Self-Publishing Vs Small Presses: Can Your Publisher Do More for You Than You Can Do for Yourself?

I recently attended an author event where numerous authors were included. One of the authors made a point of commenting upon what is wrong with self-publishing and that “legitimate” writers do not self-publish but seek to improve their writing by having it reviewed by a press with an editorial board. I tried to point out a couple of the advantages of self-publishing to this author, but she had formed her opinion and would not listen to me. When I brought up the fact that many authors make more money self-publishing than being traditionally published, she replied, “If it’s about the money to you, there’s no point in our talking about it. A real writer enjoys going through the agony of working with an editor to make the book better.” I pointed out that many self-published books are edited, but there was no changing this woman’s mind.

I went home and did a little research on this author and her book. She had claimed that her book had been her publisher’s bestselling book for something like thirty weeks. Had she said she’d been on the New York Times Bestseller list for thirty weeks, or an Amazon bestseller for thirty weeks, I might have been impressed, but being your publisher’s bestselling book doesn’t mean a lot. I did find the publisher online. They’ve published twelve books. Being the best out of twelve books just didn’t seem that impressive to me.

A male author at the event agreed with this other author. I Googled his book and could not find a website for him. All he had was a page at his university’s website under faculty information that mentioned he had written a book. I tried to Google his publisher, also a small press, and it did not come up as even having a website.

I looked up both authors’ books on Amazon. Both were there, which was a good thing. I looked them up at Barnes & Noble. Only the female author’s book was there. I went back to Amazon and read the reviews. There were a few, some good, some bad for both books. I decided I would see whether these books were really worth reading, but neither book had a “look inside” feature for the Amazon listing. And guess what? Neither book was available in Kindle or any other ebook format.

Curious to see just how good these books were, I went to the local bookstore. The male author was from out of state so I wasn’t surprised the bookstore didn’t have his book. But the bookstore didn’t carry the female author’s book either, even though she lived nearby. When I asked the manager why the store didn’t carry her book, he informed me, “The publisher refuses to work with our company. The only way we can carry it is if the author buys her own copies from the publisher and sells it on consignment to us and she says that’s too much trouble for her to do.”

Interesting, I thought. Here was a traditionally published book, published by a small press I’d never heard of that wasn’t even willing to work with the bookstore in this author’s hometown to sell that author’s book. The press did not produce an ebook version for the author, it did not have a separate author page for the author at its website, and in the case of the other author, there was no website. In short, I was not impressed by either of the authors’ publishers or their efforts to market their books. And I especially wasn’t impressed by the female author who thought she was so ahead of the game because she had a book published by a small press. Perhaps she truly didn’t care about the money part of selling books, but I had a hard time thinking her book was selling well at all, even if it were the bestselling out of twelve titles. Who’s to say any of those other books even sold a hundred copies each? I looked up a few of them on Amazon and their sales ranks were very low-in the millions, and even her supposed “bestseller” had a sales rank around 400,000. That’s actually not such a bad number, but it’s not all that impressive either.

So what makes this author think her book is somehow superior to the self-published books? Simply because a publisher chose to publish it for her, no matter how small that publisher is or how bad at marketing. This author said it’s not about the money, and I have to come to the conclusion it’s not about book sales either for her, or she’s deluded into thinking her book sales are truly impressive. I wonder whether it’s even about good writing. I think, ultimately, it’s about the “prestige” of being traditionally published, and she was ready to rub the self-published authors’ noises in her achievement, even if her publisher is some small press hardly anyone ever heard of.

I wouldn’t have given her the satisfaction of buying her book from her at the event, but I did decide to order the book off Amazon and I read it, and I found it to be a fairly well-written book stylistically, though lacking on plot and rather depressing. It wasn’t my kind of book, but I couldn’t fault it for its writing. Still, the cover was not that well done-I would have thought it was self-published upon first sight if I had not been told otherwise, and honestly, I’ve read plenty of self-published books as good as or better than her book.

Part of this author’s argument was the value of working with an editor. I always recommend authors find good editors to work with them, and plenty of self-published authors do (the ones who don’t are usually the ones who give self-publishing a bad name). That said, I’ve read plenty of traditionally published books that have mistakes in them, and not just by small presses, but very large well-known publishers as well. When a big name publisher like Oxford University Press can make a statement that it no longer feels it is necessary to correct split infinitives in its books (see http://oxforddictionaries.com/page/grammartipsplitinfinitive ), you have to wonder whether the quality of the editors at large presses is any better than many of the editors you can hire who do freelance. Oxford University Press has an academic argument for why split infinitives are a fallacy, but even so, they still sound awkward to me. Furthermore, many editors who work for large publishers do freelance editing on the side for self-published authors. I know a couple of such editors myself. So I don’t see why hiring a qualified freelance editor will make any difference.

