Thinking Of Publishing Your Own Book?

Author: Gordon Burgett

Thinking of publishing your own book?

by Gordon Burgett

As we enter 2010, here are five exciting choices:

(1) The old-fashioned way. Let the big-house publishers do it for you-if you can even get them to look at your query or project submission. I like Mike Larsen's How to Write a Book Proposal. Most "think big" if they're writing a blockbuster, a kid's book, or a novel. Beware, though, that these books usually take 18 months to see light after the final draft is corrected, the publisher is most likely to change your title and your layout, you get paid at most two or three times a year (skipping the first payment or two if you get an advance), and you'll eventually pocket about 8-10% of the retail price-or net price, which is about half the retail. They usually do production best and marketing worst.

(2) The usual self-publishing route, where you do the preparation, production, and promotion (or piecemeal it out). Dan Poynter's most recent Self-Publishing Manual is a real help, as is John Kremer's 1001 Ways to Market Your Book. Mostly, you compete on the open market, selling to bookstores, libraries, and through distributors. Shoot for 25% profit, after you pay all of the starter expenses. The old way was to print 1200 copies or more by rotary press, but now it makes sense to initially print very short P.O.D. (print-on-demand) runs, then quickly expand if your book catches fire.

(3) The lower-risk, much higher profit niche self-publishing, where you can hit a profit of 40% or more. The production part is the same as (2) but you test first and set up most of your promotion (still think direct mail) before you actually finish and print the book. My Niche Publishing walks you through the targeting, testing, customizing, and expanding. You invest about $300 to see what your niche will buy, then you write it.

(4) You might sidestep the print-on-paper version altogether and create e-books solely, as digital downloads. These work best if you have a strong web presence (or solid affiliation tie-ins) that draws buying attention, mostly through your newsletter (or others') and your blog. No warehousing, middlepeople, shipping, or taxes. You can charge higher prices too. See Bob Bly's Writing E-Books for Profit. (Don't confuse this with e-book versions of your printed text, like those sold at Kindle or through Smashwords. Those best fall into the next category.)

(5) The newest way is to use the seven ancillary publishing firms eager to produce and market your book-free! You write it, create ready-to-go text and cover files (probably in.doc, then.pdf), and submit it to them one at a time. They will make the book buyable in e-book form (in hours) or as a bound book (in 7-10 days). What kind of book? A novel, how-to, memoir, cookbook, children's, poetry, and more. They also market the books widely. But the process is so new that it's hard to calculate the income. See http://www.ancillarypublishing.com for more information and links.
About the Author

Gordon Burgett has been a publisher since 1981 and has had 38 books and 1,700+ articles of his own in print. He speaks about niche publishing and ancillary publishing nationwide (with 2000+ paid presentations) and offers a free, monthly newsletter about the topic. See more at www.gordonburgett.com.

How to Publish Your Books on Kindle

Author: Jim Green

The very mention of Kindle sends ripples of foreboding trickling through the established fields of traditional publishing and bookselling; and with good reason.

Not only are sales of the Kindle reader booming worldwide but so too are the instances of everyday usage on planes, trains, buses, parks and beaches. Vacationers for example now carry up to 5000 books in a jacket pocket rather than lugging around a dozen or so good reads in a suitcase.

As an established traditionally published author I decided recently to put Kindle Publishing to the test by uploading five of my out-of-print fiction titles; not just any five old titles though; five titles with a linking thread.

I have to say that initial returns were highly promising; 36 sales over just 6 days.

Thus enthused I uploaded my remaining fifteen out-of-print fiction titles but at the time of writing they haven't elicited a single sale which has prompted me to investigate further.

  1. The five titles that took off immediately all sold well as paperbacks ten years ago so could it be that Kindle readers have a longer than average memory? I doubt it.
  2. Did I score a bulls-eye with my choice of Kindle publishing category? Very much so.
  3. Did my painstaking choice of keywords pay off? Again, very much so.

Clearly what I must do now is to revisit the categories and keywords for the other fifteen titles and strive to accomplish by design what I achieved through happenstance for the first five.

TIPS FOR PUBLISHING ON KINDLE

If you have unpublished works cluttering up your computer (especially fiction) or if like me you have previously published books that are no longer in demand, pay close attention to these tips for publishing on Kindle.

Target market: This is vital work. Ensure that you select the definitive Kindle readership market for your book(s). Kindle provides ample tools.

Front cover: For previously published works scan the front covers; for unpublished works do not use a placeholder image. Design your own images to precise Kindle specifications.

Text formatting: Study the Kindle tutorials and implement exactly what they tell you into your formatting.

Categories: Choose your publishing categories with care. Kindle provides a comprehensive list covering every aspect of fiction and non-fiction.

Keywords: Here is where you succeed or fail on Kindle publishing. Spend more time on choosing your keywords than you would normally on any other type of online marketing. Don't select keywords with high usage like 100,000; choose tighter usages like 3/4000. TIP: If your prime keyword also features in the title of your book you are automatically on a winner.

Pricing: Be realistic with your pricing. For example, if you have a title which previously sold for $15 as a paperback, lower your sights for the electronic version; $3.50 to $4.95 would be much more realistic.

Promotion: Kindle and Amazon will assist you in a myriad of ways but fail to do your own marketing and returns will decrease dramatically. Use Twitter, Facebook, articles like this one, and above all, create an Amazon Author Page.

PS: I have just checked up to date Kindle Sales for my first five titles: 167 in just 21 days…

Click on the URL in the bio box below to inspect the full range of my out-of-print fiction titles on Kindle. See if you can spot the 5 that are selling well (It shouldn't be difficult; the core keyword is an integral part of each title).
About the Author

JIM GREEN is a bestselling traditionally published author with 40+ titles in the realms of fiction and non-fiction. http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B0034PAPH6