NZ writers missing out on publishing support
New Zealand writers missing out on publishing
support
Don’t give up your day job, says Emma
Mildon when asked what advice she would give aspiring
authors.
Emma provided this assessment during an interview with me during her return to New Zealand from the United States where she has been building a career as an author, columnist and publicist. [Hear more on her thoughts in the BMS PODCAST]
I was interested in her views on getting published in New Zealand, because this is the kind of feedback I receive constantly when I work with writers.
Emma writes about abandonment for children, particularly around adoption, fostering, and divorce. As she says in her PR message, ‘the Tweenage market is ready for fun, juicy, real young adult self-help material’ and Emma has the books, content and the teen following to prove it.
‘My message is pretty simple – it’s about you don’t have to know your family history in order to make history,’ Emma told me.
However, it’s also a story told from an American perspective rather than the New Zealand one for which it was originally written, something Emma finds disheartening.
Emma says there’s a very good
reason why this is and why she took the plunge to head to
the US for help in becoming a published author.
‘In New
Zealand and Australia the only thing you get back [from
publishers] is rejection letters.’
In the US, Emma has worked with editors in California, where her agent, Randy Peyser, is also based. As a result of her new connections, she was invited to New York to meet the CEO of the big self-help publishing group, Hay House, and to attend the kind of workshop she believes is essential for prospective authors and other creative people looking to market themselves and their products.
During the ‘Movers and Shakers’ event, those attending were taught how to build a platform from which to launch themselves and their work.
‘It is really amazing what the workshops give people who want to get into the industry and want to get heard or published. They are giving them knowledge and it’s not just generic knowledge but on a one-on-one basis.
‘This is something New Zealand and Australia need
to do and something the publishing professionals should be
offering, because we are so innovative.
Kiwi creatives
are leading the world in terms of how get ourselves out
there, because we are at the bottom of the world; middle
earth is a hard place to get your message out
from.’
Emma said her road to get where she wanted literally started with Google, and typing in what she wanted and started researching. Once linked with her agent, she was then connected to a writing and editing service, where her work was taken apart and put back together again.
Emma says the lack of similar services in New Zealand, where a rejection letter if you are lucky is the usually the only feedback for budding authors, is damaging for creative talent. She gives the Flight of the Conchords, the New Zealand-based comedy duo composed of Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement, which went overseas after their television series concept was rejected in New Zealand, only to go on to global success with a TV series.
‘There are companies overseas that are more open to New Zealand creative talent than the New Zealand creative industries I think the rejection letters from New Zealand aren’t a reflection on the work, or the quality of the work, or the platform of the author. I think it is a reflection on the limits on the number of books published each year.’
It is safer for
publishers to go with more established writers rather than
take a risk on a ‘nobody’.
‘If I was starting out
and wanted to get published, I wouldn’t start in New
Zealand. I would start in America and start networking and
going to agents to help build a platform.’
However, asked about funding the editing and learning work she has done, Emma recounts what she heard recently from CEO of Hay House: ‘The first thing he said to us was ‘The number one rule in terms of getting published and getting your name out is keep your day job. Don’t quit your job and put all your energy into making this happen, because you need to be able to support this and you need to be able to make money’.
The most cost efficient way was for authors to spend their time building their own platform as a hobby and networking, with any money spent on improving their work rather than publicising themselves.
To hear more details of this conversation, listen to the podcast of our discussion.
ENDS