Showing posts with label smashwords. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smashwords. Show all posts

October 30, 2011

Raid on Soi 5 Now Available for Free

Taking a page from the Lindsay Buroker playbook, I'm trying to release more freebies on Smashwords to help promote books that actually make me money. Raid on Soi 5 was first seen at the Flash Fiction Offesnive, so I decided to turn it into an eBook. It's free over at Smashwords, and below is the blurb:
Beneath Thailand’s veneer of smiling people and luxury hotels lies a dark underworld. Drugs, prostitution, and robbery await the throngs of hapless tourists who visit the country on holiday. Sukhumvit Road is a pleasant location in Bangkok to visit by day, but at night the filthy underbelly floats to the surface, engulfing those who dare to venture into its sleazy alleyways.

Raid on Soi 5 is a 1,000-word short story thriller about the corruption and treachery of those who deal drugs to tourists on one of Bangkok’s most notorious streets.
Enjoy!
Share/Bookmark

September 28, 2011

How to Format Your eBook for Kindle, NOOK, Smashwords, and Everything Else

Warning This Content is Out of Date. Please head on over to the BB eBooks Developers Page for the most up to date information on eBook creation.

As a self-publisher I wanted to learn about how to properly format and design an eBook so that I could place my first novella, America Goes On, on sale at the Amazon.com Kindle Store, Barnes & Noble NOOK, and Smashwords. With a few notable exceptions (such as Guido Henkel's guide on eBook formatting best practices and Paul Brookes' guide on formatting for Kindle) the information available on formatting is rather scarce at this time. Since we are all in this together, I decided to make some tutorials on formatting for the Kindle Store and NOOK, as well as a supplemental guide discussing formatting for Smashwords.

The response from the self-publishing community has been quite positive, indicating that there is a strong need for this type of information. Therefore, I decided to turn the tutorials into an eBook itself that self-publishers can utilize as a technical reference when formatting their own eBooks.

On Sale
How to Format Your eBook for Kindle, NOOK, Smashwords, and Everything Else is available for the low price of $2.99 at the Amazon.com Kindle store, Barnes & Noble NOOK, and Smashwords. Since the economy is still in the drink, I'm offering a recession special whereby I'll send you a complimentary PDF in exchange for a friendly email to me. The eBook contains edited versions of tutorials on this site, which have been edited, as well as some extra goodies to make your life easier as you publish your eBooks.

Product Description of How to Format Your eBook for Kindle, NOOK, Smashwords, and Everything Else 

Online sales of eBooks have exploded recently, and the trend will only continue with the availability of low-cost technology. Unfortunately, guidelines on how to properly format an eBook to sell on Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble NOOK, Smashwords, and other distributors are terse and geared toward web developers rather than self-publishers. Templates and third-party programs advertised to quickly convert a manuscript into an eBook often leave the final product in a dismal state of sloppiness that offends readers. This is because eBooks need to be converted to the same code that is seen on websites, not what is in a word processor.

This guide was designed by an indie author for indie authors in the self-publishing community to provide the requisite knowledge to professionally format an eBook in all major formats. It will take you step-by-step from a manuscript on your computer to the perfect eBook formats you need for Amazon, NOOK, Smashwords, and other markets.

In this guide you will learn how to:
  • Layout your manuscript for conversion into the major eBook formats (i.e. MOBI, EPUB, PDF) for all the big markets (i.e. Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Smashwords, and others)
  • Add styles to different types of text in your eBook
  • Add hyperlinks, bullets, and images to your eBook
  • Create a clickable Table of Contents for your eBook
  • Generate eBooks using open source software
No prior knowledge of web programming is needed, because this guide provides detailed instructions and images to improve your level of knowledge from the ground up. The following detailed tutorials are covered in this guide:
  • Converting your manuscript from a word processor into a text editor
  • Web programming tutorial (XHTML)
  • Web programming needed to add styles to your eBook (CSS)
  • Using Microsoft Word for Smashwords
  • Using Calibre to convert XHTML into all eBook formats
  • Publishing your eBooks on Kindle, NOOK, and Smashwords
  • XHTML/CSS source code
For those interested in the advanced methods and techniques of eBook formatting, this guide also provides the following tutorials:
  • Regular Expressions for eBooks
  • Creating an EPUB from the ground up
  • Using KindleGen to create a MOBI file
  • EPUB source code
Buy this 46,000-word (~200-page) guide that comes with over 150 helpful images, and you will never have to pay to have your eBook professionally formatted.


