Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 2 Volume 8 | Page 37

W ORDS - TO - BE -R EAD ARE L OSING G ROUND TO W ORDS - TO - BE -H EARD A NEW STAGE OF DIGITAL CONTENT EVOLUTION M IKE S HATZKIN F OUNDER AND CEO OF I DEA L OGICAL COMPANY W ords-to-be-read must now become a content category, along with still images, vid- eo, and audio. Audio includes “words-to-be-heard”. We are in what must be the early stages of a reordering of primacy among these varieties of “content for delivery and consumption”, which is distinguished from “content for interac- tion”, or the world of “gamified content” along with who-knows-what-else. In a post three months ago, I observed that I had been fortunate enough to have been taught to type when I was a little kid, so producing written words was rela- tively fast and easy for me. That led to great “experience” with the practice of narrative word creation at a young age, a great competitive advantage in school and the workplace (quite aside from enabling the writing of several published books). That piece also made the point that words-to-be-read were, until some very recent moment, the cheapest and easiest form of content to deliver and distribute. Still pictures required film and pro- cessing. Audio and video required con- trolled (and often expensive) circum- stances for recording and a variety of skills to deliver professional content. And S UMMER 2018 beyond that, delivery by cassettes and CDs was expensive and also failed to reach large numbers of the potentially interested people. We get regular reminders that since the combination of multi-function smart phones and ubiquitous wifi connections, this is no longer the case. It is very much simpler and even cheaper to capture and distribute a still photo or a chunk of video or audio than it is to deliver “words-to-be- read”. What really rang a large bell for me was the recent New York Times article about the rise of audio, which focused on big-earning writers whose fortunes and reputations had been earned through “words-to-be-read” (in what we can now see was really a different content era), but who were now switching to audio. One such author, John Scalzi, was moved to reconsider his publishing strategy when a recent book sold 22,500 hardcovers, 24,000 ebooks, and 41,000 audiobooks. Author Mel Robbins responded to her self-help book “The 5 Second Rule” selling four times as many audios as print by making her next creation an audio origi- nal. P AGE 32 W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE