The Future: Writing as a Career or Hobby

November 1st, 2008

I was talking to Mike Resnick at a convention and he remarked about the print run of his first book, which was close to six figures.   Now, he’s a good, big name writer, but new writers in SF today as opposed to decades past  rarely have print runs at that level and the average is much smaller.   There are more books published today with smaller individual audiences, which, all in all, is a good thing for fans.   I would rather have a wide choice of reading options, with some being exactly what I want.

But this downsizing is going to continue, and with electronic publishing, transform.   E-books are not the standard in publishing yet that MP3s are in the music industry.   I don’t even buy CDs any more, and keep everything on my ipod.

It may take another decade, but we will get to this technology with books, too.   It may not be amazon’s kindle but it will be the ipod version of the book.   I am living abroad right now, and it killed me to only take a dozen or so books with me to Brazil, but I took my entire music collection.

What I am getting around to is the notion that the business model for books will break soon much as it broke for the music industry, and more recently the movie industry.   There will have to be a new model.

The big winner in music has been itunes, the first system where large numbers of people paid for legal music downloads.   On-demand movies have been somewhat successful, too, although this industry will need to meet new challenges as compression technology and bandwidths improve.

Books are next.

Even if a business model similar to itunes pops up with success, the lower risk involved in publication given the potential elimination of printing and shipping fees will likely mean more books published with even smaller audiences and smaller advances.   On average.

What I am getting at, which I indicated in my title, is the notion that even fewer writers are likely to be able to make a full-time living at writing.   There aren’t many today, but there do seem to be more than when Resnick broke in, perhaps a sweet spot in terms of numbers.   I am suggesting that while there is still some money to be made by writers, it is going to get harder to make enough to live on very well (and I don’t think most full-time writers live in the lap of luxury).

My full 12-month salary as a professor in the physical sciences just broke six figures (including the summer salary I can pay myself when I have research grants).   The figures that open writers like John Scalzi provide suggest they don’t make this much, which is consistent with what I hear from friends who don’t publish their incomes in public.   It would take a really big book to convince me to move out of a tenured faculty position to write full time at this point.

So, I know I am not the first to make this point and won’t be the last, but writing is likely to remain in some sense a hobby for me (a very, important business-minded and passionate hobby) but not a full-time gig.   I also think this is going to an increasing rule in the future.

You can google up alternative models to my itunes for books proposal.   The thousand true fans thing, for instance, and other variations of patron systems.   But I think there’s a likelihood that a lot of the artists of the future will be better described as hobbyists.

Share/Bookmark

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.