We now have an eBook design startup—BB eBooks—dedicated to helping independent authors and small presses get their eBooks formatted, converted, and ready for sale at all the major online retailers (e.g. Amazon's Kindle Store, Barnes & Noble's Nook, iBookstore, Smashwords, etc.) Please contact us for a no-obligation quote. For those writers, editors, and publishers looking to go the DIY route for eBook production (you probably are if you visited this page), we offer free online tutorials and apps to help you professionally design your eBook. Please visit our Developers page and let’s work together to improve the overall standards of eBooks. Also, please sign up for the mailing list for promotions, design & marketing tips, plus eBook industry news.
Share/Bookmark

September 13, 2011

How to Self-publish your eBook on Kindle, NOOK, and Smashwords


Thank you for visiting this eBook tutorial. We now have an eBook design startup—BB eBooks—dedicated to helping independent authors and small presses get their eBooks formatted, converted, and ready for sale at all the major online retailers (e.g. Amazon's Kindle Store, Barnes & Noble's Nook, iBookstore, Smashwords, etc.) Please contact us for a no-obligation quote. For those writers, editors, and publishers looking to go the DIY route for eBook production (you probably are if you visited this page), we offer free online tutorials and apps to help you professionally design your eBook. Please visit our Developers page and let’s work together to improve the overall standards of eBooks. Also, please sign up for the mailing list for promotions, design & marketing tips, plus eBook industry news.


Warning This Content is Out of Date. Please head on over to the BB eBooks Developers Page for the most up to date information on eBook creation.

So, this is it. This is the final step toward having your eBook available for sale to the international marketplace of readers. For publishing on the Amazon.com Kindle store, you will need a MOBI file. For publishing on the Barnes & Noble NOOK store, you will need an EPUB file. Finally, for publishing on Smashwords, you will need a clean .doc file. Please consult the eBook formatting tutorials for MOBI/EPUB and Smashwords for further assistance.

This guide does not cover how to market your eBook, which is the hard part, but there are a lot of great authors who provide free advice on the matter, such as Lindsay Buroker, Stephen Knight, and Dean Wesley Smith. The Amazon Kindle store, Barnes & Noble NOOK, and Smashwords have very author-friendly methods toward placing your eBook on the market. This is of course because they get royalty payments on every copy that is sold, so they would be lousy businesses if they made the process difficult for the self-publisher.

You can self-publish to the Amazon.com Kindle store through the Kindle Direct Publishing platform. Barnes & Noble uses the PubIt platform (US authors only). Finally, Smashwords uses their Meatgrinder and Autovetter system.

One additional tool that may come in handy as you self-publish is the eBook Publishing Quick Reference Guide by Gary McLaren [free]. He also has a freebie entitled The Beginner's Guide to eBooks, which discusses various eBook formats from a reader's perspective.

Pricing: Pricing strategy is an important aspect directly related to marketing. Smashwords allows you to distribute your eBook for free or at any price that has ".99" at the end of it in US Dollars. Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble do not allow you to distribute your eBook for free, and the lowest you can go is $0.99. However, if you make your eBook free at Smashwords, the Amazon.com Kindle store and Barnes & Noble NOOK may decide to make your eBook free. The process is a bit finicky, but it has worked for others. Royalties vary depending on how you price your eBook.

Taxes: Like death, taxes are completely inevitable, especially with the United States Government going more into debt by the day. US-based authors need to provide a Social Security Number for tax reasons, and Amazon will withhold some of your earnings. Amazon and Smashwords require international authors to obtain an Individual Tax Identification Number (ITIN). Like most bureaucracies, it takes 6-10 weeks to apply for one by mail with the United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The author of this guide applied for an ITIN on behalf of his Thai wife, Lisa, and her passport came back with water damage all over it.

Important Note: You should apply for only one ITIN.

Depending on your country of residence, Amazon.com may not withhold your earnings from sales (nominally 30%) based on existing tax treaties. Consult the Amazon.com FAQ for more details on how taxes work for self-publishers.

The complicated tax structure in America has made Barnes & Noble NOOK reluctant toward allowing users from outside the USA to self-publish using the PubIt platform. Supposedly, they will be opening up the NOOK store to authors from outside the USA soon, but it has been slow.

Metadata: Even though you embedded metadata into your EPUB and MOBI files, you still need to add the metadata online when you self-publish your work. This guide recommends having a set of keywords and your eBook's description ready for exactly how it will appear on the Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Smashwords sites. Do not overlook your eBook's description, as this blurb is what the reader will see before making the decision to purchase or sample. It is also important so that readers know your book exists as they perform searches.

Cover Images: Cover images are also important to have ready when uploading your eBooks to the international marketplace. Even though the cover images were embedded inside your MOBI and EPUB eBooks, you still need to upload the JPEG file. A good rule of thumb is to use a 600x800px image for the Amazon.com Kindle store, 547x730px image for the Barnes & Noble NOOK, and 600x800px image for Smashwords. You can publish an eBook on all these sites without a cover image, but it is strongly discouraged.

Sales: All of these sites have comprehensive methods to track your sales on a very responsive basis. The only exception is the Smashwords sales that take place at the markets they distribute to (e.g. Kobo, iBookstore, etc.), because those markets report sales to Smashwords on a delayed basis. However, do yourself a favor and don't check it more than once a day. You will drive yourself completely mad.

ISBNs: It costs you absolutely nothing to use Kindle Direct Publishing, PubIt, and Smashwords to self-publish. Additionally, you do not need an ISBN for these three splatforms. ISBNs are automatically assigned by Smashwords when distributing to markets that require them (e.g. iBookstore).

Copyright: If you wrote the eBook, you have the copyright. You do not need to register this with the United States Government, which is where Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, and Smashwords are based. This is the law. The moment you type your own original work, you have the exclusive copyright, because the law actually works in your favor.

Consult Passive Guy if you need legal services with regards to copyrights. He is a lawyer with a lot of knowledge and experience in this area, and he can help authors at a reasonable rate.

DRM: Digital Rights Management (DRM) is a terrible, no-good way to discourage piracy. Not since Crystal Pepsi have consumers so universally hated something foisted upon them. Smashwords is philosophically opposed to DRM and does not allow it for any of the eBooks sold on their website. When you upload to the Amazon.com Kindle store and Barnes & Noble NOOK, you have the option to use or not use DRM. You should strongly consider not utilizing DRM in your eBooks, as a courtesy to your readers. Instead of creating unnecessary hassles for the customer and fretting about someone downloading a torrent of your eBook, which will happen whether or not you use DRM, you should focus on impressing your customer and using a pricing strategy that maximizes distribution.

Publishing on the Amazon.com Kindle Store
Amazon has the Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) platform that you need to register with before self-publishing. They have a Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) section that covers every inquiry you probably have about royalties and practicalities. The only thing that is terse is the formatting section, but since you have these tutorials, that is not an issue.

Once you have setup a KDP account, add a new title from your dashboard. The process is very straightforward, and there are help pop-ups for everything you have to fill out. You only get to choose seven keywords, so make them count. Also, make sure that you don't check the option to make your eBook public domain. This means you don't have any rights to the eBook.

The important step is when you upload your MOBI file. You will have the opportunity to "Preview book", which pulls up a miniature Kindle app in your web browser. Click through the sections and make sure that everything looks the way it did in the Kindle Previewer. You may notice that the text goes right up against the edge with no margin. This is actually what you want, because the Kindle has a built-in margin that does not appear on the "Preview book" function.
Example of Proper Preview on KDP

There is a section where you set the price, and you cannot get the 70% royalty unless you set a minimum of $2.99. Any pricing below $2.99 will only yield 35% royalties. You will also have the opportunity to enable lending, which allows Kindle readers to lend your eBook to someone else for a 14-day period. At this time, Amazon.com only allows readers to sample the first 10% of the eBook's content for free. This is unfortunate, since most readers like to sample more of an eBook before they buy it.

Once you have finished updating your information, it takes approximately 24-48 hours before your eBook is live in the Kindle store. Be mindful of this delay if you plan on a specific date for an eBook launch. It is also advisable that you maintain an Amazon author page to tell readers a little about yourself, which will be linked to the product page of your eBook.

Publishing on Barnes & Noble NOOK
Barnes & Noble began PubIt following the success of Amazon.com's Kindle Direct Publishing platform. It is essentially the same concept as KDP, and it allows indie authors to self-publish with ease at the NOOK store. The royalty structure is similar to Amazon: 65% for any eBook sales $2.99 or above and 40% for any sales under $2.99. Registering an account on PubIt is a very straightforward process, and the FAQ section is helpful. At this time, you can only register on PubIt if you have a US tax ID (Social Security Number, ITIN, EIN, etc.), a US credit card, and a US bank account.

On the PubIt dashboard, click on "Add a Title". Everything in there is self-explanatory; however, keep in mind that you will need to add an author biography for every eBook you upload.

