Order now Mail

Web TermpaperEngine

Blogging
Book-review
Copywriting
Creative-writing
Essay
Publishing
Writing-tips
Publishing

arrow Steps to Publishing Success
arrow 3 Low Cost Ways To Meet Agents & Editors
arrow 6 Tips For Your Writing Journey
arrow 7 Steps to Successful Publishing
arrow 8 Advantages to Writing a Book as an Entrepreneur
arrow 8 Tips to Get Publishers to Notice You
arrow 10 Article Writing Quirks
arrow About Writing
arrow A Few Keys to Writing Effective Dialogue
arrow A Good Book Cover Design is Key
arrow An Appeal To The Bloggers!
arrow An eBook Publisher's Dilemma: Should I Use PDF or Exe Format?
arrow A Newsletter Publisher's Main Task: Packaging Value Content
arrow A Person Is Known By the Blog He Keeps
arrow A "Plan 9" Book?
arrow A Publisher’s Rant – Why I Hate Your Articles
arrow A Quick Guide to ISBNs for Self-Publishers
arrow Article Banks and Google Alerts Harness Your Publishing Power
arrow Art Needs Time to Flower - Even in Cyberspace
arrow Becoming the Total Package
arrow Blog Your Way to Success - What a "Blog" is?
arrow Book Marketing 101
arrow Choose the website correctly
arrow Complete Guidance to Write & Optimize Press Release
arrow Consider Self Publishing in Ebook Format
arrow Cookbook Publishing - The Basic Ingredients and the Secrets to Success
arrow Could Your Book Idea Be the Next Best Seller?
arrow Documenting Everything: Your Journal is Your Logbook
arrow Don’t Lose Your Article Back Links!
arrow Don't Rely on your Spellchecker - or - The Importance of Good Proof Reading
arrow Earn Money From Freelance Writing
arrow Effective Networking For Writers
arrow Five Minute Miracles
arrow Freelance Writing on the Internet
arrow From Idea to Published Book ... How to Self-Publish the Easy Way!
arrow Getting A Publisher & Getting What You Want
arrow Getting Started in Column Writing
arrow Give Your Readers A Sample
arrow How Anyone Who Knows How to Type Can Write an Article in 30 Minutes or Less
arrow How Author Royalties Are Calculated
arrow How eBooks Can Be Very Valuable
arrow How New Authors Can Keep Their Manuscripts Coherent
arrow How the Writer Survives
arrow How to Build A Success Freelance Career (Part 1)
arrow How to Develop a Dynamic Story
arrow How to Find a Publisher for Your First Book
arrow How To Get A Reporter's Attention For Your Book
arrow How to Get Your Book Reviewed
arrow How To Publish Your Way To Success
arrow I'm A Romance Novel Hero!
arrow Increase Freelance Sales With an Online Resume!
arrow Incredibly Bad Articles Will Kill Your Credibility
arrow Interviewing an Author: Don't Be Left Speechless
arrow Learn to Write Like a Pro
arrow Le Poem De La Sweat
arrow Make Big Money On Your Book - 10 H*O*T Tips
arrow Mission Possible: Get Published with Goals, Guidance and Persistance
arrow Platform Development Tip #1: Switch Writing Hats!
arrow PublishAmerica - Publishing Parasites
arrow Publish Anything: The Saga of a PublishAmerica Author
arrow Publishing and Promoting of Poetry anthologies and chapbooks
arrow Ready, Set, Go Sell Your Book In The Real World!
arrow Self Publishing Success Starts With Marketing
arrow Snob-Bloggers: You Just Might Be A Snob If You Publish A Blog
arrow Speak and Touch the Heart
arrow Steps to Publishing Success
arrow Sticks, Stones and Lawyers
arrow Take My Publisher, Please!
arrow Taming The Book Proposal
arrow Ten Tips Articles
arrow The Biggest Challenge Facing A Poet, Getting Published
arrow The effective way to purchase your favorite product online
arrow The Great, Okay and the Ugly of E-Publishing
arrow The High Cost of a Six-Figure Book Advance
arrow The Indie Author Revolution
arrow The Phantoms of Six Mile Road
arrow The Pros and Cons of Print on Demand Publishing
arrow The Run-on Sentence: From Here To Eternity
arrow The Three Cs of Writing an Excellent all Purpose Headline
arrow The Written Word
arrow Times Change – And So Should Our Publishing Strategies
arrow Titles (and Subtitles) Sell Books!
arrow Wake Up Your Writing Spirit
arrow What Hurricane Katrina Can Teach Authors
arrow Who Else Wants to Get Screwed When Signing a Recording or Songwriting Deal?!?!
arrow Why Self-Publish Your Book?
arrow Why Write an eBook?
arrow Why You Need a Newsletter
arrow Write A Better Newsletter!
arrow Writer’s Web Resources
arrow Write Science Right
arrow Writing for the Gaming Industry
arrow You Can Be An Author
arrow Your Book Marketing Plan - Winning Strategies and Tips
arrow Your Spellchecker Can Catch Punctuation Mistakes

Admissions
Art and Music
Biographies
Creative Writing
History
Humanities
Literature
Politics
Science
Social Sciences
Social Issues
Other Topics

Why Self-Publish Your Book?


