Many nonfiction
book writers ask how to approach an agent or publisher. Today the question is
when to approach them. Traditionally, writers had to decide between selling out
and self-publishing. Their considerations were often reduced to money, time and
control.
Money. If your publisher prints 5000 copies, the book sells
for $19.95 and your royalty is 6% of the cover price (12-14% of the net), your
earnings will be less than $6000. If the book sells and goes back to press, you
may do well. Otherwise, it is not worth the many hours at the keyboard for
$6000.
According to Publishing for Profit by Tom Woll, most initial
print runs are 5,000 copies.
In self-publishing, you invest the money
but you do not have to share the net. You get it all.
The Publisher is
the person or company that invests in the book. Speed. It takes a large
publisher 18 months to move a book through its system of production and
distribution. From the time you deliver the manuscript, it will take a year and
a half before books are on the shelves in the stores.
You can have a
book printed in 2-5 weeks. You must consider: Do you want to wait an eternity
to get paid? Will your information expire in 18 months? Will someone else beat
you to the market with the same information? Do you want to let a publisher
delay the publication of your book?
18 months? You can make a baby
faster than that!
Control. Some of the larger publishers have
surrendered to their bean counters. Many of their books are on pulp paper, the
margins are narrow and the type is small. Your publisher may leave out some of
your illustrations to save money.
As the (self) publisher, you can
design the book to convey your information to your reader in the best-possible
way.
A poorly-produced book lacks credibility.
People won't
buy the book and will never be exposed to the message. Covering your bases.
Today, with the computer and digital printing, it is possible to approach
publishers and publish yourself. You can print 500 copies very reasonably (144
pages, 5.25 x 8.25, soft cover for $1,500). Then you can send the (example)
book to agents and publishers.
Those who circulate a proposal, query
letter or manuscript are treated like a writer.
Those with a book are
treated like an author.
You will also send copies of your book to
magazines for review, to book clubs for adoption and to foreign publishers for
translation and publication.
Self-Published Books that were
"Discovered" by Publishers
In Search of Excellence by Tom Peters.
Over 25,000 copies were sold directly to consumers in its first year. Then it
was sold to Warner and the publisher sold 10 million more.
The
Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield. His manuscript made the rounds of the
mainstream houses and then he decided to publish himself. He started by selling
copies out of the trunk of his Hondaover 100,000 of them. He subsequently
sold out to Warner Books for $800,000. Over 5.5 million copies have been sold.
The One-Minute Manager by Ken Blanchard and Spencer Johnson sold over
20,000 copies locally before they sold out to William Morrow. It has now sold
over 12-million copies since 1982 and is in 25 languages. The Joy of Cooking by
Irma Rombauer was selfpublished in 1931 as a project of the First Unitarian
Womens Alliance in St. Louis. Today Scribners sells more than 100,000
copies each year.
What Color is Your Parachute by Episcopal clergymen
Richard Nelson Bolles. It is now published by Ten Speed Press.
Leadership Secrets of Attila the Hun by Wess Roberts sold 486,000 copies before
selling out to Warner Books.
Self-Publisher Overcame Rejection
He was a 34-year old advertising executive in Salt Lake City. He had two
daughters, age six and four. He loved them very muchhe told them so every
day. But he wanted to express his love more permanently. So, every night after
he and his wife put the two girls to bed, he sat in the kitchen and wrote.
After six week, he had completed 87 pages. He took them to a copy shop and
reproduced 20 copies for family and friends. They read his work and passed it
on. After three weeks, 160 people had read his work. He was even contacted by a
bookstorethey had customers asking for the "book".
Encouraged,
he approached some publishersand, of course, he was turned down. Not to
be discouraged, he scraped together $5,000 and printed 9,000 copies. Then
19,000 more. By the end of the year, he had sold over 250,000 copies.
And then, the publishers came looking for him! Simon & Schuster offered
him $4.2 millionand he took it. That was Richard Paul Evans and the book
was The Christmas Box. It hit the top of the Publishers Weekly bestseller list
and was translated into 13 Languages. I teased him with "Rick, you were doing
so well selfpublishing and you sold out. Well, we all have our price. Your
price is $4.2 million. (I suspect my price is a bit lower)."
Authors
and promotion. Some authors do not want to publicly flog their books. You may
be looking forward to the day when your work is recognized and you wont
have to promote it. You may wish to be a celebrity and above all this crass
commercialism. Be advised that Frank McCourt (Angela's Ashes) spends some six
months each year making appearances on behalf of his books. He is a
best-selling author because he promotes his books.
Whether you sell
out to a (NY) publisher or publish yourself, the author must do the promotion.
Publishers do not promote books. They have the books manufactured and they
place them in bookstores. It is up to you to let potential buyers know your
book is available.
There are four stages in the life of a book:
writing, publishing, distributing and promoting. Giving birth to a book is like
bringing a child into the worldyou have an obligation to raise it.
Fortunately, the book is not a twenty-year commitment and you do not have to
send it to college. But, you do have to promote it.
You will write and
promote your book and your publisher will produce and distribute it. You can
deal with typesetters, printers and distributors yourself to get your finished
book into the stores. You might as well self-publish.
Publishing
increases the value. No one can be an expert in every booksome 100,000
titles are published each year. Everyone specializes or, at least, has a track
record with certain categories of books. If you are turned down by an agent or
publisher, that is not a reflection on the ability of the writer or the quality
of the work. That agent or publisher just does not get it. With this New Model,
if industry people fail to recognize the need and market for your book, it does
not matter because your book is launched. It is out for review, it is be
considered by book clubs and evaluated foreign publishers. If an agent or
publisher "discovers" your book after you have proven it in the market, it is
now worth more. For examples, see the sidebars.
This New Book Model is
the best approach for you, your book and your writing future. Send your
finished book to agents and publishers. Do not send a proposal, query letter or
manuscript. Don't let the agents and publishers hold you back.
Dan
Poynter does not want you to die with a book still inside you. You have the
ingredients and he has your recipe. Dan has written more than 100 books since
1969 including Writing Nonfiction and The Self- Publishing Manual. For more
help on book writing, see
http://ParaPub.com. ©