When you upload the EPUB file, it will automatically go to a mini-NOOK preview screen. Spend some time to verify that your EPUB is showing up correctly.

Example of Proper Preview on PubIt

Once you have uploaded your EPUB, expect it to go live in about 3-4 days.

Publishing on Smashwords
Obtaining an account on Smashwords is simple and open to the international community. However, publishing on Smashwords requires some additional attention, because you have to troubleshoot how your .doc file gets processed through the Meatrgrinder. Your first attempt through the Meatgrinder will most likely have some wrinkles to iron out.

To publish on Smashwords, sign in and click on the "Publish" tab. You will need to enter some metadata to include a short (<400 characters) and long (<4,000 characters) description. The cover image is required to obtain access to the Premium Catalog, and a 600x800px JPEG is recommended. You will be able to set the pricing for your eBook on this page, but it must be free or have a "$.99" affixed at the end due to the pricing policy on the iBookstore.

In regards to the formats, you have the options of making your eBook available as an EPUB, LRF, MOBI, PDF, PDB, RTF, and TXT. You should maintain the default of having the Meatgrinder convert to every available format. For some reason, uploading your .doc file with Firefox produces a strange error on the Smashwords site. If you are having problems uploading in Firefox, try using another web browser (e.g. Internet Explorer, Safari, or Chrome).

After you press "Publish", your document gets put through a queue in the Meatgrinder. In the past it took hours, but now it only takes 5-10 minutes to get all of your formats processed, depending on the time of day you are uploading. After the eBook shows up on your Dashboard, you can view the product page and download all the files for troubleshooting the Meatgrinder conversion. The files will be immediately available to the public for sale on the Smashwords site.
Various Formats on Smashwords

You will receive a notification on the Smashwords Dashboard that you have to assign your eBook an ISBN. Follow the instructions that Smashwords provides, and they will assign you a free ISBN that can be used only for Smashwords.

Autovetter errors: Within an hour, you will receive a lengthy form-generated email from Smashwords talking about your eBook being available online. At the bottom of the email, it should say if there were any Autovetter errors. Fix your .doc source file if you have any issues, because you need to have no errors to gain Premium Catalog distribution status.

Now that all the formats have been processed through the Meatgrinder, it is necessary to verify them. The most important format is the EPUB file, because it goes to most of the retailers (e.g. Barnes & Noble NOOK, iBookstore, Sony, etc.) You can use Adobe Digital Editions to inspect the EPUB on your PC. It also advantageous to validate the EPUB, just to be sure.

There are always going to be one or two problems on the first pass through the Meatgrinder. You can adjust your source .doc file, and re-publish in your dashboard by clicking "Upload New Version". It will once again go through the Meatgrinder queue and create entirely new formats. As Smashwords advises, do not publish the same eBook more than once.

Common problems with Meatgrinder conversion are as follows:

Erroneous page breaks: Try using the pagination features in Microsoft Word on your Heading 2 style.

Erroneous margins: Verify that you have set the correct spacing values in the Style Menu in Microsoft Word on each of your styles. Also, check to see that you have not accidentally declared the wrong style in each paragraph. Finally, make sure you do not use tabs anywhere in your .doc file.

Faulty NCX Table of Contents: Inspect the bookmarks in your .doc file to ensure that they are located in the correct place. When inserting a bookmark at your headings, try clicking the cursor in the middle of the heading's text, and then insert the bookmark. It is recommended that you do not select the entire heading, as this can cause bugs during the Meatgrinder conversion.

You should consult the Smashwords Style Guide for detailed troubleshooting, and don't be frustrated if it takes a few times to get it right.

Premium Catalog: To gain access to the Premium Catalog, a Smashwords team member has to look over your eBook. While this is ongoing, your eBook will say "Pending Review" under the dashboard. The review process takes about one week. If there are any problems, you will be notified via email. You should endeavor to gain access to the Premium Catalog, because that will allow your eBook to ship to all markets. Once it is approved, your eBook will say "Approved on mm/dd/yyyy".

Important Note: For the Premium Catalog, you need to make sure that you have no links to Amazon.com. Otherwise, you get an Orwellian message saying that other eBook retailers do not like to know that Amazon.com exists. It is advised to not mention Amazon at all in your Smashwords .doc source file.
Share/Bookmark

September 8, 2011

Smashwords Formatting Tutorial Has Been Updated


In order to supplement the Smashwords Style Guide, I have updated the tutorial (with videos of my goofy voice) to help indie authors looking to get their work self-published on Smashwords. It is advantageous to go with the Smashwords option, since they distribute to other markets and function as a vendor to online shoppers. The royalties are attractive for the self-publisher, and you have much greater control over coupons, contests, and other goodies compared to the Amazon.com Kindle store or the Barnes & Noble NOOK.