So what is the real difference? As far as I’m concerned, if an author is self-published and produces a professional looking book with an attractive cover, has the book edited and proofread, and has enough business savvy to know how to promote the book, then he is a step ahead of the game, regardless of whether some big name or small, largely unheard of press, did not publish his book.

Basic Math-It May Not Be About the Money, But….

I know for that author, it wasn’t about the money, but when did a little extra money ever hurt? Traditional publishers pay royalties to their authors. Self-published authors receive complete profit on book sales. The standard royalty runs around 10 percent. Let’s crunch a few numbers to see how many books a traditionally published author needs to sell to equal what a self-published author needs to sell.

An author who self-publishes his book can get the book printed at $7 each with a print run of 500 copies. That’s $3,500. The book’s cover price is $20. He works with local bookstores to sell the book at 40 percent consignment, meaning he receives 60 percent of the sales price or $12 a book; that’s a profit of $5 per book for every book sold in the bookstore and $13 for every book he sells himself. Let’s say he sells half his books at bookstores and half directly to his customers. That’s 250 books x $13, and 250 books x $5. The total is $3,250 + $1,250 = $4,500 in profit after he pays the initial $3,500 to print the books. That’s equivalent to almost 129 percent in profit.

By comparison, if the same book is traditionally published and sells for the same $20, and the cost is still $7 and the publisher is providing 10 percent royalties, the author makes $2 a copy. The publisher is keeping the other $11 in profit (getting rich at the author’s expense, perhaps, especially if he’s not using any of that profit on significant marketing efforts). To reach the profit of $4,500, the author will need to sell 2,250 copies as opposed to the 500 if he had self-published.

Now I know it’s not all about the money. True authors write because they love to write, but what’s the point of selling your words for less than they are worth? If your publisher has the marketing and distribution capabilities to sell those 2,250 books and faster than you can sell your 500, then by all means go with that publisher. But if you have a feeling that the publisher’s ability to sell 4.5 times as many books as you can sell on your own is unlikely, you may be better off self-publishing your book. Sure, you want more copies sold, but do you want them sold so you can make your publisher rich while you get only a small percent of the income?

Many great small presses are out there that have been around for years, and they are keeping up with the changes in publishing and are truly business savvy when it comes to marketing. But there are other presses run by book lovers who have little business sense. They may not be in a position or have the “know how” or the stamina and enthusiasm to make truly significant marketing efforts. So make sure you know how experienced and how business savvy your publisher is before you sign that contract. Here are some questions to ask your potential publisher-and don’t forget to get the answers included in the contract:

Questions to ask the Small Press/Publisher:

  1. What is your marketing plan for my book?
  2. Will my book be listed at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other websites?
  3. What kind of distribution do you have?
  4. Will you work with my local bookstore(s) to sell my book, even if they only do consignment or want a buy back policy if the books don’t sell?
  5. How many copies will you print?
  6. What is the likelihood of the book being reprinted vs. going out of print?
  7. If the book goes out of print, when can I buy back the rights and publish it myself?
  8. Will you offer ebook versions of my book?
  9. Do you have a website where people can purchase the book?
  10. What can I do to help?
  11. Can I buy and sell copies of my own book?
  12. Do you have any budget to help me with my personal marketing efforts?
  13. Will you build a website for me or help me promote mine, link to mine?
  14. What else can you do for me that I can’t do for myself?

If you don’t have or don’t want to spend the money to self-publish your book, finding a traditional publisher may be the best route for you. If the publisher can do things for you that you can’t do yourself or can do them better, it may also be the best option, but most of these things you can do for yourself or find people you can pay to do them for you, still resulting in you making a larger profit. Nor do you want the publisher to prevent you from selling books because it doesn’t care to produce an ebook or spend time building a website to promote your book. I urge you to do your research and make the best business decision possible. It may not be all about the money, but after all the time, research, and energy you put into writing your book, you deserve to get adequate compensation for it.

Irene Watson is the Managing Editor of Reader Views, where avid readers can find reviews of recently published books as well as read interviews with authors. Her team also provides author publicity and a variety of other services specific to writing and publishing books.

Author: Irene Watson
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Start Your Own 6-Figure Self-Publishing Empire

Many people want to write a book, or write several books or become a full-time author. And with this digital age of printing there’s never been a better time or an easier way to become a self-published author. And once you know what to do you can turn your books into your own 6-figure publishing empire.

