Showing posts with label Kobo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kobo. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

The Big Fat #Kobo Fail: Full Version & Finale #publishing

In the past year, I'd been focusing on Kobo as the only ebook retailer that could potentially rival Amazon (for me, at least. I feel like B&N have given up, iTunes is unfathomable to me without a Mac, Smashwords is still an archaic mess, I don't sell much at ARe and their weird rebate thing confuses me, and Google Play...complicated and prone to random price drops that can screw up your pricing on Amazon with their price match thing). No, Kobo looked like a good alternative and they were clearly on a drive to improve.

I've been published direct there since I released my SFR short Terms and Conditions Apply back in 2012. I was there just because I could be. With only the one short story up and being relatively unknown, I didn't sell much and their payment terms (you had to make $100 to get paid) meant I didn't even get the few pennies I'd earned. But I was okay with that. I was new, naïve, had only two titles - the main one being with a publisher - and those few pennies weren't going to make much difference. It was just being there.
Things changed in 2015 when my main publisher - Breathless Press - closed. I was already in the process of re-releasing my debut novel Keir after the rights reverted back to me, and suddenly I had five more titles homeless. In a moment of madness I decided to go ahead and re-release all but one of those on top of Keir. That's five books in one month. Crazy, right?
But it got done, and in the process I discovered Kobo had made changes to their payment policy. You still only got paid if you earned a minimum $100 a month but now, if you didn't make that threshold, you would get paid every six months regardless. Woot!
Now, this is still pretty slow compared to most retailers. Amazon pays me monthly regardless, even if two months in arrears ie in August I got paid the royalties earned in June. Draft2Digital pays me every month as long as I make a minimum $10 (right now that gets me paid once every two months, but still good). Smashwords and ARe pay me quarterly (which was also the standard for most of my publishers). But six months is still better than nothing, right?

Since I'd never been paid, I contacted Kobo to point this out and promptly received a payment. It was pennies but it was still payment! Thanks to my newly self-pubbed titles I started to earn a bit more (only just into double figures but it was going the right way). Even though I marked November as the next payment point (six months), I received my second royalty payment promptly in October.
Come 2016 I asked to access the newly launched authors promotions options and ran my first in May, seeing a good boost. I focused more on buying my books there rather than Amazon, and using my Kobo sales links for my own books in preference to Amazon's. While I still didn't sell as well there as Amazon, it was getting better.

But in May 2016 I realised I hadn't been paid as per the six months regardless. Theoretically that should have happened in April as I last got paid in October, but I figured well, first payment was May 2015 - maybe I get paid May and October.  Either way, I decided I'd best email them. After the usual wait (I find Kobo are slower/less responsive than Amazon) I received an apology and the assurance that I'd been added to the June payments and would be paid end of May. Uh, what? Not quite sure how that made sense, but I assumed that meant I'd get paid by the end of June at least.

No royalties showed up in May. June came and went, with no sign of Kobo royalties, so I emailed them again. They apologized again and assured me I would get paid in July.

I didn't.

At this point I was getting quite stressed and rather distressed about the whole thing. I've never had any issue with any retailer or publisher over royalty payments. My book sales had been dropping steadily across the board since July 2015, and by now I was struggling to find money for essential edits. I wasn't even making a living wage (if you want to know my true income, I generally make $30 a month. That's $1 a day essentially. Still think authors earn enough for it to be okay to pirate their books? Piffle. This is why I'm going back to a day job...if I can even get one). I had a decent amount sitting in my Kobo account, enough to almost pay for a cover or a chunk of editing on another book. I needed and wanted that money, and it was legally owed to me, so not getting it despite numerous promises was making me edgy and frustrated. It was a simple enough ask after all.

I'm not going to detail every communication I had from Kobo. I received numerous apologies and promises of payment by email, followed by a sudden silence. At that point I chased the Kobo Help account on Twitter and received more meaningless apologies but at least started getting emails again. I was offered a Kobo ereader which I damn well took - I figured worse case scenario I could always sell the ereader to cover the non-payment of royalties, though I fully didn't expect one to turn up any more than the money owed.

Surprise - the ereader arrived on the 27th of July. The royalties still didn't.

By now I was meant to be into the second week of my long summer break and instead I was still chasing Kobo for payment. While the money owed wasn't anywhere near enough to justify taking legal proceedings to get it, the amount was enough that it would make a significant difference to my publishing finances. After more empty apologies and promises to pay, and even assurances that a certain payment system had issued the payment at the end of July, still nada.

A new Kobo rep took over and sent me a screen shot of the payment issued. I still didn't receive it. They then said the payment company had issued 'the wrong type of payment'. Really. That's about convincing as the excuses given by our British Rail system for delays, like leaves on the line. Wrong type of payment?! Funny, because none of my details had changed and that same banking system had worked perfectly fine twice before. If any changes were responsible for the error, it was all happening at Kobo's end and not mine.

TBH, come 12th August with still no sign of payment despite Kobo's screen shot of payment being issued (BTW, 1st rep said 30th July, 2nd rep said 26th July so they couldn't even get their dates right), I began to feel like Kahmunrah in this scene from Night At The Museum 2 (except I still didn't get the combination aka royalties, and it took weeks instead of minutes). As in 'OMG, I can't believe it...'
On the 19th of August I accessed my bank account, more to double check my spending budget rather than in any real expectation of a payment from Kobo. To my surprise, it was finally there as of the 18th. Colour me amazed, and forgive me for not feeling the least bit grateful since this was four months late. I emailed the Kobo person who had been dealing with it to say that it had arrived, but didn't thank them. Do they qualify for a thanks after taking four months to actually do their job?! I didn't think so. I got an automated out-of-office response...and that was the last I heard from them to date.

Final upshot: yeah, I got a (very nice) Kobo ereader out of it but it doesn't replace the time and stress I went through trying to get money damn well owed to me (and during my 'holiday' too), and for that reason I'm unlikely to ever go back to Kobo direct. I'm not even sure I want to buy my ebooks there any more even with a flash new ereader to put them on, when other authors may be getting hit the same way. So much for Kobo being a viable alternative to Amazon. Maybe I'll just go back to ordering print from my local indie bookshop or charity shops...

In the meantime, I have The Bones of the Sea still up there as it's a freebie (because I don't have to chase for any payment on that one), and Gethyon is up on pre-order via Draft2Digital (which will ensure me getting paid monthly providing I hit $10 each time). The other titles will slowly return via the same distributor, or you can get Kobo compatible epub versions from ARe/Omnilit and Smashwords. I'm not sure if Kobo owe me any remaining monies, and frankly I don't care. I'm done. *walks away*

Update
Gethyon officially releases in just two days (though you can pre-order it everywhere now)!! Woot! I'm so happy to be putting this back out, especially with all the new and improved content, and the shiny new cover. And last week I got the second print proof...and it was perfect. So print will be available shortly. You can download a free sample from Goodreads, and if you read the previous edition, see if you can spot the changes. ;) And if you bought the original and would like the new version, just hit me with your request.

Gethyon
A Scifi Adventure Novel
B&N | Kobo | iBooks
Abandoned. Hunted. Out of control.

Gethyon Rees had always felt at odds with the universe, and hoped for an escape among the stars. But discovering he has the ability to cross time and space with just a thought brings more problems than it solves: a deadly bounty hunter who can follow him anywhere, the unwelcome return of Tarquin Secker--the mother who abandoned him--and an ancient darkness that seeks him and all those with his talents. 

When an unforgivable act sets him on the run, it'll take more than his unearthly powers to save his skin and the lives of those he cares about. It'll take a sacrifice he never expected to have to make.

A science fiction adventure novel previously published by BURST (Champagne Books), and part of the Travellers Universe. A 2014 SFR Galaxy Award Winner for Most Awesome Psychic Talent and a 2015 EPIC eBook Awards finalist in the Science Fiction category. Also now includes the SF short story The Bones of the Sea

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

What I Did On My Holiday And News! #scifi

Why hello there! Goodness, those seven weeks just zoomed by. But oh, so much to catch up on and so much to share. Where do I begin?!

Well, maybe with turning 45 and my birthday presents.





I also got a new MP3 player and the full DVD set of Jonathan Creek from hubs. ^-^

My daughter shares my birth month, turning 14 this year. Hubs made an incredible find while we were hunting for a Funko Pop Rey or Katniss: A NERF Rey Blaster. I didn't even know they'd done one! With eldest due to do her Rey cosplay in October, I've bought this to paint up. It's not 100% screen accurate but close enough for someone like me who doesn't have the budget for full scale replicas nor the skills to make one. FYI, I'll be posting the conversion over at my Tumblr blog in due course, along with my Solo blaster and more cosplay info as it's done. Last week I did a post about creating Rey's belt HERE.