The problem with Smashwords is that the Meatgrinder is a major pain in the rear. This is their system that convert a Microsoft Word .doc file to EPUB, MOBI, PDF, and other formats. It also doesn't help that you can't test the Meatgrinder until you actually update your file to Smashwords.

This tutorial on getting a bullet-proof .doc file to convert into eBook formats through the Smashwords Meatgrinder will hopefully be useful for all us indie authors out there. Good luck selling your eBooks!
Share/Bookmark

August 31, 2011

Why DRM is Terrible


DRM stands for Digital Rights Management and it is a way of limiting access to multiple devices for software, music, eBooks, and other digital goods. If DRM is enabled on a digital item that is sold to a customer, there are restrictions on where they can copy it and who they can give it to. While the schemes have varied throughout the years, the consensus from consumers of digital goods seems to be unanimous: DRM is hated by buyers of MP3s, hated by gamers, and it is most definitely hated by eBook readers.

Large corporations tend to make the argument that DRM prevents piracy. This is nonsense, because you can log onto any torrent site and find software, eBooks, and anything else that has been stripped of its DRM. Hackers have been designing cracks for every piece of software ever since the Commodore 64 came around. The DRM scheme is simply a way for honest people (like your Grandmother who just got a Kindle) to have to either pay for multiple copies of the same product or go through the technical hassle of validation when they change devices.

Another flaw is that DRM assumes people are criminals when they buy a digital product by putting pre-emptive restrictions on it. Do you really have that much disdain for your readers? If your own Grandmother loaned a print book to her neighbor, would that make her a criminal? The suits at the RIAA seem to think so. However, they have a strange view of what "theft" constitutes. If someone comes into your house and steals your wallet, that is undoubtedly theft, because you lose money and property. However, if someone downloads a copy of your eBook without paying, do you really lose money or property? It's an argument that is worth contemplating. However, to paraphrase David Gaughran, for indie authors the enemy is obscurity, not piracy.

Additionally, in places like Thailand, piracy is rampant and open. You can walk down the street or even go to malls where DVDs that come in little plastic jackets are being sold for approximately 2 to 3 dollars. This is not because Thai people are bad, it is because the country has a lower GDP than its Western cousins and cannot afford the 10-20 dollars that DVD distributors like to charge. If anything, you should explore a pricing strategy that is proportional to GDP. In Thailand, the Asiabooks eBook store is new, and you can explore different eBook outlets in countries around the world to try various prices. Hopefully, more will come online in the future (particularly in countries with huge amounts of English-language speakers like India and the Philippines). As indie authors, it is important to not think like the corporate stiff who only worries about return on investment for shareholders, you need to think like the small businessman (or businesswoman of course) that is 100% dedicated to customer satisfaction.

Smashwords is philosophically opposed to DRM and does not allow it for any of the eBooks sold on their website. When you upload to the Amazon.com Kindle store and Barnes & Noble NOOK, you have the option to use or not use DRM. You should strongly consider not utilizing DRM in your eBooks, as a courtesy to your readers. Instead of creating unnecessary hassles for the customer and fretting about someone downloading a torrent of your eBook, which will happen whether or not you use DRM, you should focus on impressing your customer and using a pricing strategy that maximizes distribution. Try spending your energy on what's really important and challenging, which is writing stories that readers enjoy.
Share/Bookmark

August 22, 2011

America Goes On: A Novella - Now on Sale for $0.99

After some thorough editing and formatting, I finally released my debut novella: America Goes On. You can pick up a copy for just $0.99 at the Amazon Kindle store, at Barnes & Noble NOOK, or at Smashwords. All proceeds go toward the Kotchakorn Monica Salvette foundation, at least until she's old enough to get a job and start taking care of me and the wife.

I came up with the idea for this novella when I saw a Marine looking down as he smoked in a plywood shack at Ali Al Salem Air Base, Kuwait, back in June 2007. This base is a logistics hub for military and civilian personnel traveling into and out of Iraq and Afghanistan. A lot of people and a lot of stories come through this purgatory in the desert. Everyone talks to each other in this environment, since there’s nothing to do but wait for your trip into the combat zone or flight back home. And then I thought about how many I’ve seen go through this hub but never make it back.

