question wasn’t interested in pursuing publication with us once I laid things out (Side note: this is a good thing: I lay things out because publishing with a small press whose practices are a small fit for your expectations is likely to be frustrating for everyone).

What’s really interesting at the moment is the way backlist versus front list models are coming into focus because of the current problems with publishing supply chains, particularly in the US. It often means people have to articulate what a front-list model looks like, and why it runs into problems.

My favourite description comes via Kristine Kathryn Rusch’s analysis of the current supply chain problems in publishing:

“Traditional publishing, as I have written many times, is built on the velocity model. Books must sell quickly out of the gate, and then taper off later.”

There’s a lot of complexity packed into that word velocity, from the legacy models trad pub clings to through to the realities of storing, shipping, and selling books in physical spaces with limited capacity. And I think it’s worth noting that velocity models do make sense in a world where that’s the only way to sell books, and it served big publishers well for several years.

But it’s also a very fragile business model, easily broken with just a few changes to the ecosystem. Tansy Rayner Roberts recently wrote her own response to Rusch’s article on twitter, noting the ways disruptions to the velocity models shaped Tansy’s career and the way she thought about the success and failure of certain books she’d written.

When Brain Jar Press 2.0 launched, I used the phrase “Backlist Focused” intentionally to describe our approach to publishing. I’m incredibly disinterested in velocity in publishing, and more interested in producing books that people find their way to over time. My perspective of publishing is shaped by doing RPG ebooks in 2005, then watching them continue to sell for sixteen years despite the industry moving on, my leaving the industry behind in 2007, and the books receiving very little advertising or updating after that point.

Ostensibly, the ability to be backlist focus is the strength of digital publishing, but it’s astonishing how often the conversations and strategies among people who use it focus on replicating the velocity model. They devote tremendous amounts of energy and advertising budget to launching big and ‘tickling the algorithm’ to get Amazon to sell one’s work, particularly among the parts of the indie publishing industry that have doubled down on the Kindle Unlimited model.

A good, backlist driven publishing model is more characterised by patience than anything else. It’s all about building connections between works, creating a web of marketing that allows you to move readers from one book they’ve enjoyed to another on your list, and regularly casting out leads for the kinds of readers you want to attract. It’s about being willing to sell twenty books at launch, confident that each of those readers will gradually talk about that book and find you twenty more, with slow exponential growth ticking along over a period of years.

Strong launches aren’t the only legacy of velocity publishing that people replicate without question, though. Velocity publishing concerns and limitations drive the conventions of a good back cover synopsis, and rarely get questioned. But those conventions are focused on getting a potential reader exciting about this particular book, because the reader’s primary relationship was with the product in their hand rather than the author.

That convention perfect sense in a world where backlist is hard to trace, and the book has two or three weeks to sell copies, but less sense in a world where books exist as part of an ongoing relationship between writer and reader. Especially given that relationship expands beyond the books, spreading across social media, convention appearances, and other forms of engagement.

52 Blog Posts That Never Came Into Existence

I recently opened the “unfinished drafts” section of my blog and discovered that I had 52 unfinished posts in various states of completion. Some of these resulted from dumping a quick idea using the WordPress app on my phone, little more than three of four words to be fleshed out later. Some are just a title, waiting for the post to arrive.

Some are near-complete or actually complete blog posts I never got around to posting, usually because they were a) incredibly negative, b) incredibly risky, or c) written during a week with a serious anxiety flare up and being ‘out in public’ with ideas wasn’t palatable to me.

I’ve logged all 52 titles here, from the evocative to the mundane, to give you a glimpse as a blog that might-have-been once upon a time. Reading them aloud makes for an oddly evocative prose poem, especially once you get to the last two entries.

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2. Short Fiction Friday: The Seventeen Executions of Signore Don Vashta

3. Book Recs: Profit First

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7. Links

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9. Thesis Month

10. The Empathy Gap and Writers In November

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12. The Holy Trinity of Process Books for Writers

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14. The Switch

15. Holding Patterns

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17. 2018 Reading: My Favourite Reads

18. The Uncool Influences

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20. Every Book Has Three Stories Attached (or, How To Talk About Your Writing Without Boring People)

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22. I Just Watched Kenny Omega Save Ibushi, and It’s Making Me Think About Storytelling

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30. SMAX #175: No-One Can Stop A Gang Who Can Fly

31. RUOK Day

32. Enid Blyton Post

33. What Could You Get Written By The End of 2018?

34. When Is A Series Not A Series?

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36. Hell Track Project Diary: Day Six (ish)

37. Some Thoughts On Masters Of The Universe

38. How To Use The Philosophy Of Circuit Training To Level Up Your Writing

39. Ask Not What Your Readers Can Do For You

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43. The World Doesn’t Want You To Write

44. Things You Should Be Going To In June/July If You’re In Brisbane And Into Spec Fic

45. The World Doesn’t Want You To Read

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49. Putting Together A Monthly Plan

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51. Your Book Is Dead. Move On.

52. I Am Surprised When Someone Reads My Work

Three of these are from 2016, 13 from 2917, 13 from 2018, 15 from 2019, 7 from 2020, and one from 2021. My plan for the rest of September is to go through and rescue what needs rescuing, kill what needs killing, and clear the space for future work.

ADDENDUM FOR PATREON: Most of this probably won’t get a finished version on the blog, but if there’s something you’d like to see in its rough form, drop a number in the comments and I’ll post it here in the Patreon for folks to poke at. 

Pre-Made Book Covers, Going Cheap

I opened up for Freelance Cover Design Work last week because our cat had an unexpected vet visit and it wiped out my emergencies fund. However, with my small business grant running out towards the end of October, I’m also preparing to open up a few more side-hustles to keep things afloat while I’m looking for a new day-job and keeping Brain Jar Press running.

Which brings us to the secondary side-hustle on the design front: pre-made book covers folks can pick up slightly cheaper than getting me to design stuff from scratch.

The proper launch for this will likely come in October, when I’ve had time to set up a proper web store to streamline the buying process and built up a decent catalogue (the aim is about 5-to-6 covers for each genre I want to cover at time of launch). Meanwhile, here’s the preview gallery of what’s coming:

Like I said, the full store is coming in October. However, given the vet visit and impending shift to freelancing, I’m totally open to selling these ahead of the store going live. If you want one, drop me an email with the title you want and formats needed (ebook only/ ebook and print) and I’ll invoice you once we update the design with your title, name, and details. The process will usually take 48 hours or so. Prices are $60 for an ebook only file, and $210 if you want it converted for a print book through Ingram Spark or KDP print.

Like a cover but don’t have a book ready to go with it? Buy it now and let me know you’re keeping it for a future book in the email — I’ll pull it from sale and keep the cover on file until you’re ready for it.