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11 Tips to Avoid Self-Publishing Traps
Self-publishing used to be the Rodney Dangerfield of book
publishing. It didn’t get “no respect.” Today that’s all
changed. With originally self-published books like The
Celestine Prophecy, Butter Busters, The Christmas Box, and
What Color is Your Parachute? monopolizing bestseller
lists—do-it-yourself publishing is very much in vogue.
To be successful, however, it’s mandatory that you adhere
to certain guidelines. By following the tips below, you’ll
avoid the pitfalls and enhance your chances of flourishing.
1. Educate yourself. Self-publishing is a business.
Approach it as such. There are informative books on the
subject, seminars offered, and associations where you can
learn the ropes and network with the more experienced. This
can be very lucrative if properly approached. Conversely,
you can waste thousands of dollars by blundering along
without knowledge or a plan.
2. Study the competition. Don’t add more to a subject
that’s already glutted. Be sure the topic hasn’t been
overdone. Just checking a local library or bookstore is not
adequate research. Look in Books in Print Subject Guide and
Forthcoming Books in Print Subject Guide. You’ll be amazed
at how many books there are on the topic. Yours must be
better than what’s already available. Make it shorter,
longer, easier to use, more informative, funnier, richer in
content, or better organized. For fiction, try to tie into
a hot topic so you have a “hook” for publicity.
3. Write what other people want. Catering to your personal
desires often makes for lackluster books nobody buys. The
fact is, few care about your life history or your deep-felt
opinions. Personal journals and impassioned tirades are
best saved for family and friends, not foist upon the
general public.
4. Think “marketing” from the very beginning. The time to
generate marketing ideas is before you write the book, not
after you have 3,000 copies in your garage. Identify and
target your market. How can you reach them? Start folders
of ideas: what catalogs might be interested, which
associations reach your potential readers, what magazines
and newsletters are relevant? Can you sell the book as a
premium to companies that would give it away as a gift to
entice new customers—or use it internally for training?
Think about who else reaches your potential customer and
how you can partner with them. Do you have contacts who
have national name recognition and might write an advance
endorsement?
5. Get professional editing. No, we repeat no, author
should edit or proofread his or her own work. You’ll miss
the forest for the trees, overlooking things that are
obvious to you, but unclear to your reader. And it’s so
easy to pass by the same typo time after time.
6. Create a snappy title. The right title can make a book,
just like an uninspired one can be a death peal. Short is
best. While clever is nice, don’t sacrifice clarity. For
nonfiction, be sure to include a subtitle as it gives you
extra mileage in helping readers know what the book is
about.
7. Include all the vital components. Just as a cake falls
flat if you don’t add the right ingredients, so do books.
Yours needs an ISBN, LCCN, EAN Bookland Scanning Symbol,
subject categories on the back cover, etc. (If you don’t
know what these are, refer back to #1!)
8. Have a dynamite cover. The cover is your book’s
salesperson in bookstores. Get it designed by a
professional who understands cover design . . . not just
somebody who does nice logos or pretty brochures. You have
enormous competition—and a wonderful opportunity to stand
out.
9. Make the interior inviting. Go to a bookstore and study
the insides of books. Find one with clean, “user-friendly”
pages. Use this as your model. It may not make sense to
purchase and learn typesetting software if you’re only
doing one book, however. In that case, consider hiring an
outside vendor.
10. Use a book manufacturer for printing. Don’t expect your
corner print shop to have the knowledge or technical
capabilities to turn out a quality book. Book manufacturers
specialize in this type of printing and can save you
enormous grief and considerable money.
11. Publicize, promote, publicize, promote. Eat, sleep, and
talk your book. Nobody cares about it as much as you do.
Ongoing, enthusiastic marketing is the real key to success.
Never quit. Keep your antenna out for new review
opportunities, freelancers who write articles on your topic,
etc. We have books that have been in print since 1979
because we’re tireless promoters.
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Visit http://www.SelfPublishingResources.com and sign up for their FREE monthly ezine on how to make more money
selling books—plus get your FREE downloadable copy of 15
Smart Strategies for Self-Publishing Success. Order books
by calling 800-331-8355.
Take rest; a field that has rested gives a bountifield crop.
Ovid
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