- More
- Back
I would not advise a first author to go straight into self-publishing. Let me tell you why, and let me be direct about it. Two reasons. One because it is really hard to build audience and market your books as well as write them. And secondly, and sadly because there is a great deal of money being taken from writers who do not need to lose it.
My advice is simple, and I will not soften it. Be realistic. