Tamela Rich

Breast Cancer,Inc.: Breast Cancer as an Industry

Since my involvement with breast cancer causes, I’ve become acutely aware of the commercialization of the disease. Looks like this filmmaker is ahead of me.

 

I see that the film will be shown in Richmond, VA on 2/10/12.  My mother-in-law, whose breast cancer metastasized into bone cancer, is buried there. I’m inclined to go up and see the film and the panel discussion afterwards.

Breast cancer and the Politics of PhilanthropyThe film draws heavily on the book, Pink Ribbons, Inc. Breast Cancer and the Politics of Philanthropy.

Breast cancer advocacy is being transformed from meaningful civic participation into purchasing products.

The pink ribbon has come to symbolize efforts to find a cure for breast cancer. But it has also become a powerful symbol for corporate philanthropy, boosting the image of corporations, that promote products from yogurt to cars, slicing off a portion of proceeds to support breast cancer research. King, a women’s health issues scholar, explores the phenomenal growth of Pink Ribbons Inc.; the annual massing for the Susan G. Komen Foundation’s Race for the Cure 5K runs; and other high-profile events with huge corporate sponsorships. However admirable the effort to find a cure, King argues that it overwhelms efforts to learn how and why women get breast cancer and how it can be prevented. Prevention efforts could help more low-income women who lack the means to pay for treatment. King examines the history of philanthropy and how breast cancer became such a prominent cause, garnering far more support and publicity than other diseases, demonstrating the ability of American women to flex their political and economic muscle on behalf of an important cause. ~Vanessa Bush Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

How Much will you Charge to Ghostwrite My Book?

Potential clients always want to know how long it will take to turn the content they’re been collecting into a book and how much I will charge to ghostwrite it for them. “Can you at least give me a range?” they ask.

Not to answer like a two-handed economist, but it depends.  Before I can accurately scope my work effort, which is how I determine my fee, I’ll ask you some questions of my own.

Do you have a table of contents? This is not to say your outline will go unchanged, but the process of developing a table of contents  (TOC) forces you to think critically about what you really want to convey and how. Yes, I can help you develop your TOC as part of the overall project or as a preliminary engagement, but if your budget is tight this is a good place to put your sweat equity.

How well organized is your source material? Not just your original content, but also industry resources that you want to quote or refute. Is the source material pegged to chapters in your TOC? As I said above, the process of compiling your materials will serve you well.

What is the single most important point of your book? If you can’t state this in 200 words or less I can’t begin writing.  No worries, though, I can help. Rest assured, I won’t let you slide with something that isn’t crisp and cogent.

What are three skills or takeaways your reader will glean from the book? Maybe you have more than three, but you catch my drift.

What are your goals for the book? I want your book to meet your goals, too. Here’s a post on the goals I had for Live Full Throttle: Life Lessons from Friends Who Faced Cancer.

Start with a “Goldilocks Chapter”

Once you’ve got the outline, source material and reader objectives,  I’ll be able to price writing a Goldilocks Chapter.

What’s a Goldilocks Chapter? Remember the story of  Goldilocks and the Three Bears? One chair was too big, another was too small and the third was just right; one bowl of porridge too hot, another was too cold and the third was just right. In similar fashion, a Goldilocks Chapter isn’t the longest or shortest chapter in the book; it isn’t the introduction or the summary. It’s a chapter that represents both the the length and the level of difficulty of the average chapter in the book.  The Goldilocks Chapter will give us a feel for our working relationship and give me a mini project from which to price the entire book.

It should take two or three weeks to finalize your Goldilocks Chapter. We need time to let the chapter cool down before the final round of edits so we can approach it with fresh eyes, so don’t try to rush the process. I remember sitting down to read the final copy of a book I recently wrote, turning to my collaborator and saying “What in the world did I mean by that?”  You don’t catch errors like that when you write, edit and proof-read like a college kid turning in a term paper in the morning.

Average pricing for a Goldilocks Chapter

Let’s assume  you have a strong sense of what you want to say, how you want to say it, and you’ve done your research. Count on spending $2500 to get your Goldilocks chapter ghostwritten and edited. At the end of the Goldilocks Chapter project we’ll both know what’s ahead of us to finish the book.

This is the juncture at which you can take the chapter and include it in a book proposal or bring in another collaborator. I promise you, this is the best way I’ve found to start a project.

This does NOT mean that every chapter will cost $2500. They will not. There is a great deal of preliminary work in the Goldilocks Chapter that will help us both as we finish writing the book or book proposal. One is the process of transferring your voice to me. The book needs to sound like you–only better.

Once the Goldilocks Chapter is finished, the rest of the book will flow.

Average pricing for the rest of the book

I suggest budgeting $7500 for a 15k-word book, including edits, which I sub-contract (no one should edit their own work). I’ll sub-contract a graphics expert for graphs, charts and other illustrations, too (I’m a wordsmith, not a designer).

If your book runs to 30k words budget $12k, but let’s not get out ahead of ourselves with this budgeting business.

Let’s write that Goldilocks Chapter first.

Resolved to Write a Book?

Within the last week of 2011 over  four million Android devices were activated.  What does this mean to the business professional who has been waiting to write a book? You’d better get with it.

Every day over 500k  devices are activated that people could be using to read your message–or someone else’s. Yes, even Apple users can read what you’ve written if you publish it on the Google eBookstore (which means there is no need to wrestle with publishing to the iBookstore).

Like snowflakes to an avalanche

If you’ve made resolution to write a book this year but haven’t written so much as a blog post or newsletter, start with one of those projects. If you’ve been blogging or writing articles, white papers or newsletters for a couple of years, you’ve got a running start at a 15,000-word book. Here’s how quickly your smaller projects could add up:

  • Do you read newspaper opinion columns? They average 700 words, so if you’ve written 22 pieces of that length, you could compile them into a book.
  • Most blog posts average 300+ words, so 50 posts would total 15,000 words. Count the average words in your blog posts and do the math.
  • How many speeches or presentations have you delivered?  Those add up, too.  If standard speech without long pauses runs 150 – 170 words per minute, a 20-minute speech is 3,000 to 3,400 words.  If you’ve delivered five 20-minute speeches on your subject, you’re ready to roll.

If you think you’re ready to begin or want to talk about how to begin writing a book, contact me. Our first consultation is on the house.

Tamela Rich
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