Suffering from a case of dry and stodgy characters? It’s time to meet the Dialogue Doctor.
Suffering from a case of dry and stodgy characters? It’s time to meet the Dialogue Doctor.
BookLab is back! Three industry experts give Machelle Hanleigh advice on how to improve sales of her Paranormal Romance novel.
Book Brush is known for its easy-to-use artwork templates. Now authors can build their own book trailers, too.
With the industry in flux, Jane Freidman discusses what trad publishing is doing to keep up with the changes.
James Russell goes one step further than writing a children’s book series that flows into a middle-grade trilogy – he makes each book an interactive experience.
Carlyn from BookBub explains how authors can utilise their ads platform, plus tips on how to snag one of their powerful and elusive promotions.
Lucy explains how taking Mark’s courses has led to her becoming one of the biggest romance writers in the business.
He co-presents the Writers, Ink podcast and is the man behind the Mastermind author group. J. Thorn’s new challenge: writing one short story every week for a year.
Two editors, one book. James interviews those responsible for helping his book finally cross the finish line.
When two (or four, or eighteen) minds are better than one – how to collaborate as an author.
How to maximise the effectiveness of both POD book services.
Qualified flying instructor Nathan Van Coops explains why he loves to write time-travel novels part-time.
Flesh out your characters and shake up your writing with the Emotion Thesaurus.
Prolific sci-fi author Lindsay Buroker explains how uploading her books to YouTube brought in a four-figure monthly income.
How BookFunnel’s new features can help you deliver advance audiobook review copies.
Collect sales data from multiple stores and platforms without compromising your data.
Royalty splits with self-publishing services company, Draft2Digital, explained.
Getting your books translated doesn’t have to be a costly and frustrating process.
From rejection letters to making $300,000 a month – meet the indie publishing power-couple.
Miles Hudson explains how he blends teaching physics with writing self-published dystopian sci-fi novels.