The summer break was pretty hectic with two birthdays, and my middle child now having his own phone and arranging his own entertainment with friends like eldest. He also did a coding and robotics courses, while eldest and I went to see an abridged version of Romeo and Juliet at a local church. It's not our favourite work by Shakespeare but she's unfortunately been set it for her English GCSE years (exams), and the Mercury Theatre's Youth Performers group put an interesting twist on it.
We also took a trip along the Rendlesham Forest UFO trail, possibly the most significant UFO site in the UK (a separate post on that to come).

And hubs and I went to see Suicide Squad as our random film of the year. I'm not a fan of DC (I much prefer Marvel in most respects) or of Jared Leto if it comes to it, but Harley Quin looked fun. I went in expecting dark and violent (although it wasn't any more violent than an Avengers mass battle, maybe even less so) but I'm left kinda confused. Firstly, the whole concept for the film was fuzzy, and the motivation for a lot of the characters weaker than wet tissue paper. I really didn't get it. Also all the wiggling the witch does (really?!). Only Will Smith had any kind of presence and believability. However, I did love Harley Quinn, and even Leto's Joker worked (even if I don't like the actor). The rest...meh. I won't be rushing to see it again but we'll probably pick up the DVD. Despite its 15 rating here (and I'm not sure why since hubs reckoned it was less violent than The Force Awakens, any sexual content was implied, and the swearing was minimal (I've heard worse come out the mouths of teen boys leaving the local school) I'd let my older two monsters watch it. I'd rate it a B for entertainment if you're willing to ignore the motivation issues and just want 2 hours of nonstop action, explosions, and a sassy, crazy kickass psycho-girl, but a D for plot. The start is a little slow but after that its boom, bam all the way.

NEWS!!
While I was (mostly) off social media, things were still happening publishing wise (aside from the usual hair pulling and wailing and what seems to be my annual debate over why I keep doing this and whether I should keep doing this and blah, blah, blah. I'm still here.). My scifi adventure novel Gethyon--my last book left with a publisher--was returned to me in June. Although it had been in edits since the start of this year in preparation for the rights reversion and an immediate re-release, it...had gone somewhat slowly. What can I say? Some days editing be like:
And other days editing be like:
I'll let you guess which Gethyon was. >.< Regardless, the edits are now done and the preparations for re-release are in motion. Gethyon is due to return on the 22nd of September, and is already up at multiple retailers for pre-order. Woo hoo!

Why that date? Well, not only is it the birthday of Bilbo and Frodo Baggins, but also that of my middle child...who just happens to be part of the inspiration for the central character in the story. It's up for pre-order, a print proof is shipped, and the cover reveal took place last week. Did you spot it? If not, here it is again. :P


Gethyon
A Scifi Adventure Novel
B&N | Kobo | iBooks
In the meantime, a huge shout out to my sanity savers and supporters Dani Fine and Laurel Kriegler for keeping me going, and to RavenFire Media for my excellent cover. Would you believe the artist held that cover for me for two whole years?! And I had to keep it secret. >_<

The Kobo Saga
Another thing that kept me online when I should have been on a complete break was Kobo's continuing inability to pay me the royalties owed. I'm pleased (or perhaps more relieved) to say that I finally got paid on the 18th of August. I'll be posting about the complete saga next week. At the moment the majority of my books are down from Kobo because of their failure to pay, except for The Bones of the Sea because it's a freebie anyway and Gethyon on pre-order via Draft2Digital. They will all slowly go back up via D2D. That should hopefully ensure me getting paid on a monthly basis instead of six months plus whenever Kobo decide to pay me (even if it means paying an extra premium to D2D. It'll be worth it!). I apologize for any inconvenience to readers, but if you are desperate for a Kobo edition you can pick one up from Smashwords or All Romance eBooks/Omnilit (epub) until the transition is complete. I am done dealing with Kobo direct, even if that means missing out on their new promotions opportunities. I like to get paid the pittance I earn so I can pay deserving people like my editors and cover artists. :-/


But I know the real reason you stopped by is for the...
Chook Update!
My feathered girls are doing just fine and enjoyed a summer of roaming the garden. We did have one visitation from the fox: It had been so long we thought it had died from the mange it was clearly suffering from, but no. However, our increased security systems meant it left without a chicken dinner. Then we heard it harassing a neighbour's chooks and dashed down to warn them. They suffered a few moments of anxiety when they found one chook missing but luckily she turned up hiding in the undergrowth. After being thwarted at ours and chased off by the neighbour's dog, the fox left, apparently now lame as well as mangy. I'm afraid I have little sympathy after losing two of my girls to it. So here's a couple of photos of my girls.


