
The International Writers Magazine: Publishing: Taking Control
Going
With a Small Publisher
Antonio Graceffo
You
worked months or years to write your book, and it became a huge
extension of who you are. If you lock it up in the bottom drawer
of your desk, satisfied at having finally completed your opus, no
one will ever read it. And you will never achieve the dream of being
a successful author.
So,
you go out looking for a publisher. The big publishing houses are
your first bet, because you heard that they pay a large advance,
plus a percentage of the cover price. The other major advantages
with a major house are that they have the marketing budget, experience,
know-how, and contacts necessary to sell the book.
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But you soon find
out that big publishing houses are very selective. Some are even unapproachable.
Eventually, you grow weary of spending $25 per query, submitting sample
chapters and return postage to big publishers and you review your options.
The fastest, and easiest, way to get published is to go with a self-publishing
company. Most will accept any author, who is willing to pay their fee.
And fees have dropped dramatically, in recent years, due to advances
in technology. Some self-publishers offer complete packages as cheaply
as $700. In the past self publishers, formerly referred to as vanity
presses, were regarded as the last desperate act of a narcissist, who
saw himself as a misunderstood genius. At that time, you paid big money.
When the book was ready, 1,000 copies were delivered to your door. You
gave some away as presents. Maybe you negotiated with a few local book
stores to carry a copy or two. And the rest, 953 copies, took up space
your garage. Today, many self-publishers offer services, such as print
on demand, which reduces the number of copies that you must agree to
print. They also offer standard marketing packages, through websites.
Some will collect orders, process payments, and ship books to customers.
If you are willing to do some hustle on your own, and if you have $1,000,
self publishing may be the way to go. One of the biggest advantages
of self-publishing is that you get to keep the entire sale price of
the book.
For a book, which retails $14, you may clear as much as $7 after expenses.
This is a far site better than the $1.40 that you would receive as a
royalty from a traditional publisher.
For my first book, The Monk
from Brooklyn, (available at barnesandnoble.com), about my experiences
as a foreigner, studying at the Shaolin Temple in China, I chose a third
option. I went with a small publisher, who had both a self publishing
and a traditional publishing option available to authors who were accepted.
I chose the traditional option, whereby all of the expenses were picked
up by the publisher. Although going with a small publisher often means
no advance, it also means no out of pocket expense. The royalties that
I was offered were fairly standard, 10% on the first thousand copies,
12% on the next thousand, and 15% for life.
I didnt take a financial risk, as with self-publishing. And, my
book was guaranteed to be published. So, I didnt have to wait
through years of submissions and rejections to the major publishing
houses. By the time a writer finishes his book, especially if it is
his first book, it has become so much a part of himself that he feels
he wouldnt let it go for all the tea in China. Unfortunately,
publishers dont normally offer all the tea in China. So a lot
of first time authors pass up their first big break, holding out for
more of an advance or for a bigger publisher. We all know someone who
believes that he or she has written the next great American novel, but
hasnt managed to place it anywhere but the back of the bedroom
closet. Even if this is the greatest book in the world, it wont
generate an income sitting under your unused Seven Minute abs video
tape. The first rule of publishing a book is: PUBLISH THE BOOK! Get
it out there, or you cant make a dime.
Signing a contract, even with a small publisher opened so many doors
for me.
When editors heard about my book deal, it suddenly became easier to
sell my
magazine articles. This increased my income, and increased my
publishing
opportunities. Additionally, having a deal for this one book, moved
that
book, from the To Do box in my mind, the Works Completed box. No longer
being bogged down with the first book, meant that I was mentally free
to
start working on my next book. It also gave me a publishing credit,
which I
used to sell my second book.
No matter who you go with, a big publisher, a small publisher, or a
self-publisher, you have to be part of the sales process. At the end
of
the
day, it is your book, and you are the only who cares if it sells or
not.
Yes, the publisher will make more if you sell more copies. But most
publishers are only looking for a certain percentage-point return on
the money they have invested in you. With a small publisher, if the
investment is as small as $1,000, the publishers break-even point
may be at 100 books.
He knows that by putting the book on every website and electronic book
store, and by contacting your family and friends, pretty much any book,
no matter how bad, will sell 100 copies. Everything beyond 100 copies
is profit for the publisher. For the author, 100 copies sold may only
mean $160 in royalties. It will certainly mean that the author will
remain in obscurity. So, it is definitely the writer, not the publisher
whose life depends on heavy sales of a given book. Remember too, you
have only one book to sell. Your publisher has many. What he cant
make on one book, he can make on the next. Or, he can make it up in
volume.
