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Monday 6 March 2017

What is it with charts?

Since putting my first Time Rats novel on Kindle Scout, I've continued to nominate other authors' books on there. I'm a bit spasmodic about it, depending how busy I am, but I enjoy guessing from only the cover, blurb and first few chapters of a book whether Kindle Scout editors will select it. At the moment, I have a 20% success rate, which is exactly average (and not terribly impressive, now I consider it). Every now and then I receive a free copy of a book I've nominated which Kindle Press published, and get to find out what the rest of the book is like.

A few months ago, Scout Rankings appeared on the site. You can boost your rank by nominating, reviewing a chosen book, choosing a book that gets selected etc.. There is a Scout Leaderboard, displaying top ranked Scouts. I was at #31 when it opened. Now my rank is #191. The moment KS started a chart, people started caring about their rank and trying to improve it, even though they do not benefit one whit - Amazon, of course, benefits from their increased engagement.

I see the same thing with the Hot & Trending chart, which reflects the number of readers who have nominated each book. I have to admit the graphics on one's book page are beguiling; as you watch, gold bars shoot up, one for each day of the campaign so far, showing the number of hours spent on H & T. There's a graph showing daily views, and a pie chart showing where they came from. And none of this matters a jot. Experience has shown that a book's success or failure to clock up the hours on H & T have nothing whatsoever to do with its chances of being selected. Yet people go to great lengths attempting to stay on it, networking like mad and paying for adverts.

I used this idea, along with China's new Social Credit system, in Time Rats 3, which I'm writing now. Part of it is set in a 2135 where the Global Union runs the world, and everyone has a CCR. In this new timeline, Liam Roth's life is very different. Here's a snippet:

“In the other future you were rich. You had a house in De Beauvoir,” Floss said. “And when –”
“Wait – I was rich? And lived in De Beauvoir? With my own time machine? The alternative me must have had one hell of a CCR.”
“What’s a CCR?”
“Citizen Credit Rating.”
“What’s that?”
“You don’t know? Everyone on the planet has one. They score you for stuff like financial stability, criminal record, behaviour on social media, who your friends are, job performance, neatness of appearance, core values, attitude – hundreds of different areas, and your rankings fluctuate on a daily basis.”
“Bloody hell,” said Floss. “So what’s your CCR, or isn’t it done to ask?”
Liam laughed. “18%. That’s overall. My attitude rank’s probably hovering around zero right now.”

4 comments:

  1. CCR. Ooh... worrying. Ah, just realized, I won't be around then. I hope.

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    1. Neither of us will in 2135 - however will they manage?

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  2. Lexi,it sounds as though Orwell's Big Brother is waiting for us 100 years in the future!

    I used to think that women might be better than men at running the world. Then the Scottish first minister emerged and my thoughts changed dramatically. If I were Big Brother in 2135 I would have that awful woman dragged into the future and publicly spanked by a big hairy conservative politician. Alternatively I could send her back in time and stick her in the stocks where I could throw rotten fruit and veg.

    More seriously though, could it be that Big Sister is waiting for us in 2135?

    Looking forward to the new novel. Will this be a trilogy?

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    1. Hi Q! I like the idea of Big Sister (only in fiction, I should clarify, not in real life). NS is truly awful. You originally gave me the idea of a World Government, which in TR3 morphs sinisterly into the Global Union.

      Yes, it'll be a trilogy when finished. Series should be easier to write, but I find them harder than standalone novels.

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