Can you spot Kyru having a dust bath?

Front to back: Pitch, Scoop, Chiana and Effie

Back to catching up with everything...

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

The #Kobo #Review Fail

Although Amazon is the big cheese in book publishing/selling, I'll say right off it isn't perfect. It is not the author's best friend. The recent scandal about Kindle Unlimited (go HERE and HERE, but keep an eye on your blood pressure if you get through both AND the comments) and the top new releases show how scammers are taking as yet unpunished advantage of Amazon, and the continually diminishing payments in KU with its demand for exclusivity have put my hackles up. That said, it is still the marketplace that pays me most.

And let's face it, there's no serious competition. Other retailers have been slow to adopt the often groundbreaking methods of Zon to provide an exceptional service to readersr. 1-Click purchasing to get a book straight on your Kindle, a loaning system that works for readers (but not necessarily so great for authors these days), a straight forward, easy option for authors to publish ebooks and print (it's the one platform where I NEVER have an issue with uploading or formatting) - yep, Amazon has a lot to offer. B&N have clearly given up, with their latest decision to withdraw from the UK. The Smashwords interface and Meatgrinder continues to suck. I've pulled my books from Google Play because of their random, unexplained and no-warning price changes that can affect my book prices elsewhere. I don't understand the All Romance eBook rebate thing, and I don't sell anything there. I only get sales from iTunes via D2D - not having a Mac or an Apple account makes them unfathomable to me.

The only real alternative I see to Amazon right now is Kobo, and I do still have my issues there as an author. At this moment I also have an issue with Kobo as a reader, and it's one that affects authors too. Authors love and want reviews, right? But what happens when Kobo rejects your review and won't tell you why?

I don't know about most people (when I posted about the problem on Facebook most didn't even know you could post reviews on Kobo. Now that's another problem for a start) but I've now wasted a lot of time on this issue and made zip progress. So I'm about to give up. I've wasted precious time, and an author whose book I enjoyed is missing out on a review. This has been ongoing for over two weeks now.

So, my issue with Kobo?
1. Their 'guidelines' - listed as review writing tips - are vague and no help in identifying exactly what triggered the rejection. Plus you can only find those when actually writing a review (at least, after searching Help and looking around their website, that's the only way I could find them. Please point out my blindness if that's wrong).
2. When I finally got someone to talk to me via email (after several auto responses and invitations to 'chat' - no. I don't chat. I want email) they gave me their more specific but internal review guidelines...which still didn't tell me what the actual issue was.
3. After removing three things I thought might be triggering the rejection, resubmitting, and hearing nothing for over a week, another rejection. Bearing in mind I've posted other similar reviews before and since, AND at all the other retailers (including Amazon who can be temperamental and random with review deletions) without ANY issues.
4. Their appalling lack of a decent 'contact us'. A form for reporting ereader faults only is...unhelpful.
5. Their Twitter account @KoboHelp was way more responsive...but after discussing it up to and including sending them my actual review, they went silent. I've messaged them again twice. I got one reassurance that they were looking into it the first time. Then nothing.

So here's the review that posted everywhere else, and the crossed out bits are what I cut from the edited review that I submitted (and that also got rejected), with the new sections in blue. Can anyone tell me what's getting it booted? (PS, this is taken from the Goodreads version where the spoiler is hidden-for the retailers, the hide option is not available so the spoiler is in full).

Please excuse the peculiar phrasing which is due to Kobo's oversensitive review algorithms.
What I liked:
Grab some tissues and hold on tight! This final installment packs some serious emotional punch (one reason I generally go for SFR over straight SF, but here you get it without the romance), as well as a real adrenaline-laced ride through violence, more betrayal, sacrifice, and emotional awakenings. Basically all hell breaks loose. I finally forgave Caleb for being such a jerk as this a-hole twat of a reluctant hero has finally turned himself around from someone I hoped would die long before the end of the series to one I could cheer and feel for. Clean, crisp and gritty writing, with a couple of good twists towards the end, plus a satisfactory conclusion that wraps up the four books but leaves intriguing openings for more. Frankly I would love more of One's adventures, but could let Caleb fly off into the sunset because I can only see him reverting after all the character growth in the four books (and I don't want to see that).

What I didn't like:
*spoiler alert! Don't read this section if you don't want the ending given away* 

[Well. It's a minor niggle, but the ending didn't sit entirely right with me. I think it's more because I'm perfectly willing to kill all my characters at the end of a non-romance, so maybe I expect other authors to do it (and there's really no reason why they should!). And the vague hints of romance/light romantic elements throughout weren't exactly resolved either - there's still an opening there for potential future books. Maybe I'm just too set into the SciFi romance groove to accept a non-romance ending when I felt the story was heading that way. That said, it wasn't enough to even justify taking off a half star, and didn't spoil my overall enjoyment.]

In conclusion:

I feel like One ripped out my heart and squished it, before giving me a hug! This was a seriously good conclusion to the series, and a real tear-jerker, as well as providing some dark, acidic humor and high-adrenaline action. Those hoping for a romantic ending might be disappointed, but for fans of scifi action adventure who aren't offended by the sex explicit bedroom scenes and foul language, this is perfection. Recommended for those who like Firefly/Farscape certain space opera series starting with F.

Full disclosure: I received a free advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.

###

Any ideas? Maybe the full disclosure thing? IDK.

Update: I received this via Twitter -

"Thank you for your continued patience. We have reached out to our web team and it would seem that this is currently a known issue. Unfortunately, until this is resolved you may continue to have issues submitting your review without it being denied. This is a system issue but please note that we are working adamantly to resolve it."

I'm guessing that means there's a problem with their automated system and perhaps not the review itself after all, but I'm not really all that much the wiser so I said so -

"It seems that quite a few reviews are being automatically rejected by the system. We are looking into this matter and working to resolve it. We apologize that you believed our team was rejecting your post..."

So there you go. I've still waiting for two further Kobo reviews to go live (I uploaded them before the second rejection) but they could get caught in this problem, and repeatedly rejected too. I'll let you know. But your best option if you want to talk to Kobo is very clearly the Twitter account.

Status Update
I'm pushing to get the revisions done on Reunion by the end of this week as my monsters break up for the spring holiday on Thursday and I'll be taking my usual social media/work respite. The release date is still 21st May, but the sheer amount of words I've had to add so far (almost 10K) is starting to scare me!
I'm also signed up to edit my June project for this April's Camp NaNoWrimo. I need deadlines! Another downside of being indie is I don't work well to deadlines I set myself, not even release dates. If anyone would like to volunteer to stand over me with a cattle-prod to get things done, I can pay in cookies...
Quickshot releases in just 9 days! If you haven't pre-ordered it, you can find it at all the links below the cover. With the scandal over KU I decided to pull it from Amazon exclusivity and go wide, and finished uploading it to other retailers last week (phew!).

A Space Opera Short Story
Goodreads | Webpage
Amazon | ARe | 
Smashwords

iTunes | Kobo | B&N
Restless In Peaceville (my YA paranormal with zombies) and When Dark Falls (my dieselpunk superhero romance) are now both out of KU and back up at most retailers (I think I'm just waiting on B&N for Restless. As per usual). This means you can't borrow my books anywhere at this point in time. I'm sorry about that. The KU system sucks for me, and nowhere else is currently offering a subscription service that works. If you want to read my books for free, I can only suggest signing up as a reviewer at Manic Readers or The Romance Reviews site - I'm currently updating and reloading my titles there and added Quickshot and Keir's Fall - or my YA works (currently excluding Gethyon) are available at YA Insider.
AND Keir's Fall is currently up at NetGalley to read and review for free HERE. Working for a review site is a fantastic way to get books for free without using pirate sites, harming authors and opening your computer to viruses or getting your financial info hacked.

Happenings
The Little Things Blog Hop is in full swing until the end of March. Over 100 participating authors and over 50 prized to be won! Click the banner to visit my post on the hop and find the link to the next.

From next week I'm taking a two week break as my monsters are on holiday, so my next two posts will be on automatic as I share some info and excerpts from Quickshot. Enjoy!