Friday, June 29, 2012

Making my own book trailer

Okay, so last year I decided to take my unpublished chick lits and indie publish them, because I had nothing to lose. They weren't making any money sitting on my hard drive, and agents and editors all told me that they liked my writing, but that no publisher was touching chick lit with a ten foot pole, not for a new writer. Furthermore, they're Mormon chick lit. I'd already published one book with one of the major LDS publishers and at the end of the day decided it wasn't worth the hassle for the very limited exposure I got in such a tiny, regional market. So, why not see how it worked in the national market? Fast forward eight months and I am making more money from my indie novels than I am from my science fiction short stories, and I've been paid pro rates on my short stories for years, but the gap keeps on widening as the novels sell incrementally more each month. I never thought I'd be a self published author OR a chick lit author. It's funny the twists and turns life takes sometimes. Nowadays I love being both traditional (as Emily Mah, the science fiction/fantasy author) and indie (as E.M. Tippetts, the LDS chick lit/YA author) and what I especially love about being indie is all the skills I have to learn. I know so much more about how a book goes together, gets seen by readers &tc. nowadays, which can only help my traditional publishing career, I think.

So I decided to try to make my own book trailer. I should have kept my first ever draft, but I saved over it. When I realized that it was worth showing a before/after, I did save one of the older drafts.

The images are from Shutter Stock, which is also where a lot of cover designers get the raw material for their cover art (including me), and the music is from Premium Beat. Since I don't have the talent or resources to do a live action trailer, I knew I had to invest a little into getting professional images, and especially into music. Premium Beat does movie trailer music, as in what people in Hollywood literally buy for their trailers. The site has a cheaper rate for us small time indie folks. What is absolutely critical in any business you start up is to be thrifty, not cheap. The idea is to get good value for money, not avoid spending it altogether. If you can only afford a slideshow trailer, then you pay good money to make it the very best slideshow trailer you can afford, and if you can do live action, invest in making it look professional. Having a bunch of your friends in a park speaking Old English with people throwing frisbees in the background is a complete waste of your money. Having no trailer is better than having a bad one.

Sooo, I had to see if I could make a "not bad" one. Here is the first "final draft" version I created:


As I said, the above trailer was my first "final draft", where I thought, "Okay, that'll work". Only it doesn't. There are many, many flaws in it, but the ones I spotted were:

1) No reference to my website. Oops. Duh. I should have that in there because this trailer is embedded in other sites all over the net, including Goodreads, Facebook, and Amazon. It's therefore not enough to mention my website only on YouTube, as not everyone will even see the YouTube page.

2) The text flashes by too fast in parts: Now this is a hard one. My problem is that I'm a speed reader, as in a super speed reader, as in I read Twilight in one day and part of another book too. When the last Harry Potter novel came out, my husband and I were both reading it on a plane. I sat on his right because I was soon one page ahead of him, and within an hour, I was half the book ahead of him. Therefore, I do not have a good concept of how long it takes people to read the text. If they can't read it, that's really ineffective. I'm not sure I was able to fix this one entirely, but I think I made it better.

3) The placement and formatting of the text is weird in places: "Her boyfriend is devoted" has a weird indent in part of it. "the senior class psycho" displays right over a large white portion of the picture for a long time, and worst is the end. I have my sand castle image there, and you'll note the title and my name are positioned to crash right into it. All of this was due to my using Microsoft Movie Maker and it's not intuitively obvious how to position text with that program. I finally figured out that if I had blank lines before or after the text, that would move it up or down the screen.

4) Poor timing of images: I couldn't fix all of this because I don't really know what I'm doing, but where possible I tried to line up more of the image changes to the beats in the music. I think Microsoft Movie Maker offers very limited capability on that score. Some of the images are too slow, like the diary excerpts. You don't actually need to read those, so those can flash by much faster and just give the gist.

5) Too much text in some frames: I really was conscious of how long the whole trailer was because a lot of ones I've seen go on too long. But I figured out in the end that this was a scripting issue more than a trailer editing one. Trailers that go on too long try to cover too much of the plot and get into subplots. Here my experience submitting manuscripts came in very handy. I only talk about the central plot with just a few hand waving hints to subplots in the setup. Given I'd kept the script tight, I could afford to take more time to display less text per frame and keep it on screen long enough for the person to absorb it.

Is the final product perfect? No it is not, but I think it is better, and given it's my first ever book trailer, it's not a complete disaster. See what you think:

12 comments:

  1. Hey, excellent. One day I'm going to try it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. HI JoAnn! I had a lot of fun with it, at least.

      Delete
  2. Love. What you did with images and graphics is amazing. K. I've got some good advice/ideas from this for next time, thanks.

    ...and we need to talk LDS chick lit. That's (sort of) my next story... after reading your post I'm worried my publisher won't want it. IF that's the case, I'm definitely interested in self-publishing because it's a story I really, really, from my gut, want to have out there. *sigh* Anyway, I'm glad you have done well. That makes me feel like there are more options than just the "big 4" if they all reject this story.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Sarah! The Big 4 in LDS publishing, if that's who you're talking about, still do chick lit. I'm a former Covenant author, myself, and they published my first chick lit. We ended up parting ways over contract issues; I think they'd have kept publishing my chick lit otherwise. This was before the ebook revolution; I think now you can both be with an LDS publisher and have a good shot at making sales in the national ebook market. Anyone else know?

      Delete
    2. OK, that makes me feel better :).Not sure if I am *quite* aiming for a national market just yet. Maybe I am aming too low ? Anyway, I definitely want to read your story. I am hoping to get a kindle for my birthday...yours will be one of the first I try, I think.

      Delete
    3. Hi Sarah, there's no aiming too low unless you're making less money and reaching fewer people than you want or are mismatched with your audience. That was my experience. The national market is a much better fit for me. I don't necessarily sell any more than a lot of LDS market writers, but I sell more than *I* would sell in the LDS market.

      Delete
  3. OH MY GOSH! After watching that trailer I HAVE TO READ THE BOOK! Wow - it moved me. Great job, Emily. I like how you put together a few simple elements and still got a big punch. You've also made me want to try making book trailers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! I'm glad you like it. I'm doing the last round of copyedits today (I've input all the ones the copyeditor found but I'm reading to see if I can pick up any more. Fun fun fun...)

      Delete
  4. Love it. Though the test is a bit to fast for me. I can't read that fast. Hopefully others do. :)
    Great job,
    Anna del C. Dye
    for clean tales of Elfs & Romance
    http://www.annadelc.com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. HI Anna! Yes, I know a few people will still have your experience and not be able to read it, so this is something I definitely need to work on. Next time I need to put less text in each frame and give people longer to read it.

      Delete
  5. Great job, Emily! I sure love the behind-the-scenes peek, because we have no idea how much thought and work goes into something like this. Well, it worked. I can't wait to read your book!

    ReplyDelete

What be on yer mind?