You’ve obviously heard of engineers opting to spend a couple of years in some IIM or a lesser institute and come out brandishing his MBA degree or diploma to finally settle down to selling soaps or thrusting limp shares down the throats of gullible investors or happily being an armchair advisor or as the industry calls them, business consultants. There are a couple of newer streams that the MBA think-tanks all over need to seriously consider… after all, isn’t diversification the surest way to remain in the news, right? It is a lot easier to discover trends these days… I mean, one doesn’t really need to hire Neilson to spend a crore and then make a presentation with obfuscating stats in a starred hotel to just mutter in the end, ‘Writing is big business.’
We know that already. Yes, writing is indeed big business. But selling writing is bigger business simply because our publishers are no longer doing it effectively. Let us first investigate the link between MBA and the art of writing. If you are able to think of just Chetan Bhagat, I’m afraid you really need to polish your author GK. Rashmi Bansal, Amish Tripathi, Yashodhara Lal, Ramchandra Guha, Mallika Sarabhai, Harsha Bhogle, Prasoon Joshi, and Mallika Sarabhai are just a few. There are, in fact, hundreds of them who have decided to exercise their right to write because they think they already know how to market and sell. The tens of names that I have not listed (because come on, dammit, this isn’t a sponsored list and I’m not getting paid) can anyway be found bobbing in that sea called the social media. Surf the waves of Facebook and you’ll soon find them on rafts selling their novel… which is probably a thriller with a lot of banking terminology thrown in to make it sound intelligent enough. This isn’t bad at all… after all weren’t we all anyway being strangled by those authors who made writing complex with all references from the classics thrown in, pretentious sentences saying all that even a sarkari-school-educated reader could have said without sounding pompous, and who moved around only in the company of other wordsmiths muttering something sounding uncannily like what Ifeanyi Enoch Onuoha once wrote: ‘The audacity of my sagacity is instrumentality to my successity.’ Enough of this! We needed writers whose writing imitates the simplicity that life is and not those who make it go a step beyond understanding to enter the mumbo-jumbo world of a superior caste called a ‘writer’.
The emerging breed of writers today have promptly dumped everything associated with literature, complex meandering of mundane thoughts in overdone sentence formations… or even grammar, if this makes you grunt with satisfaction. This was obvious as the editorial teams of publishers were anyway busy with trying to write their own novel and had hardly any time to look up from their personal manuscript and read what is sent to them for corrections and suggestions. It is far easier to reject manuscripts that pour in endlessly, pick up some smart plot and begin realigning its genetic code to make it escape the attention of Dr Plagiarist-catcher. The marketing teams of publishing houses are no less… look at them pretending to understand how things happen on Facebook and suavely call themselves influencers. The only problem here is that they reserve all their talent for their own book, butt I finaly found one who can actually help every writer out there, Sunderland SEO is the best marketing team out there right now, so go check them out if you need assistance. Thus the author despite his degrees in engineering and business management, is sent a carton full of his unsold book with a terse note, ‘We told you it wouldn’t sell. Now use the skills you learned at the B-school and see if you can make a living.’ Such writers soon discover that they cannot really muster the courage to re-read their own work… and so it is simpler to invade Facebook-groups with ‘buy this today – discounts don’t last forever – and remember to review it on Amazon’ message updates.
No, I’m not digressing from the topic… the last paragraph was written simply to tell you that the time for the idea of linking business acumen with writing is here and now. This is what is obvious on Facebook, Linkedin, Twitter, and even Instagram. A large percent of authors (and I don’t mean just Indians writing in English) fall in the ‘shamelessly ask for sales’ or shamelessly promote your book every time, all the time’ category. I guess this is because, as I said earlier, the marketing teams in publishing houses are busy doing everything but what they are paid for… and this means that some of them are authors as well. Editors dream of peddling their own book on the social media… and so the books that authors send across are hardly ever edited and reach the reader howling with howlers. Everyone, it appears to me, is writing a book. The world is fast turning into one amorphous lump of authors. And so, just as everyone is forever selling on Quikr and OLX with not many actually buying, we have tumbled into an era where everyone is writing and not many are reading.
