PUBLISHING YOUR BOOK - WHAT WAY IS BEST
FOR YOU?
Judy Cullins c 2003 All Rights Reserved
Your book is nearly finished. You wonder if you should try to get an agent to represent you
to the publisher. Maybe you've already sent out your query letter to some agents. You dream how great it
would be to be taken under the publisher's wings.
What's wrong with this picture? Even if an agent has given you the go and asks for a book proposal
that has specific marketing information in it (takes three-seven months to write), you still have to face
reality. FACT: Like Oprah, publishers and agents choose only 1-2% of proposals submitted.
Let's say for now, you are chosen. The point is, are you fortunate to be chosen?
Are you willing to wait on the traditional publishing process 18 months more? Are you willing
to accept around 1% of the profits? Do you realize that after a few months of one initial book tour (of which
you must pay all costs from your book sales), you are on your own? And, it you don't put a lot of time into
promotion, your book will fade away within 2 months from the brick and mortar book store shelves. All unsold
and coffee-stained books left will be returned, and the cost is deducted from the author's royalties. Unless
you are a favored celebrity or famous author, publishers put little time or money into your book's promotion.
Get the Right Help the Right Way
Who says you can't publish the book yourself? It will certainly cost you less than you imagine,
even under $1000 (£ 400) . It will certainly bring you all the profits. It will certainly put
you in charge to make suitable and favorable writing, publishing and promotion decisions.
With a little help from professionals! These entrepreneurial experts such as book coaches,
book designers, and eBook specialists can guide you to publishing success. These people may give teleclasses,
small group coaching experiences, inexpensive ways to learn the ropes. These pros will shorten your learning
curve too, so you get the right help right away to write the right book right away.
When you think you still have to promote your books, even with a publisher, why not keep most
of the profits and do some of the work yourself. Learn from a coach's mistakes, "Do What You Do Best—and
Hire the Rest!" (That doesn't mean you can't barter for services). Check out the methods below and see which
one suits you best, is more rewarding and far more profitable.
Why Self-Publishing?
In self-publishing, you are the boss. You get to choose the cover, the style, the layout, the
message, even the format (eBook or Print Book). It's your book you are the one enthused about it.
In self-publishing, who do you think can sell it the best? You, the passionate author in love
with his or her book, or the rookie publisher's employee in charge of publicizing your book?
On Print Books
In self-publishing you'll make much more profit from your effort and you will get your book
out to the buyers so much faster, making faster profits. A $15 book costs $4 to print even a rather small
run using "print on demand" (POD) or "print quantity demand," (PQN). If you sell it at the back of the room,
you will make $11 each book.
On eBooks
If you sell it as an eBook on your Web site or link it to other publishing web sites, you will
make the whole $15.
FACT: In traditional publishing, you must get a distributor, and a wholesaler to get brick
and mortar bookstore chooses to carry your book. The bookstore gets a percentage too. Maybe these costs will
add up to 90%! What's left for the author, the one who wants to make a difference in people's lives?
Is there a drawback to self-publishing?
If you print it, you must pay for the printing yourself, but remember that could be as low
as $300 for 50 plus books. Print on Demand and Print Quantity Needed print short runs from five to 500. Depending
on how many that could run from $2-$5 for a book you can sell for $12. You'll only have to make a small investment,
you won't have a huge inventory, and you can apply that saved money on promotion, the most important part
of the book's journey.
Promotion is always at least as important, if not more important, than your book. Drawbacks
are starting to look like profit and low cost investment for you. With PQN (you have all control, keep and
distribute all the books) or eBooks you won't have hundreds or thousands of unsold books in your garage gathering
dust.
Many people feel it's a drawback to have to market and promote their books. Yet, you can learn
skills such as the sixty second "tell and sell," the promotional article or power press release, and the
sales letter for your Web site from an already successful coach. Publicity agents charge a lot of money and
tend to overdo the media kit, (media editors and reporters usually throw everything away except the news
release).
You need to learn how to talk about your book in a few sentences, a few paragraphs, and a longer
sales letter. You need someone who has authored and sold many books, one with long-term copy writing experience.
But even if you spend $1000 for coaching, editing and printing, you'll still be able to realize a larger
profit than the traditional route.
Traditional Publishing—Where does the money go?
Lets say you have a $15 book. Your agent takes 15% of what you get paid. Your publisher takes
all risks, pays editing, design costs and may pay an advance Vs royalties (around 5-8% of cover price or
10-15% of net). They book tours for you, but you must repay those costs from your book sales. The sad thing
is they keep your book alive for only three months as does the bookstore unless you are a best seller. Your
well-written, great message book may die here.
Your distributor/warehouse who sells to bookstores takes 25-30% of net from bookstore (12.5%
of cover price). They charge extra fees for storage, to keep you in their catalogue, shipping costs, and
returns. What does that leave you? Maybe $2 a book. Often distributors go belly up, and so does your investment
with them.
You the author need to decide what path is best for you. Make sure it's a profitable one.
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About Judy Cullins
A 20-year author, book coach, and speaker Judy works with small business people who want to
make a difference, and make money writing and publishing a book. She shares her expertise through teleclasses,
seminars, talks, free monthly ezine, and these eBooks: "Write Your eBook or Other Short Book--Fast!" "Ten
Non-techie Ways to Market Your Book Online" "Create Your Book Web Site With Marketing Pizzazz Kit" http://www.bookcoaching.com subscribe@bookcoaching.com Phone: 619/466-0622
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