Got Beta Readers?
I have a dear friend who is getting ready to publish her first novel, and I am one of her Beta Readers.

I have been a Beta Tester for a Beta Launch or Beta Version, but a Beta Reader for a novel? What a novel idea - I love it!

If you are ready to self publish, right before you hire an editor, you might seriously want to consider finding some Beta Readers of your manuscript to ensure the best possible success of your hard work.  Before you simply go ask Aunt Martha to read your book, and give her your pile of college-ruled, lined paper filled with your one-of-a-kind, handwritten brilliance, here are some things that might make the experience actually worth your (and your Beta Readers') time:
  • Choose your Beta Readers carefully - Unless the aforementioned Aunt Martha is a professional copy editor, and can do double duty as editor and Beta Reader, you might want to find five to seven other people who love to read and/or write the type of book you have written.  If your audience is primarily one gender, your Beta Readers should be also.  Remember, you are asking these people to provide constructive feedback on your baby - make sure you feel their comments will possibly improve your book.
  • Provide a format that is both easy and functional for your Beta Readers - I received an Adobe Acrobat version of Clare's book, which allowed me to add my comments by using sticky notes and the like.  Joanna Penn, on the other hand, printed a version of her first novel and provided it to her Beta Readers for hand written notes.  Whichever you choose, think of the ease of use for your Beta Readers, and be prepared to read your book many times with many comments.
  • Give clear instructions and a deadline for your Beta Readers - You are looking for usable feedback, so provide usable instructions. Ask your readers to read as if they themselves bought the book.  Have them look for plot/timeline confusion, character concerns, "speed bumps" that make the reader stop and question, factual errors, tone or voice confusion - any comments repeated by two or more Beta Readers tell you that a rewrite of that section is probably wise.
  • Be prepared and have a plan for another red pen markup of your perfect baby - Many of us writer-types wed ourselves to passages, dialogue or scenes, and if those are questioned, we fight for our darling tidbits.  If only one person questions one of your wedded verses, maybe they just didn't get it, but if two or more people question it...kill it!  Which is more important...the success of your novel, or that one brilliant verse?
It is common practice for serious self publishing novelists to ask for feedback before the final stage of publication.  Joanna Penn, Self Published Author of two Best-Selling thriller novels and voice of The Creative Penn says Beta Readers are essential to successful publishing.  Find Beta Readers and use them wisely; you will be happy you did.

Have you used Beta Readers prior to self publishing? How would you characterize the experience - Successful? Painful?  Please share ~

~Mary Kathryn Johnson
Author ~ Entrepreneur ~ Mom

@SayBumpandTweet
MommyLoves to Chat!
Everything MommyLoves
Say Bump and Take a Left


 
 
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I believe the most difficult thing about editing your own work is determining if and when you need to cut text. You may have written the most poetic and harmonic sentences, but if they don’t propel the plot forward and are simply beautiful words strewn together, they probably need to be deleted.   Most authors, once they find a sentence or phrase they are totally in love with and feel conveys the perfect sentiment, will sometimes try to make that phrase work even if it hurts the overall story. This is why a professional editor is highly recommended since it’s nearly impossible to be truly impartial to your own work.

When taking on at least the first level of edits, make certain every word chosen has a purpose in the story. Perhaps that perfectly written phrase or paragraph doesn’t need to be cut entirely, but simply rewritten so that it offers meaning to your plot? Or maybe a whole new story is fighting for life?

How do you determine what should be cut? Do you find making cuts stressful or liberating? I'd love to hear your thoughts.


Andrea Bandle
Writer/Editor, Co-Founder
@HelpMeSelfPub
editor@helpmeselfpublish.com