Another Writer Mill: Atlantic Publishing Co. (APC)
Recently I've mentioned Helium and Demand Studios. Both share some telling characteristics and give insight into the institution of the writer mill:
- The pay makes burger flipping seem like glamorous high-rolling.
- The only way to really make money is to let quality fly to the winds, because you almost need to end the assignments before they start to make a reasonable dollar per hour figure.
- They constantly advertise for new writers, suggesting the deal is so bad that they cannot keep people around for long.
- (Bonus Characteristic) They have executives scouring the web, looking for potential criticism and trying to counter it.
Atlantic Publishing is looking for writers in various fields to write books on subjects such as: Building, Cooking, Farming/Animals, Gardening, Arts/Crafts, Recycling, Internet/Technology, Business/Investing, Real Estate, Finance, Parenting, Pets, Publishing, Education, and Self-Help. This position is a freelance opportunity. The payment varies from project to project. Writers are not required to reside in Ocala, FL, work may be done anywhere in the United States. If you are interested please contact Amanda Miller at amiller@atlantic-pub.com with your resume and writing sample.I was curious at one point this year and replied to one of the ads. Here's what they said in an email about their projects:
Because we have many manuscripts that need to be rewritten, and each are in different stages of writing, the amount of work that needs to be done will vary. Some of the material in the manuscript may be useable [sic] or the book may need to be rewritten completely. Some sections may just require you to revise information to make the material up-to-date or reorganize. We would like to hear your comments on the manuscript, how much work you feel needs to be done, and how you can contribute to the book.On the low end it's supposed to be copy editing, and the upper bound is full rewrite. Given that range of scope, what do you think they might pay? Here's the answer:
Upon acceptance of your bid we will e-mail you our freelance author agreement ( work for hire), and research material to complete the work. Typical time frames run from 30 days to 90 days for completion, we pay upon acceptable stages of completion, we check all manuscripts against proprietary plagiarism software, and we typically pay from $500.00 - $1,600.00 depending on the scope of the work involved. Many of our authors have completed several manuscripts for us. We give you full credit on the cover, in online databases such as R.R. Bowker, Amazon.com, B&N.com, and recorded CIP data in the library of congress.Oh, goody -- credit. And a full typical $1,600 to completely rewrite a flipping book on a work for hire basis (though technically books don't quality for work made for hire under U.S. copyright law). That even makes a publisher like Adams Media, known in the industry for its relatively low fees, seem like a spendthrift. No wonder they check manuscripts with plagiarism software, because they're barely paying enough for a chapter. Why does any writer mill think that people will slave away for laughable sums? Because they get enough inexperienced ones to do so and know when they leave, dejected and squeezed, there will be others whose credulity and eagerness to "get into the business" will leave them vulnerable.
The only point I couldn't verify was the bonus characteristic of whether their executives also troll online, looking for anyone that might question their practices. I'm sure we'll find out soon enough.
Labels: books, pay, publishers, writer mills



6 Comments:
Erik, I responed to one of those adds several months, not realizing that it was basically a writer mill. I never even got to the stage where we discussed payment because I was very put off when they wrote back and asked me to rewrite a book on employee law (I believe that was the topic). First off, what happened that they wanted me to rewrite someone else's work? And second of all, why would they entrust a topic like that to a writer who has almost no legal background? A book on a cover letters I could handle. Perhaps some kind of lifestyle topic like decorating or organizing. But legal issues?! That smelled kind of fishy to me!
There are so many cheeseballs out there Karft should sue them all down to their socks! Mixed mataphor, but you catch my drift. These dopes and the writers who think this is a cool deal (in toxic waste dumps of Bangldesh or someplace) are dragging the whole profession into the toity. Who do you think wrote the originals they other people are fixing--people who can't write, that's who! So now they need more people who don't value themselves to fix it? Bleh.
I wouldn't be surprised if you were sent a published book about employee law and asked to "rewrite" it.
As a former employee, I would say you have things just about figured out. They also treat their employees like crap, too, so there you go.
Erik, thanks for posting this. I've been getting curious about APC myself and was considering emailing them, but you've just saved me the time and effort. Just goes to show we should always trust our instincts if we're going to put lend our time (and name) to a project.
Erik, thanks for the post. I was wondering if they were a writer mill. I had already found some press on Writer's Weekly about spamming, so I was wondering if they were on the up-and-up. I agree with Melanie, I bet they have a copy of a book that has sold well and they want it rewritten so that they position their little trade book in the same market.
Uh, I would just like to mention I contributed to one book "Divorce and Widowhood" as it was in parts completely factually incorrect.
(I've been publishing www.Familylawcourts.com
which outs the divorce and custody industry since 2001.)
Atlantic Publishing apologized for not including the stuff I sent them, including the part where I outed former attorney Ron Lais. Nope. I was told the dog ate my homework.
Meaning, they lost the consent form.
By way of explanation, Kimberly Fulscher said she had no way to contact me. Seriously.
Then, Amanda Miller wondered if I'd like to write reviews of three books (288 pages each) for a whopping fifty books. Whoo hoo!
She added:
" The rate is $50 for three book reviews, which is paid upon completion of the entire project. What we ask our reviewers to do is write a 2-3 paragraph review with a star rating of 1-5 (5 being best) , send the review to us to look over, and then post the review if we approve it. We ask our reviewers to post to Amazon (which requires that you have an active account with them and have purchased from them in the past), Barnes and Noble, Powells.com ( http://www.powells.com/ ) and our blog site, located at atlanticpub.wordpress.com. We pay our reviewers through PayPal, if this does not work for you then unfortunately you will not be able to work on this project. As for what types of books we publish, most fall into the real estate, finance, management, and food service categories. The timeframe is flexible; some of my reviewers complete the project in three business days while some stretch it out much longer. I have found that the average time is approximately one to two weeks. This is a onetime project, I can only give 3 books to one reviewer.
If you are still interested, I am attaching the contract that will need to be hand signed before I can send you the books. You can fax it back to me at 352-622-1875 or scan and email it to me, whichever is easier for you, as long as it is hand signed."
Her signature was in script form.
Why does anyone write fiction?
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