mserotic81
Virgin
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2015
- Posts
- 1
Can I generate a good living writing erotica? Has anyone here done it?
Thanks
Thanks
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If you write a 50 Shades of Gray, you'll make some money. If you write a 50 Shades of Gray that never catches on, you'll make virtually nothing. Writing for money is like buying lottery tickets. There aren't very many winners. Even best selling mainstream authors have day jobs.
You might try coming up with a concept that could attract Netflix or HBO for a series, but even then, if you're not in their inner circle, or you don't have an agent or lawyer, no one is going to read your stuff.
As others have already said, making real money out of any writing often comes down to luck.
In my experience, you’re going to need a good agent. And finding a good agent who will take you on often comes down to luck. I met my first agent on a Sydney-Hobart yacht race. How lucky was that?
You’re also going to need a publisher who will get behind your stuff. Not all books are treated equally. A good agent will help you get a good publisher, but then you need a bit of luck – chemistry, if you like – with your editor. My first editor and I hit it off when we discovered that we both liked drinking decent Bordeaux wine and playing backgammon.
Writing is only half of the job. You need to be able to pitch your book in person – book signings, press interviews, interesting talks wherever there are readers gathered. Some writers are good at this; some are not. I’ve known terrible writers who could make a good pitch; and I’ve known excellent writers who were hopeless. It always seems to be the writers who can pitch who sell the most books.
Some people will tell you that success in publishing often comes down to who you know. I’d refine that a little and say that it often comes down to who you meet. A friend of mine took ten years to sell her first story. And then one night – even before her story had made it into print – she happened to sit next to BBC producer at a dinner party. The rest, as they say, is history.
Another friend just happened to sit next to a film producer on a flight from London to Miami. Somewhere over the Atlantic, the producer got talking about a film that was already ‘in the can’ but wasn’t quite working. My friend pitched a few suggestions and, before they had landed at Miami, the producer had hired my friend as a story consultant.
Yep, now that I come to think about it, it’s pretty easy really. All you need is lots and lots and lots of luck, and a good agent.
Good luck.
So... for a writer just starting out, getting his/her work into the "right" hands, one or two ebooks would be worth ??? a year?
That's great that you guys are making decent money off your erotica. I'm assuming it took a while to amass such a lucrative catalogue?
You don't really need any of that in the erotica e-book world--and that's the world we're really addressing here, isn't it?
I was talking about making money out of writing in general. Erotica is a tiny bit of what I do. In fact, I don't really know any writers who live on erotica alone. Maybe I mix with the wrong crowd.![]()
But the question was about erotica, so I think your response was misleading for the question being asked.
For the sake of the OP, what would a dollar amount be for someone with a big, active ebook catalogue like SR71? I'm guessing $50 to $100 a month, but it would be nice to see some real numbers. I can just see aspiring LIT authors telling their spouses "but I don't have to get a job because I can make money with my erotic writing!"
$8,000 to $11,000 a year--from the erotica. I have mainstream too (but the erotica pays better).
As others have already said, making real money out of any writing often comes down to luck.
In my experience, you’re going to need a good agent. And finding a good agent who will take you on often comes down to luck. I met my first agent on a Sydney-Hobart yacht race. How lucky was that?
You’re also going to need a publisher who will get behind your stuff. Not all books are treated equally. A good agent will help you get a good publisher, but then you need a bit of luck – chemistry, if you like – with your editor. My first editor and I hit it off when we discovered that we both liked drinking decent Bordeaux wine and playing backgammon.
Writing is only half of the job. You need to be able to pitch your book in person – book signings, press interviews, interesting talks wherever there are readers gathered. Some writers are good at this; some are not. I’ve known terrible writers who could make a good pitch; and I’ve known excellent writers who were hopeless. It always seems to be the writers who can pitch who sell the most books.
Some people will tell you that success in publishing often comes down to who you know. I’d refine that a little and say that it often comes down to who you meet. A friend of mine took ten years to sell her first story. And then one night – even before her story had made it into print – she happened to sit next to BBC producer at a dinner party. The rest, as they say, is history.
Another friend just happened to sit next to a film producer on a flight from London to Miami. Somewhere over the Atlantic, the producer got talking about a film that was already ‘in the can’ but wasn’t quite working. My friend pitched a few suggestions and, before they had landed at Miami, the producer had hired my friend as a story consultant.
Yep, now that I come to think about it, it’s pretty easy really. All you need is lots and lots and lots of luck, and a good agent.
Good luck.
You don't really need any of that in the erotica e-book world--and that's the world we're really addressing here, isn't it? You don't need a lot of fancy promotion. In fact, it's not cost effective. You need a great cover and blurb and, if you want to keep them buying (and you have to keep producing to get they to keep buying), you need to have good content that meets the requirements of a sizable audience. And you need to get the book listed on as many distribution platforms as possible in as many formats as possible.
There are no book signings, etc. for e-book erotica.
All righty, although I have no idea why you'd think that it would disappear (or that there's anything wrong with it other than Sam's post not being relevant to the book market the OP was querying).
Just doing your usual neophyte backbiting?
Since my post on what I make wasn't quoted, I'd guess the not so secret society, is using your numbers to set their sites for the future. kind of flattering don't ya think?![]()
Since my post on what I make wasn't quoted, I'd guess the not so secret society, is using your numbers to set their sites for the future. kind of flattering don't ya think?![]()
Write proposals for who to what purpose? Erotica publishing doesn't work this way. Even if you are going for a mainstream publisher for print (which just doesn't happen much at all for erotica), you don't start with a proposal unless you are a name brand already and that, rather than the book, is the selling point. You have a finished manuscript.
I'm not sure that it's being understood that, for more than a handful of authors, the realm of erotica is limited to e-booking (with paperback option). It is approached in an entirely different way than mainstream publishing is.