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Opinion: How Indie Authors Can Learn To Love Financial Management

Opinion: How Indie Authors Can Learn to Love Financial Management

headshot of Debbie Young for financial management post

Debbie Young looks on the bright side of financial management for indie authors

Would you like to enjoy the financial management duties of being an indie author, rather than suffering them as a necessary evil? If so, read on…

 

Being a successful author-publisher brings with it all manner of responsibilities and duties besides the core activity that is surely most authors' main motivator: the joy of writing. Ask a roomful (or should that be a chapter?) or indie authors which task they least enjoy, and their financial management would be certain to crop up. Until recently, British novelist Debbie Young would have agreed, but in this post she explains how discovering certain accounting apps are helping her to evolve from the ostrich of financial management to high flyer.

The Ostrich of Financial Management

For years I've been a self-confessed ostrich when it comes to managing my finances. I have a mental block about insurance policies, and bank statements blur before my eyes. This is an acquired condition rather lifelong, perhaps triggered by a couple of my earliest jobs being in accounting. Although the main reasons I disliked those jobs were bullying bosses, they programmed me to hide my head in the sand ever after at the mere mention of bookkeeping.

Be More Micawber

line drawing of Mr Micawber, famed for his financial management advice

Mr Micawber, a timeless source of sound financial advice (Image: public domain)

Of course, I've always known and accepted the basic tenets of financial wisdom, and I've managed to reach this stage of my life as a solvent householder, so it's not all bad news. Unsurprisingly for an author, I've always taken Charles Dickens as my personal finance advisor rather than John Maynard Keynes. Says Mr Micawber in David Copperfield:

“Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen [pounds] nineteen [shillings] and six [pence], result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and six, result misery.”

Isn't that all we really need to know?

 

Don't Be a Skimpole

Drawing of Skimpole and friends in a scene from Dickens' Bleak House

Harold Skimpole professed a childlike approach to adult life – i.e. completely irresponsible (Image: public domain)

Sadly, I've often veered more towards Mr Skimpole's philosophy in Bleak House. He avoids the responsibilities of adulthood by proclaiming himself “a child”, particularly about money:

“Are you arrested for much, sir?” I inquired of Mr. Skimpole.

“My dear Miss Summerson,” said he, shaking his head pleasantly, “I don't know. Some pounds, odd shillings, and halfpence, I think, were mentioned.”

“It's twenty-four pound, sixteen, and sevenpence ha'penny,” observed the stranger. “That's wot it is.”

“And it sounds — somehow it sounds,” said Mr. Skimpole, “like a small sum?”

The strange man said nothing but made another snort. It was such a powerful one that it seemed quite to lift him out of his seat

While Dickens' wisdom still holds true, modern writers have access to tools that the great Victorian author could never have envisaged.

Let's Talk About Apps

photo of Charles Dickens at a writing desk

Moving on from Dickens to the digital age… (Photo: public domain)

Another confession: my own bookkeeping system has until recently been more Dickensian than digital: a large tin full of receipts, tallied only at the year end, a couple of days before my tax return fell due.

Yes, I know how to use spreadsheets, timesheets, and other such systems, having used them for decades in responsible day jobs, but now they leave me cold.

But a real lightbulb moment (what would Dickens made of lightbulbs, I wonder?) came when I installed an accounting app that I could use on my phone.

Under my old system, I'd chosen an especially pretty tin to make the task of accounting more palatable. The same applies to my phone cover. Every time I take it out and see the quip on the case, (a photo of Benedict Cumberbatch's Sherlock Holmes saying “Not now, John, I'm on a case”), I can't help but smile. Pavlov's dog here is gradually learning to start each accounting session with a smile.

New Tricks for This Old Pavlov's Dog

Some of the many tricks the new system allows me to do on my phone are to:

  • take photos of receipts and allocate them immediately to the right cost center
  • automatically import transactions from my bank account allowing me to include or exclude each transaction as income or expenditure
  • keep a running total of mileage on all business journeys
  • check my bank balance without having to log in separately to my bank
  • and much more

But most importantly, it keeps running totals of profit and loss on a day-to-day basis, so that I can check the health of my author business at any moment.

Effective Financial Management as a Motivator for More Profit

That in itself is a powerful motivator to be more conscientious about financial management, because I can see the immediate impact of my actions:

  • Round trips to meetings that I don't charge for, for example – now I look more carefully for monetising any non-essential mileage.
  • Delivering print books to bookstores – now I can calculate more precisely how many sales I need to make to cost-justify the process.

Of course, the author business is not a simple hand-to-mouth, manufacturing business. Production costs, including time spent writing each book, may be incurred months or even years before sales start to accrue.

But at least this kind of approach provides a starting-point snapshot. And if, as I do, you are writing and publishing at a consistent pace, the overall picture will still be helpful.

I've carefully not mentioned the name of the accounting app I'm using until this point, because I know there are many others available, and I've chosen just one recommended by fellow author members of ALLi. But I ought at least to give it a name-check: it's QuickBooks. But other systems are available, so shop around to find the one that best suits you.

A New Addiction?

My only word of caution about these systems is that they can be a little addictive! It's tempting to check your phone more often than is healthy throughout the day to catch your latest sales report, for example. But to my mind, that's healthier than my annual tin-opening habit, and I daresay that in time I'll end up somewhere in the middle.

But hopefully also, as Mr Micawber advises, at least sixpence in profit.

OVER TO YOU What are your favourite financial management apps? Do you find them more of a help or a hindrance? Any cautionary tales to share? Join the conversation!

OTHER POSTS TO HELP YOU MANAGE YOUR AUTHOR-PUBLISHER FINANCES
From the ALLi Author Advice Center Archive

 

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This Post Has One Comment
  1. First of all, kudos for making this discussion all the more fun by bring Mr. Micawber and Benedict Cumberbatch into it! 🙂 Which was the main point you were making…I couldn’t agree more. Making it fun, making it organized, and making it a regular practice all sound like excellent methods to make keeping track of our finances less of our chore. Thank you for the advice!

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