But where do you start? Well first of all you need to write a book. Most people will say that they don’t have time to write a book. But everyone has time to write a book. We all have 24 hours in every day – the exact same 24 hours. The only difference is what you do with it. Just getting rid of your TV set can give you up to 50 extra hours to write every week.

And if you can write a letter, you can write a book. You just need to write a series of articles, turn the articles into chapters and voila! You have your book.

So, once your first book is written you then need to self-publish it. To do this you need to use a digital POD company that will print your book and distribute it as it’s ordered. This way you don’t have to worry about printing and warehousing thousands of copies of your book and the whole ordering/printing/packing/shipping process can be automated for you. And thousands of online book stores across the globe will happily list your book.

Or you can contact other publishing companies and ask them if you can use their distribution company to sell your books. Many publishing companies will do this, even the really big companies. But they can charge a lot, sometimes up to 70% of your profits. But if you can sell tens-of-thousands of copies of your book this way, then it could be worth it.

Next you need to market your book to let everyone know it’s out there. You can use press release companies to do this or you can do it yourself for free by writing articles on your book’s subject and sending them to websites and magazines. You can also write up your own marketing material which includes all the information about your book, including number of pages, benefits of reading the book, where it can be purchased/ordered, etc.

Then get a list of book store and library supply company addresses (and newspaper and magazine addresses too) and mail out your advertising material to them. You don’t even have to send it out all at once. Just send out half a dozen or so at a time. That way you can be marketing all year round.

Then you need to set up a website. To do it the cheapest way it’s best to take a course in webpage design and learn all about HTML, etc. That way you can be completely in charge of your website and update and add to it whenever you want, at no extra cost.

Fill your website with content related to your book. Write and upload free articles and short reports. Join affiliate programs and sell other companies products for commission payments. And put up plenty of links to your book.

You could also write articles to post on article directory websites with a link back to your site. If you write articles regularly, and they’re good articles, other website owners will also download them and publish them on their websites too. And then before you know it your name and your book will be known all over the world.

But don’t just stick at writing books. You could write eBooks too or sell your book as an eBook version as well. Your eBook could also be sold through other eBook websites such as ClickBank.com or MobiPocket.com and even Amazon.com.

This way your profits can explode beyond your wildest expectations.

Just look at it this way. Say you published print 6 books 6 eBooks every year and you made $10 profit on each book. If you sell 500 copies of each book every year you’d earn $60,000 a year. If you sold 1,000 copies of each book every year you’d earn $120,000. That’s a 6-figure income!

And if you kept on writing and publishing at this rate you’d have written and published 18 print books and 18 eBooks in 3 years and so if you sold 500 copies of each book you’d earn $180,000 and if you sold 1,000 copies of each you’d earn a staggering $360,000 a year.

Plus you’d earn all the other income from your website such as affiliate commissions. And if you put pay-per-click advertising on your website, such as Google Ads, you’d earn revenue from that too.

And as a writer you’re able to open as many websites as you want. For instance, if you open a website about healthy eating, you could write and sell recipe books from your site. You could also advertise fitness clubs, gym equipment, other online websites selling health-related products, and earn affiliate commissions from them all.

And remember that all this is “passive income”. This means that you can be earning money every day without having to work for it because once you write a book it just keeps on selling and you keep getting paid.

That’s the beauty of being a writer in the 21st Century. You can use the internet to build your own self-publishing empire. Other internet entrepreneurs have to pay writers to write their website’s content. But a writer, you can do it yourself for free. This gives you a much better edge to help you to achieve your goal of becoming a wealthy self-published author.

And the best thing about being an author is that is a job that you never have to retire from.

Ruth Barringham is succesful writer, author and publisher and runs two web sites for writers. Writeaholics.net is a web site for freelance writers and Self-Publish Worldwide is a website full of information on all areas of self publishing. So if your interested in writing or publishing, or both, visit these two web sites. You can also sign up for the free monthly newsletter at Writeaholics.net and receive the free eBook ‘Become a Freelance Writing Success’ when you subscribe, or download a free self publishing report at Self-Publish Worldwide. Or why not do both? After all – they’re free!

Author: Ruth Barringham
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Self Publishers’ Guide To The Best Cheap And Easy Book Marketing Tips

Whether you’ve just published a book or have a book that isn’t selling, now is the time to get to it; start marketing today! Self publishers need to have a good marketing plan to sell books and should be written prior to writing your book and in place a year prior to publishing your book. Your book selling, book marketing, and book promotion planning should begin before the manuscript is completed.

