10 Steps to Success – Part 1
If you are a first time author and looking for a publisher you need to know several facts about the book publishing business. It’s a big ocean to dive into and remember there are sharks. Like any kind of business, and book publishing is a business, there are people who want to make a quick buck out of naïve and vulnerable authors so avoid them at your peril.
Step 1 – Write the book. Publishers are not really interested in ideas they want to see proof that a would-be author has the skill, the stamina and the discipline to finish the job. Publishers expect that a novel should be about 80,000 to 100,000 words long and taking an average that’s about 300 pages.
Step 2 – Before you send your MS to a publisher have the courage to show your creation to someone who will give you an honest assessment of your writing. Don’t ask your spouse or best friend because they are not the best people to give you an honest report. Your local librarian might be a good place to start. It’s a harsh truth but unfortunately the writing world is overcrowded with writers who have great expectations of themselves but have little talent.
Step 3 – Okay you have written a book and your honest critics say it is brilliant and should be published, well done! Now is the time to do some hard work trawling through the books, internet sites and writers groups who can aid you in your search and provide professional help and good advice.
In the UK there is a very useful publication called ‘The Writers Handbook’ and it is up-dated every year. The editor Barry Turner has done much of the leg-work for you and his handbook really is a useful and complete guide to agents, publishers, editors and copywriters.
I am sure there must be a similar publication in the USA so go out and get your own copy. I know it seems daft but you need to know your own book, what genre is it and even what sub-genre it falls into. Next get a highlighter pen and work your way through the handbook and mark out those publishers who do publish novels similar to your own. Be meticulous in this exercise for it will save you time in the long run. It’s a total waste of time sending your romance story to a publisher who only publishes science fiction. Read the small print carefully.
Step 4 – Having got your list of prospective publishers then check out the minutiae of the submission guidelines. Many publishers will not accept unsolicited MS. So do not waste your time, money and effort sending your MS along to one of these companies. When they say they don’t accept unsolicited MS they mean it, and they probably have their own arcane reasons for this rule.
Step 5 – There are many publishers who do accept ‘unsolicited’ MS especially from new authors, in the hope they are going to sign-up the ace in the pack and that might just be you.
Your publishers list may be getting shorter by now but this is good because you are refining your search and with every step and you are closer to finding the right publisher for you.