In
self-publishing, you are both the book creator and book producer; you are the
author and the publisher. You will need creative writing talent to become a
published author and money to become a publisher. Of course, that is an over
simplification but the point is that writing is a creative act and publishing
is a business.
Anyone can be a publisher. The right to publish is
guaranteed to you by the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United
States. You do not have to get a license or register with anyone to publish a
book. But it does cost money. In fact, one definition of publisher
is the person or company that makes the book happen; the one who puts up the
money. Until recently, book printing was expensive.
You may sell out
to a publisher or publish yourself. Getting your book published is what is
important. How you break into print is not. A publisher will edit, design,
typeset, layout, proofread, print and distribute your book. You may also
perform these functions yourself or hire a book designer, deal with a book
printer and use a booktrade distributor.
Design. Go to a
bookstore and look on that shelf where your book will be. You will notice that
each genre or category as a different design. For example, business books are
usually in hardcover with a dust jacket and go for $29.95 or $34.95.
Professional booksfor doctors, lawyers and accountantsare often in
hard cover without a dust jacket and sell for much more. Childrens books
are over size, are in full color, have exactly 32 pages and if you put a dust
jacket on them, they sell for five dollars more. And travel books are
low-priced, on light-weight paper and are tall and narrow so they will slip
into a pocket or pack. Your book must look like the rest on the shelf. Respect
your category; This is not a time to be creative.
Select a design you
like. Check the color of the paper, the size of the type, the design of the
book and so on. Buy that book. Use it as a model for your book. Someone else
has invested a good deal of time and money to design a book that you like.
Adapt that design.
Typesetting. You can typeset your book
yourself with MS-Word but your pages will look even better if you learn a
page-layout program such as PageMaker, In-Design or Quark.
Once you
are done with the typesetting, you can convert the text file into a graphic
file with Adobe Acrobat. Most of the files received by book printers today are
in Adobe Acrobat PDF.
Printing. Traditionally, the printing of
the book has been most expensive part of the publishing procedure. Due to the
setup costs, printing is a numbers game. It used to be necessary to print at
least 3,000 copies to achieve a reasonable per-unit cost. That meant a large
printing bill. For example, if you were printing a 144-page softcover book
measuring 5¼ x 8¼, your 3,000 copies might produce a print bill
of $4,800. And, you could not print less without the unit price going
upway up.
Types of printing POD, Print On
Demand: Digital printing of one book at a timeafter it is ordered by a
customer. POD is more expensive per-unit because all the overhead must be
charged to a single book.
PQN, Print Quantity Needed: Digital
printing of a small number of books for stock and promotion.
Press: Traditional ink-based printing requiring a minimum of 3,000
books to be economical.
Now we have digital (Print Quantity Needed)
printing: high-speed, computer controlled, toner-based production. These
machines print both sides of the paper at the same time and do not require a
period for the ink to dry. Press setup time is virtually eliminated. Excellent
color covers are usually done with the same toner process.
The same
144-page book might cost out to 400 books for $1,200. The per-unit price is
higher but the invoice you have to write a check for is much lower.
The quality of the toner-based printing is actually better. There are no
light and dark pages as in ink printing. The softcover or hardcover books look
better than traditionally-printed books.
Delivery time for
digitally-printed books is normally five days from pressproofs and reprints
take three to four days.
Writers have benefited from offset printing,
computers and the Internet. The next technological revolution is digital PQN
printing. Digital book printing is faster, easier and cheaper.
Putting
a lot of ink on paper is now just an option; a good one if there is large
prepublication demand such as advanced sales to bookstores and/or a sale to a
book club. There is no longer an automatic requirement to print 3,000 or more
copies of your book on spec. Price is no longer an excuse for procrastinating
on your book.
Here is a list of digital printers DeHart's
Printing Services Tatiana Promessi 3265 Scott Blvd. Santa Clara, CA 95054 Tel:
408-982-9118 Tatiana@DeHarts.com http://www.DeHarts.com
Tri-State
Litho Kumar Persad 71-81 TenBroeck Avenue Kingston, NY 12401 Tel: 914-331-7581
tristate@ulster.net http://www.TriStateLitho.com
BookJustBooks.com Ron
Pramschufer 51 East 42nd Street New York, NY 10017 Tel: 800-621-2556
customerservice@rjc-llc.com http://BooksJustBooks.com
TPC Graphics Len
Metz 518 Coles Mill Road Haddonfield, NJ 08033 Tel: 856-429-2858 Fax:
856-429-0644 TPClen-Pat@erols.com.
Small run digital and conventional
book manufacturing. Case, soft binding. Fidlar Doubleday Steve Rozewicz 6255
Technology Avenue Kalamazoo, MI 49001 Tel: 800-632-2258 Tel: 248-761-9435, cell
Fax: 888-999-0655 SteveR@Fidlar.com http://www.fidlardoubleday.com
Alexanders Digital Printing Doyle Mortimer, Barry Merrell 245 South
1060 West Lindon, UT 84042 Tel: 801-224-8666 Fax: 801-224-0446
http://www.Alexanders.com
Infinity Publishing John Harnish 519 W.
Lancaster Ave. Haverford, PA 19041-1413 Tel: 610-520-2500 Fax: 610-519-0261
jHarnish@BuyBooksOnTheWeb.com http://www.infinitypublishing.com
DigiNet Printing Guillermo "William: Perego 5723 NW 159th Street Miami
Lakes, FL 33014 Tel: 305-825-9260 Fax: 305-825-9294 gPerego@DigiNetPrinting.com
http://www.DigiNetPrinting.com
Morgan Printing and Publishing Terry
Sherrell 900 Old Koenig Lane #135 Austin, TX 78756 Tel: 512-459-5194 Fax:
512-451-0755 mprinting@austin.rr.com
Sir Speedy-Whittier Tim McCarthy
7240 Greenleaf Avenue Whittier, CA 90602 Tel: 562-698-7513 tim@ssWhittier.com
http://www.sswhittier.com
Sir Speedy-Scottsdale Sheri Statt Bercaw
7373 East Camelback Road Scottsdale, AZ 85251 Tel: 480-947-7277, Ex 111 Fax:
480-946-3957 sstatt@SirSpeedy21120.com
Adibooks Thomas G. Campbell 181
Industrial Avenue Lowell, MA 01852 Tel: 978-458-2345 tcampbell@KingPrinting.com
http://www.adibooks.com
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. ©