Your book press release should not be written as you would a sales letter or flier, it should be written for the editor and tell about your book in a factual way, no opinion or glowing remarks. Mail a press release to at least 1000 print and broadcast contacts just prior to publishing your title and again and again after you publish; you can never send too many. Make sure you have at least one good press release, written in AP style, that you can send out for the lifetime of your book.

Using press releases can be a very effective marketing tool if used properly. Make sure your press release spells out the ‘who, what, where, when, and why.’ Learning to write and use powerful optimized press releases can often drive tons of traffic to your website while providing multiple back links that can lead to increased page rank and numerous top ten search engine rankings for your targeted keywords.

Don’t underestimate the value of a good press release for making book sales. Send out the same press release to the editor of your local daily newspaper every week until you are called for an interview or are written up.

Make five telephone calls a day that relate to marketing your book. Create an online contest and list it in online contest directories to drive traffic to your website. If your book solves a problem, focus on this in your marketing.

Get as many testimonials about your book, as possible, from experts in the field relating to your title, not customers; use on your fliers and back of books. I’ve seen publishers lose a lot of money paying for expensive display ads, so beware if you do this; I don’t advise it in the beginning — get your feet wet first so you know what you’re doing. When you get a nice write up or feature about you and/or your book, have it laminated and set it up on an easel at trade shows.

Every day it’s important to focus on a variety of marketing approaches. If your book fits a specialty market, find a store that fits the genre and offer to leave books on consignment; many publishers have sold thousands of books this way. Make sure not to overlook the Internet; get yourself interviewed or profiled for sites both about writing, publishing and about the topics covered in your book.

Remember to make sure your book is listed in Books-in-Print; don’t assume it’s already listed. Submit articles to online article directories that focus on your book’s topic to drive customers to your website. Contact non-bookstore booksellers and offer to leave books on consignment.

Build a web site that provides another avenue for ordering, a virtual online press kit and link exchanges with sites that relate to your topic. Make sure to promote and market your book each and every day, both online and offline.

It’s important to publish a website that focuses on your title; you’ll be able to refer editors and customers and all interested parties to your book information with the click of a mouse. Local radio shows and television appearances are good but are often forgotten within hours of the broadcast; make sure to make or get a copy of any television broadcast for future promotions.

Make sure to do some serious marketing and promotion every single day, no excuses. Don’t delay another day if you’ve fallen by the wayside; make sure to focus on promoting, selling and marketing your book each and every day. One of the biggest problems self publishers and book publishers tell me about is the hundreds of books they have in inventory they haven’t set up a marketing plan for; don’t let this happen to you — get prepared now.

For more information on book marketing tips and selling more books go to http://www.TwinPeaksPress.com founded in 1982, specializing in help for authors, self publishers, ebook and book publishers with tips, advice and resources, including information on media, library and other mailing lists, and press releases – online, wire service and offline distribution

Author: Helen Hecker
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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A Few Pros About Self Publishing

Creative Control – Design your own cover or let us help you!
Financial Control – Determine the number and type of books you want!
Inventory Control – Order when you want to and when you need to!
Competitive Pricing – (as in VERY affordable – compare for yourself!)
Fast Turnaround – As quick as 7 days!

You can develop your manuscript on your time, at your leisure, at your own pace, right at your PC and then simply upload and wait for your professionally bound, bookstore quality books to arrive. You determine the amount you want to publish and you determine the amount of money you feel you can spend at any given time. Again, many authors publish a hundred or so books at first and then find themselves ordering hundreds more.

Creative Control –
You may have a favorite literature category, you like to read and there are scenarios you have never seen written in your genre, then you’ve most likely experienced frustration. Now you are left to ponder and to speculate. The reason your favorite sub-genre has been ignored is money matters in book publishing companies of today.

A great example is fantasy fiction literature. Until a few years ago, the number of fantasy books (i.e. Dragon books and Warlock books) that had been published could be counted on two hands. Without saying there’s current development of ebooks. And ebook sales are only getting bigger. A large collection of fantasy fiction literature has entered the marketplace and is available or in some cases free of charge. Some offer their ebooks free of charge.