Look at the other phenomenon happening on the social media… everyone who thinks he (and a ‘she’ is also included every time I mention ‘he’) can write but cannot sell, is selling the art of creative writing. More than a score of my friends on Facebook are successfully making a living selling one-day creative writing workshops. The better-off graduate to selling their own property in the hills and tout them as ‘havens for writers and poets’ and add value to the deal by throwing in some one-book writer who nobody knows or cares about knowing, as the teacher of creative writing. I thought only the engineering colleges and B-schools were churning out writers of novels but they are being thrown into the system by even these workshop-experts on the social media. So obviously, I don’t suggest B-schools to design a writing or creativity curriculum for future writers… they just need to have a specialisation in selling your own book through the social media. B-schools need to wake up before the social media workshop consultants get a whiff of this idea. If they do, we’ll soon be having our Facebook timelines swamped by updates selling ‘one-day workshops in the art of selling the book that you wrote after attending our workshop on how to write your first novel!’ I’m waiting for them to invade the YouTube space as well soon enough. Hey! This is a really profitable concept… keep adding modules about YouTubing, Instagramming, Periscoping, and even Whatsapping and the earning never stops because apps are anyway going to continue their blitz for a long time.
Does this disgust me? No. I have lived my life in times where everyone is anyway selling something or the other. I wish, though, that someone thought of selling the art of reading. What the world desperately needs is a dedicated set of readers… and now please don’t tell me we already have the masterful Kindle, the humble Kobo, and a line of others including the bumbling Juggernaut reader. I mean the other sort of readers. Readers who step out of cars to pee or those who make rude gestures when they’re angry. You’ve got the drift by now, I suppose. We need readers.
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Arvind Passey
06 September 2016
27 comments
Prasad Np says:
Sep 6, 2016
thought provoking post sir… We have all kind of authors and all kind of readers. So everybody has a right to right and promoting a book. Yes if somebody is being pushy to sell it or ask for reviews then one can always take an appropriate call and say yes or no or ignore.
Arvind Passey says:
Sep 6, 2016
The funny thing is that I have written this post simply to see the kind of response I get if I rake up a controversy by writing something that sounds utterly rude and negative… and I am indeed surprised at the reactions I am reading. 🙂
Prasad Np says:
Sep 6, 2016
I mean right to write and promoting a book.. see no proofreading here 😛
Kavipriya Moorthy says:
Sep 6, 2016
Truth-to-be-told post! Wonderful!
Arvind Passey says:
Sep 6, 2016
Yes, there is truth in every word uttered or written or thought… despite the number of agreements or disagreements it may encourage. Thank you for sharing the post and for commenting.
Hope to see you back on the blog soon, Kavipriya. 🙂
Amrutash says:
Sep 6, 2016
Visit http://www.blps.in
(Not spam)
Arvind Passey says:
Sep 6, 2016
OK… but I know I shall forget. You really need to find a better way to lure readers to your site/ blog/ whatever… 🙂
Amrut says:
Sep 16, 2016
Aiyo. I wasn’t luring you or anything. I thought you’d find the concept interesting. Anyhow. Leave it. I don’t know why I bothered to comment.
Amrut says:
Sep 16, 2016
As in, I thought you’d be interested because your last line was, “We need readers.” And that’s what we do – develop readers.
I really gain absolutely nothing if you don’t visit my website.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 4, 2016
Yes Amrutash, I did reach out for the site that your shared… nice work that you and your team are doing. Hope you do manage to bring in readers through your story-telling sessions. 🙂
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 4, 2016
I wrote that because there was nothing but one URL mentioned… and that makes a person believe that your interest was only in promoting your website.
Anmol Rawat says:
Sep 6, 2016
Well, times are changing I guess. People are more interested in reading what we might cringe at! I would like to add that most of the new publishing houses are not even employing any editors, they simply publish anything sent to them because people are paying them a hefty amount to do so. They don’t deny anything because it’s more of a sprint-to-earn-some-cash by college goers instead of establishing something meaningful. I’ve received a few books that were downright disgusting in every manner. I mean, I’m not even fond of Ravinder Singh, but he had an innocent story (just in his first book). Most of the people don’t even have a story to tell and then they top it up with spelling/grammatical errors that are not attended by any editor, sex (lots of it), drugs, booze and abuses. The result is pure crap, but that’s not what discourage them as their motto of tagging themselves as a author is complete, they are not looking for anything more.