Warning: include(ads/adswhite.php) [function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/termeng/public_html/publishing/Why-Self-Publish-Your-Book.html on line 207

Warning: include(ads/adswhite.php) [function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/termeng/public_html/publishing/Why-Self-Publish-Your-Book.html on line 207

Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening 'ads/adswhite.php' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home/termeng/public_html/publishing/Why-Self-Publish-Your-Book.html on line 207

by: Ceci Miller

When I meet an author with a great book concept, one who’s definitely the right person to write that book, right away I’ll often encourage him or her to self-publish. This is because I know that, if an author is thoroughly invested in what they have to say, and if they’re determined to create a buzz about their message, they’ll discover . . .

5 Fantastic Benefits of Self-publishing

1. Control. When you enter into a contract with a major publishing house, you’re signing an exclusive agreement that prevents your having input into most of the important decisions that will affect your book’s perception by the public, and its sales. You’ll have very little say about the look and feel of your book cover, the endorsements that appear on the back of your book, or the wording of your press release, for example. And since all of the above elements are critical to giving your book its best chance for bestseller status, such loss of control can pose significant problems. “But don’t publishers know better than I what to do to sell a book?” you may ask. Not necessarily. Authors usually know more about their book’s subject—and hence, about their target audience (market)—than anyone else. Hey, they wrote the book!

More food for thought about signing with a major publishing house: If for some reason your book doesn’t sell quickly and the publisher lets it go out of print, there’s often a “waiting period” before the author is allowed to self-publish the book to get it back on the shelves. In the meantime, the reading public sees that your book is “out of print” and a great deal of word-of-mouth damage is done. Self-publishing means that you are at the helm of your book project. Of course, it also means that the responsibility for its success rests in your hands. But when you believe in your message and know that you’re going to do everything in your power to get that message out to your target audience, isn’t it a good feeling to know that you’re the one driving its success in the marketplace?

I suggest a balance of control and delegation. The right publishing ally can coach you through the process of writing and editing your book, and will also advise you to design and market your message in a way that gets optimum results. Your publishing ally may be a book editor, a publishing consultant, a published author, or all three. If she’s worth her salt, though, she’ll know what it will take to get your book published, and she’ll know how to help you make it happen.

2. Money. Why does it make good business sense to self-publish? Consider the following: a contract with the book publisher doesn't give you an ironclad guarantee that your book will ever and upon the shelves. If you’re a new author, your publisher will allocate zero marketing dollars to promote your book. It's sink or swim! If your book does sell well, it will be due to your own hard work and ingenuity—and your reward will be a tiny fraction of the book’s total profits. Self-publishing admittedly involves more capital risk, but it also means that the extensive footwork you do to market your book will go to producing income for the person who most deserves it. After all, you’re the one who’s doing all the work to ignite word-of-mouth about your book. Not only that, you wrote it! Don’t you deserve to reap 100% of the profit?

3. No Waiting, No Rejection. The Cinderella story of the little book that gets discovered by a publisher and becomes an overnight bestseller is mostly just that—a fairytale. Yes , it happens. But it hasn't been happening a whole lot lately. In the current publishing climate, with major houses paying gigantic advances to celebrity authors—their “cash cows”—not much is left to spend on developing new talent. Let's be honest: a publisher isn't going to spend a dime marketing a book by an as yet unknown author. To get your book considered for publication in the first place, you'll need to have an extremely convincing marketing strategy in place which you intend to implement on your own, at your own expense! Such as the case in every genre from children's books to alternative health to historical novels. First-time authors are being turned away en masse. And since many nonfiction book projects are time-sensitive—well-placed offerings intended to respond to a specific market trend —their authors often while way their precious window of opportunity waiting for agents or publishers to respond to a proposal. It isn't impossible to get a major publishing house interested in a book by a first-time author, but it’s getting more difficult all the time. Self-publishing removes the wait (and the accompanying weight from your shoulders) and the discomfort of rejection from the process of getting your book into print.

4. Independence. Self-published authors are usually people with confidence in their message. Many have already developed a following by giving talks and seminars in areas where they live and work. Experts know when they have a powerful personal message—they don’t need a publisher’s approval to pump themselves up. Such authors, many of whom are already seasoned professionals, self-publish their books because they love being in the driver’s seat of their book project. Rather than gamble that a big corporation will treat their book with the respect it deserves, such an author takes the publishing reins to ensure that her message reaches the widest possible audience. No one cares more about your book than you do.

5. Power of Belief. The power of belief in our words is what makes promises good and turns dreams into reality. Authors who self-publish their books believe deeply that others will benefit from reading what they have to say. They have unshakable conviction. Such authors often tell me, “I had to write this book. I just have to get it out there!” Deep belief is the selfless power that drives all true service and makes a difference in the world. Authors with a strong sense of purpose know that they can make their books succeed. They don't want to wait around for a publishing house to “accept” their work. Aware that time is precious, such authors create their own publishing opportunities. They get behind their own message. They launch a campaign fueled with belief in the creative power of intention.

Every good editor or publishing consultant knows that the best way to make your book a true success is to create and market a message that you will both be proud of for years to come. Creating uplifting books is a passion. Make it yours, and every one of your books sold will be a vote of confidence in yourself and the rest of humanity!

About The Author

Ceci Miller, MFA, President of CeciBooks Editorial & Publishing Consultation, has been writing and editing books with bestselling authors since 1988. A graduate of the University of Iowa Writer’s Workshop, Ceci Miller has written, co-authored and edited numerous published books, and worked as staff editor for an international magazine. For a free initial consultation, or more information, go to www.CeciBooks.com.

This article was posted on October 20, 2004

 

 

 

 









 


©Copyrighted by Termpaper Engine All Rights Reserved 2006