I was
going to start on the material for the 'So you want to self-publish'
as featured in last week's first ever post. However I've realised
there is a step missing that every writer/author/illustrator and
self-pubbie needs to take before getting into the nitty-gritty of
self-publishing. Interestingly enough, it's the first question I've
asked quite a few new self-publishers over the last few months.
WHY AM I PUBLISHING MY BOOK?
The answer to this question gives you an idea of what direction you will
want to take. If you are publishing your book because you'd love to
see it printed and sitting on your book shelf in the foyer next to
Shakespeare, C.S. Lewis and Agatha Christie, then print on demand
will be a great path to take. If you want to get your story told, and
present it to the universe or as much of it as you can, then using a
platform like Smashwords is a great way to go as it deals with all
the major online retailers. If you love your quirky story and want to
sell it in independent bookstores in NZ and Australia, then Vanity
Publishing will work for you – although is costly and very time
consuming. If you want to publish a story and make as much money as
you possibly can – in my opinion – you need to publish on Amazon
and use their Kindle Select Programme.
Here are some Wiki definitions of each of the ways to publish:
A vanity press or vanity publisher is a term describing a publishing house in which authors pay to have their books published.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanity_press
Print on demand (POD) is a printing
technology and business process in which new copies of a book (or
other document) are not printed until an order has been received,
which means books can be printed one at a time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Print_on_demand
Self-publishing
is the publication of any book or other media by the author of the
work, without the involvement of an established third-party
publisher. A self-published physical book is said to be privately
printed. The author is
responsible for,
and in control of, the
entire process, including design (cover/interior), formats, price,
distribution, marketing & PR. The authors can do it all
themselves or outsource all or part of the process to companies that
offer these services. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-publishing
Smashwords
(http://www.smashwords.com/)
is a self-serve
publishing service. Authors upload their manuscripts as Microsoft
Word files to the Smashwords
service, which converts the files into multiple ebook formats for
reading on various ebook reading devices. Once published, the books
are made available for sale online at a price set by the author. More
on Smashwords here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smashwords
Kindle Direct Publishing
(http://kdp.amazon.com/):
concurrently
with the Kindle device, Amazon launched Kindle Direct Publishing,
where authors and publishers independently publish their books
directly to Kindle and Kindle Apps worldwide. More
information on Kindle Direct Publishing here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kindle_Direct_Publishing#Kindle_Direct_Publishing
Amazon Kindle is the largest ebook retailer, with the largest market –
while things like the Kindle Select Program may seem limiting your
audience by restricting you to the one retailer, it usually results
in more exposure than any of the rest (possibly even more than all
the others combined).
This is
just a brief description of each of these avenues for publishing. We
will go into more detail on each of these in more depth later on, in
the topic 'Understanding your Market'.
So have
a think about what you want to do with your story then take that path
to the end. No matter what you do –
how you publish, you and you
alone are responsible for the marketing and sales of your book.
Building your author platform
is paramount – even before you have published. No platform =
no sales.
So, what
do you want to do with your book? Where do you want to take it? What
is important to you as an author? Once you have answered these
questions then you can begin your self-publishing journey.
All the
best,
~ Joy
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