Arvind Passey says:
Sep 6, 2016
What you say is correct. Many have dived into writing a full-length novel much before they were ready for the task. I guess we humans are always in some sort of a hurry… but then the other side is all about jumping into a task and learning on the go. So there are no correct or incorrect answers. However, a badly written text will remain a badly written text and there is no denying this.
Pankaj Giri says:
Sep 16, 2016
A very illuminating article, sir. Seriously, bad novels are selling like hot cakes, whereas good novels gather dust. This is because quality writers spend more time writing than investing huge sums of money and marketing their book. Wish there was a huge group of literary readers who love well written fiction and gobble it up in huge quantities so that even good writers could flourish and sell well, instead of those stupid, poorly written Hinglish campus romances which rule the market nowadays. Maybe a blog like yours with good readership where you highlight good fiction, and yes, your Facebook group, too.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 4, 2016
I agree with you on the need for good books… and readers. Readers have the unique luxury of picking up books from a wide range of genres, if they wish. So I guess, it will never be a great idea to do away with pulp fiction. A reader’s life cannot possibly be interesting if there are only literary books available. 🙂
Pankaj Giri says:
Oct 4, 2016
It’s okay if those books are getting popular. Everyone has their own taste, and they are by no means downright bad. But the problem is that well-written novels are going down. Let every genre thrive. That’s the thing I feel.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 7, 2016
You’re right… let us just hope that readers get wiser, sooner. 🙂
Jyoti Arora says:
Sep 18, 2016
Nice post, sir.
There is another effect of success of such books. If you notice, all such books are short in length. So if you write anything above 55 thousand words, it’s not considered acceptable by most publishers. The push is towards giving just the story, simply told. You better not waste any words going into the psychological depths of your characters or society. No need to try and create magic with words. Just give the story, short and simple.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 4, 2016
Why can’t writers just write what they want to in whichever way they dream of… instead of being dictated by the market whims of publishers? I guess a good writer will never succumb to market forces… unless he or she has a definite strategy in place.
sathish says:
Sep 18, 2016
totally agree… we need dedicated readers… also some responsible writers who uplifts the literature… thought provoking post indeed.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 4, 2016
Thanks for reaching out… do visit my blog again. 🙂
Durga Prasad Dash says:
Sep 18, 2016
Once I tried Chetan. It was so third rate, I could not get past page 3. The other authors you have listed must not be much different, though I am yet to try any of them. The popular movie scene is no different. It is as if we are writing books and making movies to appeal to a mass whose intelligence is stuck at 9th gradede and rely heavily upon marketing and branding to do the rest.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 4, 2016
My review of Chetan Bhagat’s latest release will be up in a couple of days. Hope you find the review interesting. 🙂
veturisarma says:
Oct 10, 2016
I mean the other sort of readers. Readers who step out of cars to pee or those who make rude gestures when they’re angry. You’ve got the drift by now, I suppose//
I’m sorry I didn’t get it, but a timely post otherwise. There are some publishers who give you more money to promote your book, and publish more copies if you were able to get 10 500+ word reviews.
Arvind Passey says:
Oct 10, 2016
Please read the connecting sentence as well…
“What the world desperately needs is a dedicated set of readers… and now please don’t tell me we already have the masterful Kindle, the humble Kobo, and a line of others including the bumbling Juggernaut reader. I mean the other sort of readers. Readers who step out of cars to pee or those who make rude gestures when they’re angry. You’ve got the drift by now, I suppose. We need readers.” I’m talking about different definitions of the word ‘reader’ — one that is full of technology and the other that breathes or steps out of cars to pee… 🙂
Thanks for reaching out, Narasimah, and for even commenting. Do visit my blog again.
Your point about a few publishers with a bit of magnanimity is also true… but must it be an author’s responsibility to get 500+ word reviews? 🙂
Varun Gupta says:
Sep 8, 2017
Very, very insightful! The pleasure of reading intellectually enlightening humour was a bonus.
The ability of correctly pre-judging the thought process of the reader is a rare quality of Arvind ji.
Thank you!
Arvind Passey says:
Sep 20, 2017
Nice to finding you here again, buddy… I only hope I keep writing stuff that readers like. 🙂