My mind has been on the topic of
publishing recently, so I thought that it would be a good time to blog about
it. I've been doing some research about the publishing world and what it
involves. What I've found on the internet is a lot of article and videos giving
your "10 Tips on getting published" which is not exactly what I was
looking for at the time, but some of these article were interesting.
Part of the problem was that many
of the articles and videos I found were actually about self-publishing, which
is an entirely different ball game than traditional publishing. For one thing,
instead of the publisher footing the bill, you, the writer, have to pay the
expense up front. That might be thousands of dollars out of your pocket to see
your book on store shelves in the hopes that some people might pick it up and
purchase it.
In self-publishing, the process is
involved for the author. After the book is written one of the key differences
is that, as a writer, you will not have the benefit of an in-house editor, one
of several people hired, full-time, by a publishing house to look over your
book for ways to improve it. If you want to improve it in self-publishing you
either have to do it yourself, find friends and family, or hire an editor. This
will be the first expense.
After that, you'll have to design a book cover. You could do this yourself or find someone to do it for you. Again, this could get pricey. Then it's a matter of formatting your book. This part means that you'll have to make sure the spacing is right on the pages, and the fonts are the ones that will read easily. Being sure you have your cover pages, page numbers title pages, and other details like this are all part of formatting. Once you have it formatted, you approach a company who works with you to get your book self-published, if you want to work with a company. They’ll get your book put together and printed in the quantity you order.
The reason
that so many of these online articles and videos put forward the idea of
self-publishing is that it is a faster method to publish than the traditional
method. In the traditional method, you have to submit a book proposal or send
your manuscript to a publishing house. Then it's a wait of up to eight weeks
until you hear back from them about whether or not they are interested about
taking on your book or not.
From recently
reading an article by Chip MacGregor on his website, I learned that the process isn't as simple as the Big
Kahuna taking a look at your book's title, flipping through the first chapter
and saying "I don't like it. Wait two weeks and send them the form
letter." There's an acquisitions editor who looks at it, an editorial
committee who takes a gander, then a publishing committee who looks at it if it
gets past those guys. If it gets through all of those groups, then the editor
runs a profit and loss sheet to get some ideas about how well the book might do
if they publish the book.
People often get the idea that publishers get the manuscript then sit around on it, burning time before deciding arbitrarily to send out a rejection letter. But this article made it more clear to me that there is a lot that goes on behind the scenes even before a writer gets an offer to publish their book. Though it might be weeks before they hear back from the publisher, the people working for the publisher might be deliberating and running numbers for weeks on their book to see how well it might do before they tell the writer anything about what they intend to do.
People often get the idea that publishers get the manuscript then sit around on it, burning time before deciding arbitrarily to send out a rejection letter. But this article made it more clear to me that there is a lot that goes on behind the scenes even before a writer gets an offer to publish their book. Though it might be weeks before they hear back from the publisher, the people working for the publisher might be deliberating and running numbers for weeks on their book to see how well it might do before they tell the writer anything about what they intend to do.
In any case, whether one intends to self-publish or go by the traditional method, it’s been an interesting process to learn more about both methods and what they entail. The self-publishing method will have you pay up-front, but you keep all the rights to the book. However, if you go by the traditional method of publishing, you will be paid to publish your book, and will have a team of people working to be sure that it gets put together and to see that it gets a good chance to sell in stores.
MacGregor, Chip, “Ask the Agent: How Does a Book Get
Selected by a Publisher?” MacGregor and
Luedeke, MacGregor Literary, 4 – January – 2017,
http://www.macgregorandluedeke.com/blog/ask-agent-book-get-selected-publisher/
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