I actually wrote this story in 2008 just before I finished my time as a lieutenant in the Navy. A year earlier I was a staff weenie in the International Zone under the Individual Augmentee program. It was a good experience for me, and I was fortunate enough to come away from the sandbox with all my fingers and toes. I have tremendous respect for the troops who’re patrolling outside the wire day in day out. It’s a very stressful environment where something bad and unexpected can happen 24/7.

When I got back from Iraq, like most veterans, I was disappointed that no one seemed to care about the young men and women who never came home. We’re creating a separate class of servicemen in America where the concept of civic duty is now a joke. I hope our politicians will think more rationally before sending off a small percentage of Americans to fight a long-term war on the entire nation‘s behalf. Even the New York Times has taken notice that there is too much a separation between the military and the civilian world

The reason I took so long to publish this novella is because I wrote it just for myself and a few friends. They gave me nice feedback, but it didn’t blow them away. Then, however, came the self-publishing revolution of 2011, and my wife was pregnant with our daughter. Seeing how a few extra bucks (or baht in my case) could go a long way, I decided to throw my hat into the ring.

I dug up the manuscript on my computer and re-read it. The grammar was awful, the dialogue was stilted, and the story didn’t make sense. Using the powers of editing, both mine and my brother’s, we polished the manuscript into the version before you today. I hope that you enjoy it.

Here's the blurb:
A young veteran of the Iraq war drives across America while struggling to find his place in the country he just defended. Confronted with complacent attitudes and narrow minds, he realizes his fellow citizens don’t even understand America is at war, let alone respect his sacrifice. At least he has his fellow Marines from his second tour of duty, along with a mysterious girl who is waiting for him on the East Coast. Or so he thinks. Travel with this veteran through the barren desert of California all the way to New York City as he learns about modern America, as well as himself.

America Goes On is a 15,000-word (~65-page) novella about the 21st century reality of war in America.

Share/Bookmark

August 6, 2011

Short Story for Sale - The Bunker below Believers' Palace


Now Available at Amazon.com Barnes & Noble and Smashwords
Lieutenant Nixon is a bitter, frustrated naval officer serving his time as a staff weenie in the International Zone. Bored with the monotony of war, he ventures to a secret bunker below one of Saddam Hussein’s former palaces with a quirky German named Hans. Crawling down to the depths of the destroyed structure, he finds more than he bargained for.

The Bunker below Believers’ Palace is a 3,400-word (~15-page) short story about the mystery behind Saddhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifam’s toppled dictatorship.

The actual bunker is a real place that was constructed for Saddam and his goons by a German firm in the 1980s. The palace really did get nailed with JDAMs in 2003

Photo Credit Miserable Donuts

This is my first attempt at self-publishing, so hit me with your best shot. I find that the nastier the criticism tends to be the most helpful. My brother did the editing, and I was able to get the eBook formatted pretty quickly with the tutorials I made for MOBI and EPUB conversion along with getting a Word document to pass the Smashwords Meatgrinder.

But enough with the nerd talk, just read my damn story. If you're hurting for dough and need that $0.99 to buy clothes hangers or whatever, shoot me an email and I'll hit you up with a free PDF.
Share/Bookmark

August 5, 2011

Smashwords - Fixing Page Breaks

For all you formatting nerds out there, Smashwords has just released a new style guide that walks you step-by-step in creating a clean manuscript in Microsoft Word. You then put it through the Meatgrinder on their website and have access to a lot of markets that are difficult to break into as an indie writer. You can watch my full tutorial here.

The guide itself has a lot more details on generating the Table of Contents and a few other things. However, I was disappointed with the guide's discussion on page breaks. It still advises you to use two carriage returns followed by the page break feature (Ctrl-Enter) in word. I tried this method and had very little success.

Here's an easy way to get page breaks on your manuscript that will pass the Smashwords Meatgrinder every time:
  1. Change all your headings where you want the page breaks to Heading2 Style
  2. Click on the little arrow below Change Styles to pull up the Styles Menu
  3. Click on the down arrow next to Heading2
  4. Click Modify
  5. Click Format->Paragraph->Line and Page Breaks
  6. Under Pagination, Click Page Break Before

From Word 2007

This method seems to work for me, and I left a comment on the Smashwords blog. It may seem trivial, but when you're trying to make money selling professional looking eBooks, you'd be a real jackass to not get worked up over little details.
Share/Bookmark