You can expect a publisher to help you, but only so far. That means
you have to do the rest yourself. So, the question comes, How
do I sell copies of my book? First off, every author should constantly
be adding people to his email distribution list. You should send out
a monthly newsletter or some other type of mailer, which is interesting
and informative, and which people will enjoy getting. For me, I am an
adventure travel writer. So, I maintain an email distribution list,
where I send copies of my articles or copies of my diaries on a monthly
basis. People enjoy reading about remote regions of South East Asia,
where I live most of my adventures. They forward the emails to friends,
and often ask me to ad people to the list. By the time my book was published,
my list of personal contacts was in the hundreds. I sent announcements
to each of these people, suggesting that they buy my book. And most
of them did, because they were excited to see the words in print, which
they had been reading on the internet.
People like to own a writer. The average person is very excited, when
recommending a book to a friend. I know the author. I have been
on his
email list for two years. Just as reading biographies of famous
authors
helps you to appreciate their writing. Publishing your diaries gives
readers
an insight into your character, and this increases their enjoyment of
the
book, as well as the likelihood that they would buy it, and recommend
it to
friends.
Another way to increase your book sales is by writing for as many publications
as possible. This includes websites, magazines, news papers, and newsletters.
Again, some writers turn down magazines who want to publish their work
for free or for a token fee of say $25. This is a mistake. Your articles
may be great. But if no one ever reads them, they are useless. So, let
them go. Let them go. Let the go! Even if it I for free. Just publish
as much as you can. If you enter my name, Antonio Graceffo, in any search
engine (yahoo, google, MSN, dogpile) you will find at last five pages
of my stories, which have been published in various media around the
globe. This all adds to book sales.
The more places you publish the longer your resume, the more impressive
you are, the more you will be able to publish. Every website and every
media has some core of loyal readers, however small, and these are people
you wouldnt have been able to reach, without publishing in that
particular media. Dont look at it as giving an article away for
free. Look at it as trading an article for free publicity. Try writing
to websites and magazines, even non-paying ones, and asking them if
you could have a free one page ad, to sell your book. They will probably
decline. But if you send them an article for free, they will run it.
And now they have good content. And you got a free one page ad. Everyone
wins.
One way I have found to increase the number of places where I publish
is that I find clubs and associations who have interests similar to
mine. Right now I am in Cambodia, writing about Khmer culture. So, I
went on line, and found all of the Khmer associations, clubs, and news
letters in USA and Australia. Every month I give them one of my articles
for free. And every month they reprint my article. I just increased
my potential market by more than half a million people. When your book
is released, you contact every publication you have ever written for
and ask them to carry an ad for free. Many of them will. If you arent
that bold, or if they decline, then you could ask them to carry a review,
do a review, or carry an excerpt of the book. Now you are giving them
good value, good content, and you are getting free publicity.
Another technique is to make lists of genre you feel you could write
about, even if it is outside of your normal writing scope. My normal
scope is adventure travel. But obviously I could also write for media
dealing with any country I have worked in, or dealing with foreign culture
in general. I also feel I have something to offer to writing magazines,
because I am a professional writer. I could stretch my scope and include
exercise magazines, self improvement, motivation, linguistics
Once
you have created a list of these genre, then locate all of the coinciding
media, and write them a good quality article. In that article you should
also mention your book.
If people like the article they will buy your book. And you just
increased
your sales.
Here is an example of shameless self-promotion. My book, The Monk from
Brooklyn, is a humorous and entertaining story about my experiences,
as
a
Chinese-Speaking Italian American from Brooklyn, who has chosen to
study
kung fu in one of the almost and holiest Buddhist temples in the world.
The
book is available at barnesandnoble.com
So get out there, give your writing away, and sell some books!
*Antonio's travel
writing was featured in an anthology, published in the UK, entitled
"Travellers Tales from Heaven and Hell Part Two." Antonio's
book about his studies at the Shaolin Temple, "The Monk From Brooklyn,"
has been published by GOM Publishing, and is available at barnesandnoble.com
and gompublishing.com. His book about his adventures in the Taklamakan
Desert, "The Desert of Death on Three Wheels" is currently
under review for publication, in 2004.
Film Credits Antonio co-stared in the Khmer Kung Fu film "Krabei
Liak Goan," (Buffalo Protecting Child)
He is a regular contributor to Hackwriters.com
Hackwriters recommends
only two self-publishing companies at this time - both these organisations
do not take money up front and will not rip you off and will provide
quality books from one to thousands. Yes we use Lulu.com ourselves
www.lulu.com
www.pabd.com
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