Why are all these bizarre and wonderful sub genre literary selections appearing? The new “e” platforms [electronic] platforms allow authors to self publish their creative works, as we know them in the literary field. These writers have about 100% freedom to write about virtually anything that comes to their creative mind. Do not feel left out. Start writing. Write until you’ve put down all your ideas, then edit. Your goal is to get self-published to an ebook format to share on the world-wide web. Then think about publishing in normal book form. Note, before ebook formats – self publishing became easy and affordable for almost anyone. However, the editors in publishing companies made the decisions on what choices we had to read. Now, readers and authors can make those decisions.

*** Self-Publish! ***

The Internet and companies like Amazon have made this all possible with their self publishing platforms. They allow writers to publish their ebooks on their websites and gain access to large numbers of potential readers. This particular business model has become very successful. Publishers are scrambling to try to figure out how they will survive in the age of digital books.

If you are an author who has an agreement with a traditional book publisher, I am sure you have had issues with their editors in making changes to your creative work. Moreover, I bet you have some wonderful manuscripts lying around that no one would purchase. With the self publishing options of today, you can publish your manuscript without a publisher or editor who changes your book in a fashion you are not satisfied.

Retaining creative control of your content is but one of the many advantages of self publishing your ebook. Remember you have control with self publishing.

Some of today’s top selling authors are still with traditional publishers, but this will change soon. The superstar authors of tomorrow are likely to be self published authors.

Author: Kim G Lain
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Self-Publishing – How to Know If It’s Right For You

Frustrated writers often ask, What about self-publishing?

It has never been easier or more profitable to self-publish the right works for the right reasons. For the wrong reason, self-publication is as much a dead end as ever.

Let’s get the wrong reasons out of the way first. For a novelist who thinks the big publishers just don’t know an obvious New York Times bestseller when they see one, self-publishing is probably going to be a disappointment.

Now that we’ve cleared away a minority of those who are thinking about self-publishing, let’s talk about who it can work for.

Who can self-publish profitably?

  1. Nonfiction writers, such as Internet marketers, financial advisors, health and diet experts, may appreciate getting the entire profit from their books, rather than just royalties. These books can be either print or ebooks — or both — and can be sold from the author’s website or through affiliate marketers.
  2. Business owners, especially those who sell their goods or services over the Internet, can publish ebooks quickly and inexpensively and use the ebooks as incentives. The ebooks could also serve as a sampling of the entrepreneur’s approach and style or as a handout for a class or workshop.
  3. People who give public speeches and other events can market print-on-demand copies of their books.
  4. Authors of books that reach a very small niche audience, such as a family history or ghost stories of a small town, can publish print on demand, with no upfront fee and all the production costs included in the per-copy price. I heard a story a few years back about a literary agent picking up a self-published local history while on vacation. She then called the author to offer representation and ended up selling the book to a big publisher. It doesn’t happen often, but a well-written book that fits its niche just might make the leap.
  5. A marketing genius, such as science fiction author Scott Sigler, can write an exciting novel, podcast it as a free audio book, and parlay the popularity into a contract with one of the big publishers. It doesn’t hurt to come up with a basket full of great marketing ideas along the way.

Some things self-published authors should keep in mind

  1. 1. One of the things a publisher has traditionally been responsible for is marketing and publicity. A self-published author (and more and more these days, a traditionally published author as well) is responsible for marketing and publicity.
  2. If you want to sell your self-published book through your neighborhood or online bookstore, you’ll need an ISBN number (ISBN.org). You don’t need an ISBN to sell the book in private transactions. How to get an ISBN is outside the scope of this article, but you’ll want to decide before you print the cover.
  3. Publishers have traditionally provided editing, fact-checking, proofreading, page layout, and design. There’s a natural inclination for any writer (including me) to finish a book and say, “That’s a wrap,” and assume there is nothing else to be done with it. But a book riddled with inconsistencies, factual errors, and typos undermines its own credibility. An unprofessional cover suggests an unprofessional book. Self-published authors make a wise investment in a good editor, proofreader, and designer.
  4. There are many new means of publication and distribution on the horizon for authors with information to share or a story to tell, as determined by the needs of their audience and limited only by their own imagination.

The bottom line

The arrival of print-on-demand and ebooks means that publishers no longer have to keep hundreds or thousands of copies of a book in inventory. It means that the book can be written in one place and printed closer to its delivery place, saving on shipping and handling.

An ebook doesn’t have to be printed at all, but can be sold as a download, eliminating shipping and handling altogether.

Self-publishing can be one of an array of possibilities for a writer’s work and the best option for some kinds of projects. It’s worthwhile for every author to give it a look.

About the author:

Jan Bear gives tips on communicating in the English language at http://www.writeatlight.com Sign up for a free weekly newsletter, English for Communicators.

Author: Jan Bear
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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