"If you do not write for
publication, there is little point in writing at all."
--George Barnerd Shaw
Self-Publishing
There are a lot of reasons to self-publish. Here are
some of them:
1. Save Time. Most commercial publishers work on an 18-24 month
production cycle. Self-publishing will take only two to four months once your manuscript
is completed. This becomes especially important for time-sensitive material.
2. Keep Control. Self-publishing gives you total control of your book.
Commercial publishers are interested in your book as a money-making "property"
and may have less allegiance than you do to the integrity of the work. If you are
unwilling to have changes made to the title, the contents, the illustrations of your work
or feel you can't live with a possible sensationalizing of it, you'll want to retain the
control that self-publishing offers.
3. Bigger Profits. A large publisher will finance your project but may
only offer a 5 to 15% royalty. Since most authors have to do their own promoting anyway,
why not self-publish and earn a 40 to 400% margin? Ironically, self-publishing has become
one of the surer roads into a major publishing house. If your self-published book becomes
a hit, publishers will come calling. So after raking in 40 to 400% on your initial
self-published printing, you will have the upper hand in negotiating the sale of second
printing rights to your book.
4. Sole Owner. As a self-publisher, you own all rights to your book.
If you use a traditional publisher, the publishing house will own the rights to your book.
They decide how long it will stay on bookstore shelves (usually three to six months). If
they lose interest in it, you won't be able to print additional copies unless you purchase
back these rights.
5. Filling a Niche. You may not be able to interest a major publisher
in your book if it deals with a special topic with a limited market. Books that deal with
educational material or specific religious themes, hobbies or other interests which
generate limited interest in the national market, for instance, may not be found in the
mass market because the demand for them may not be great enough to warrant a large press
run. Yet your book may fill a niche that has not been met. You can test the market with a
short-run printing. If you already understand or are willing to learn about that market,
you can target it precisely. You won't need to print a million copies to make a profit,
because you'll be likely to sell every book you print.
6. Local Advantage. Books about local or regional topics, i.e.,
historical books about certain towns, projects, localities, etc., are generally produced
by local authors in short-run quantities. Large publishers are unlikely to publish such
books because of their limited sales potential.
7. Be in Print. Making money is not the only reason to publish.
Sharing what you have learned or leaving a legacy to your family are other admirable
motives. So is offering hope or inspiration to others who face a situation you have dealt
with successfully. A book is an expression of yourself and a gift to others.
8. Avoid the Chaos. Publishing companies are merging like medflies in mating season. In the final months of 1998, Random House, Bantam Doubleday Dell, Holt, St. Martin's and Farrar Straus Giroux were all German-owned. British companies held Putnam, Viking, and Addison Wesley, and an Australian company controlled HarperCollins. Then Barnes & Noble bought Ingram - not a month after they had themselves sold 50% of Barnsandnoble.com to Bertelsmann.
Along with these acquisitions, of course, comes policy and personnel changes. It's hard
to know who is publishing what these days, and who works where. Manuscripts can get lost
in limbo during this game of musical chairs.
Now that you've looked at some of the reasons to self-publish, find out what is needed to
do it successfully. See the online seminar, Is
Self-Publishing For You? Or...
Ready to go? Skip the details with ... Advocate House
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