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How to Get a Book Published

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic (by 57 people)   Your rating: 1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic

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How to get a book published

 

How to Get a Book Published is a question nearly every author asks. 


You've finally finished your novel. Or perhaps you're thinking about writing a nonfiction book.  But now what? Should you self publish? Use a publish-on-demand company, or try to get your book commercially published? 

This lense will answer your questions about how to get a book published.  If you have a specific question, please post it in the guest book.  

It can be an extremely difficult task to break into the publishing world when you begin with no writing credits and no publishing industry contacts—but definitely not impossible.  New writers break in every day—and get paid handsomely for their work.



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Power of Publicity

What's the biggest challenge in getting a book published 

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Have a question about how to get a book published? 

Post it here and I'll do my best to answer it

Nikari

I have just finished a book that I'm getting opinions on. I've been working on for a while. However i need a publisher to atleast give me the time to present my book to them. Its a heart-felt book with a meaning behind it. I'm 15 and need the advice. if anyone out there works with a publishing company i need a chance.
email me nikari93@yahoo.com

Posted August 22, 2008

qlcoach

So this is the one key issue how to get published. Thanks for sharing this lense. The other key is marketing don't you think? Feel free to interact at our publishing club:
http://www.squidoo.com/garyeby

Sincerely: Gary Eby, author and therapist

Posted July 22, 2008

Amanda

I am in the middle of writing a teenage nonfiction but im 16. I have been writing since I was 8. Of course my poetry and short stories have improved since my infant ages but I want to share my thoughts, my imagination with the world. How could I get my book published? I am not finished but Im getting there. Every good work of art takes time.I just want to get my book out there. Who is willing to publish me? My mom said she would love to be my gaurdian on signing. I just really think I could go far.

Posted July 16, 2008

Martha Brunelle

How do I get an energetic sock-it-to-em honest agent? My characters have appeared in a newspaper, but they are waiting in books to come to life via the dedication and belief of some agent or publisher!

FIND ME!

I am looking for you. . . and I hear my characters giggling in the background. "Shhh-hhh. We're trying to get a book deal!"

Again, HEEEELLLLLLLLLLLLLP. No matter what I read now, it seems that the only thing missing is a good agency who will take a chance on me and my happy characters - - - - . . . children's books - - Yep, you heard the dastardly words. . . but, think ROWLING - - Yes, it can happen again! And, I'm next in line!

But, where are you, agent with faith in me and mine?

MARTHA

Posted June 30, 2008

Eliott

Hi I am eight years old and I love to write scary stories. I would love to see some of my work get published and see it sitting on a book shelf someday. How should I start, who do I talk to about getting my work published?

Posted June 19, 2008

 
1 of 11 pages

Free report The Perils and Pitfalls of Publishing 

The major pitfall is that new writers often fall prey to individuals seeking to separate the author from his or her money. Don't let it happen to you.

Find out how to get your free report The Perils and Pitfalls of Publishing: Whom Can a Beginning Author Just visit Free Report

The Publishing Primer 

answers the question "How to get a book published?"

How to Get A Book Published

Do you have a great idea for a nonfiction book?

Have you polished your novel to perfection?

Is your children's book just about finished?

Would you like to add 'published author' to your list of accomplishments?

But You Don't Know Where to Start?

The Publishing Primer: A Blueprint for an Author's Success, our new Ebook, will answer your questions. Based on interviews with acquisition editors, literary agents, bookstore owners and experts, and our own research, you'll have all the information you need to make your book a success. Book publishers and book publishing can be a confusing maze. The Publishing Primer answers the question "How to get a book published?"

What Do Bestselling Authors Have In Common? 

Four Characteristics That May Surprise You.

In writing The Making of a Bestseller: Success Stories From Authors and the Editors, Agents and Behind Them," (Dearborn Trade, 2005), we wanted to find out what separates the publishing industry elite, the bestselling authors, from all the thousands and thousands of writers who aspire to someday make the bestseller lists. We interviewed 24 of today's most popular authors. It turns out that writing talent is not the only separating factor; in fact it may not even be the most important factor.

1. Perseverance Is Key
Nearly all bestselling authors faced the same struggles early in their careers that less successful, even unpublished authors, face. Immediate success is rare. One distinction of bestselling authors is that they do not get as discouraged by lack of early success. They persevere. Their desire to succeed is enormous. Bestselling authors often have to demonstrate the patience and stamina to write a number of books before achieving notable success.

2. They Write, And Write And Write
The productivity, the writing output, of bestselling authors is much greater than the average writer's. They have the discipline to get up each day and produce high quality work. They don't wait for the muse to tap them on the shoulder. Some authors' literary production is phenomenal, such as Catherine Coulter, who wrote "Point Blank," she has produced over fifty bestsellers so far in her career.

3. They Like To Write And Write And Write
They would rather write than do anything else. It's not just that successful authors are more disciplined, though that is part of it; they simply enjoy writing more than other writers do. Many aspiring authors enjoy the idea of writing, not the hard work itself. Bestselling authors seem to thrive on the hard work, and they work much harder than we might suppose. Iris Johansen, author of "Countdown," writes two books a year, not because she has to but because she couldn't not do it. Writing is her passion.

