By Gloria Ferris (Author of Mysteries & Crime Thrillers)
There are four main paths for authors to follow to get published:
There are four main paths for authors to follow to get published:
1. Traditional publication by one of “The Big Five” publishers
a) Hachette
(David Baldacci, J.K. Rowling, James Patterson)
b) Harper
Collins (Neil Gaiman, Lisa Jackson, Amy Tan)
c) MacMillan
(Kelley Armstrong, Louise Penny, Dan Brown, Donald Trump)
d) Penguin
Random House (Ken Follett, Danielle Steel, Diana Gabaldon)
e) Simon
& Schuster (Stephen King, Brad Thor, thriller, Mary Higgins Clark)
Each of the Big Five have
hundreds, if not thousands of authors in their stables. I’ve picked just a few
names everybody will recognize. If it’s your dream to be among them, you’ll
need an agent, no way around it. The Big Five will only accept agent queries.
Period. Finding that agent is a whole other topic and we don’t have time to
address it here, but know that it is difficult and time-consuming to land an
agent. Give yourself a time limit to find one and a Plan B to move forward if
the time limit passes without an agent nibble.
2.
Traditional publication by a smaller,
independent publisher. There are thousands out there. All will have a website
with information on the company, and outlining submission rules. Most do not
require an agent – you submit directly to the publishing house. Before
submitting, make sure the publisher is reputable. One way is to look at the
publisher information on books in your genre on Amazon or other online
retailers, and do some research. Make sure you only submit to publishers who
handle your genre, i.e. if you’ve written a fantasy paranormal about vampires,
don’t submit to a company that handles cozy mysteries. And, follow the
submission guidelines to the letter. It’s difficult enough to attract the
attention of an acquisition editor at a publishing house. If you don’t follow
the format they request, your submission will be deleted or tossed without a
word being read.
3. “Self-publishing”
or “Vanity publishing”. There are companies that offer publishing packages costing
hundreds to thousands of dollars, depending on the services purchased. Royalties
are slim to none. Some of these companies are honest, some are unscrupulous to
the extreme. Be very careful which one you choose. Do your research online.
This type of publishing works well for a writer who wants to publish a personal
memoir, or a family history that has limited appeal to others.
4 Indie
publishing is becoming more popular for both authors who have gone the
traditional route and now want complete control over their work, and for those
writers who have never been traditionally published but don’t care to wait
through the agent/query/submission/rejection/more rejection/acceptance/eventual
path to traditional publication which can take up to two years after acceptance
and contract signing. Some indie authors do everything –
design their own covers, format their own files, upload to online retailers,
create branding and marketing strategies. Others outsource one or more of these
steps, notably cover design, or using an aggregator to upload to all online
retailers.
There are many other components to publishing we
haven’t covered such as: query letters to agents or queries to accompany
submissions; contracts; advances; marketing and promotion. Writing is a business. Publishing a book, whichever
path you take, is just the beginning.
***
Gloria's new release mystery (#3) in the Cornwall and Redfern series is now available from Amazon and other Worldwide Book Vendors:
2 comments:
thanks, Donna. It was a pleasure guesting on your blog!
Clear and concise Gloria. It's not an easy road but I'll keep on trucking.
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