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If you’re reading this, chances are you think I would make a good professional writer. I’m attracted to the concept, but when I look at the future that strikes me as a career of suicide. I believe that the amount of money people spend on the written word will decrease every year and writers will have to be constantly moving to find revenue.

Right now, novels appear to be the safest market – the market isn’t large, but most consumers pay for them. Non-fiction books have to compete with Wikipedia and the rest of the web, while people have less and less time to get deep into a topic. Besides, many non-fiction books seem to either be collections of magazine articles (eg: Malcolm Gladwell), or single magazine articles stretched to book-length with the addition of anecdotes (eg: Urban Tribes).

Jakob Nielsen believes that eBook readers will invert that as the Kindle is very usable for linear, engrossing content but unusable for most non-fiction. He also believes that non-fiction still has a market: The ability to inspire deep thinking is why non-fiction books still have value compared with websites, which are better for quick hits and controversial writing.

But Clay Shirky (an Internet fanboy whose ideas must be taken with a grain of salt) argues convincingly that all the writers are going to go broke before we invent a new way to pay them:

When someone demands to know how we are going to replace newspapers, they are really demanding to be told that we are not living through a revolution. They are demanding to be told that old systems won’t break before new systems are in place. They are demanding to be told that ancient social bargains aren’t in peril, that core institutions will be spared, that new methods of spreading information will improve previous practice rather than upending it.

Written by Jared

April 3rd, 2009 at 4:36 pm

3 Responses to 'Writing is a Dead-End Job'

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  1. Doctorow wrote a big article about media markets, “Media-Morphosis: How the Internet Will Devour, Transform, or Destroy Your Favorite Medium”.

    I like my slightly-shorter quip, “The Internet Doesn’t Give A Fuck About Your Business Model”, but that’s because I grew up on gangster rap.

    Anyway, Doctorow talks about the writing market. I think in future it’ll have a 19th century business model — lots of piracy with authors living off speaking fees. Human interaction is impossible to steal.

    I once paid to see Terry Pratchett give a talk at a church in Victoria. “Fornication”, he started, “is the reason we are all here.” Of course, he was talking about the fornicated architecture of the space. A prepared joke, sure, but timing, delivery, surprise, all are part of the human interaction of the performance, and that’s something the Internet can’t steal (plus there was a question period, and he signed one of my hardcovers).

    Jack

    3 Apr 09 at 5:20 pm

  2. I wouldn’t be surprised if Doctorow is already making more from speaking than his lackluster books.

    Shit, does that mean I have to join Toastmasters?!

    Jared

    3 Apr 09 at 5:46 pm

  3. I think I have to join Toastmasters as well. Cousin K’s a member so I’m legacy :) . People keep pointing out that my rhetoric is too adversarial to actually convince anyone of my arguments.

    Jack

    3 Apr 09 at 10:07 pm

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