4. Promotion Is Constant
Bestselling authors never stop promoting their books, no matter how successful they get. Many still market at the grass roots level, not just through national TV or radio interviews. They take the time to visit and meet individual bookstore managers at both chain stores and independents. They never relax and believe they have "made it." After ten bestsellers, including "The Notebook," Nicholas Sparks still tours with every new book.

Books every writer needs 

Besides The Publishing Primer of course

The Plot Thickens: 8 Ways to Bring Fiction to Life

Amazon Price: $11.16 (as of 08/30/2008)

Book Proposals That Sell: 21 SECRETS TO SPEED YOUR SUCCESS

Amazon Price: $14.00 (as of 08/30/2008)

Your First Novel: An Author Agent Team Share the Keys to Achieving Your Dream

Amazon Price: $11.55 (as of 08/30/2008)

The Savvy Author's Guide to Book Publicity

Amazon Price: $10.88 (as of 08/30/2008)

Three More Characteristics of Bestselling Authors 

Do you have these characteristics?

5. Marketing Is Critical
Even if they have never taken a business course in college, they have an innate sense of marketing concepts such as brand building and product differentiation. They closely watch trends in the literary marketplace. They understand what it is about their books that readers respond favorably to. They take a strategic approach to their careers and they realize that much more goes into being a successful author than the writing itself. Carly Phillips big break came when Kelly Ripa recommended "The Bachelor" on The Kelly & Regis show. It wasn't just luck that landed her the recommendation, but a concerted effort on her part and her publicist's part.

6. Fans Are An Important Asset
Bestselling authors listen closely to what their readers say, and try very hard to meet or exceed their fans' expectations, but they do not necessarily pay close attention to what reviewers or book critics say. They don't even necessarily expect good reviews. Word of mouth support from readers and booksellers is more important to them than reviews. Linda Fairstein, the author of "Entombed" and the Alexandra Cooper series, loves book signings. At her level of success she doesn't have to do them but she loves talking to her readers.

7. The More Success The More Pressure
Bestselling authors face more pressure as they get more successful. As they rise to the top, there are increasing demands on their time. Top authors lead three very different lives. First, the quiet, solitary scholarly life of being a writer. Then participating in the team effort within the publishing house to make the book the best book it can be. This involves learning how to take advice from and collaborate with the professionals within the publishing house. Finally, the author must participate in the very public life of trying to sell books to the mass audience. They have to master all three lives if they intend to continue to achieve bestseller status. Susan Elizabeth Phillips worked for a month without a day off when "Ain't She Sweet" was released.

Links from Dee Power and Brian Hill 

Over Time, the novel
Money, Love and Football: All the Important Things in Life
Brian Hill and Dee Power
This is our author's site
58 Ways to Find Money for Your Business
An ebook we've written
Private Label Reports
Our PLR site where you can find articles, reports, and short ebooks we've written.
Weddings on a Shoestring Budget
Our wedding site
Business Plan Basics
An ebook for entrepreneurs and infopreneurs

Two More Characteristics of Bestselling Authors 

8. They're Grateful
Bestselling authors are keenly aware how fortunate they are to have arrived at the top of their profession. They sincerely appreciate their loyal readers. They recognize that they have been chosen to receive a strikingly rare, special distinction by a bustling, competitive marketplace. The success, fame and financial rewards that have come to them are often beyond the most extravagant dreams they had when they first sat down to write a book. Christopher Paolini credits the support of the teachers, librarians, booksellers and fans, for the success of his first book, "Eragon".

9. There Is No Single Profile For A Bestselling Author
Bestselling authors are seldom the top graduates from prestigious university writing programs. Writing may have been a second or third career for them, and the publishing industry values authors who bring life experience to their work, in fiction or nonfiction. Bestselling authors span all age groups, many different professions and varied educational backgrounds. There is no single profile for what a bestselling author looks like.

***********************************

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DeePower

About DeePower

Dee Power was born on the East Coast and grew up on the West Coast. She holds a Master of business Administration.

She started her writing career in the second grade by writing a Thanksgiving Day play which debuted before many appreciative parents.


Dee has been engaged to do consulting projects for a myriad of different companies, and realizes now that her management consulting career is over her brain is filled with data about almost every industry.


Accomplishments
Brian and Dee founded Profit Dynamics Inc., a management consulting firm in 1987. They specialized in writing business plans (which investors often consider works of fiction). Clients included large well-known companies as well as entrepreneurial start-ups. The experience they gained from this work provided the inspiration and material for two books they co-authored Inside Secrets To Venture Capital, (2001) and Attracting Capital From Angels, (2002), both published by John Wiley & Sons.

Their current nonfiction book is The Making of a Bestseller: Success Stories from Authors and the Editors, Agents and Booksellers Behind Them, Dearborn Trade, 2005.

DeePower's Pages

See all of DeePower's pages