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Strange New Worlds Contest

Zman1

Captain
Captain
Why was the Star Trek Strange New Worlds Contest discontinued by Simon and Shuster? Yes I know its old news but my wife asked me and I have no idea, and after googleing I am even more confused. It seemed to have been a very popular contest, at least in hind sight. Even if the dead tree wasn't cost effective I would think the ebook would be, didn't the contest generate publicity much cheaper than other forms of ad revenue and also act as a talent scout for new writers for pocket books?
 
The SNW anthologies were losing money from the beginning. They lacked both of the things that anthologies generally need to draw an audience: name authors and unifying themes. If anything, it's amazing they lasted for ten whole years.

And yes, it was a popular contest, in that a lot of people wanted to enter it in hopes of getting into one of the volumes. That doesn't necessarily translate into being a popular anthology, something that a lot of people were buying.

And there's no way that publishing a book -- let alone managing a contest at the same time -- is cheaper than issuing an advertisement. It took a sizeable investment of time and labor. As for talent scouting, yes, it did have that benefit, but there have always been other ways of bringing new authors into the fold.
 
While it's pretty much says the same thing Christopher says here's a quote from my June 2009 article on the SNW contest drawing from comments by the contest's editor and several authors:

“Anthologies never make enough money in publishing.” Dean explains. “Nature of the beast, but Pocket Books and Paramount wanted to fund this to get the new writers in, to keep the fans writing Trek, and it worked for ten wonderful years. But even deep pockets like Pocket Books and Paramount couldn’t continue to lose as much money as this was costing them, so ten years seemed to be like a good place to stop. I didn’t expect it to go past year one, to be honest.”

“You have a book full of stories by unknown authors,” adds Allyn, “and they're being paid very well. Three cents a word is considered a professional pay rate, and SNW paid ten cents a word, plus the bonuses to the top stories. In addition, the books were completely scattershot in terms of their contents; the anthologies didn't cohere. There was also a certain disposability to the stories; these stories were just there, and in an era when readers were expecting more inter-story continuity, Strange New Worlds marked itself out as something different that could be safely ignored. Add these together, and you have a book that is going to have low sales – no marketable authors, strange story choices – combined with a high cost to bring to market. End result is a book that was going to be on life-support until the money ran out.”

William suggests that the range’s branding might’ve played a part in its downfall. “My own suspicion is that the ‘by the fans, for the fans’ tagline led some would-be buyers to believe that the SNW collections were not professional works, and caused them to pass them by.”
Dean = Dean Wesley Smith
Allyn = Allyn Gibson
William = William Leisner
 
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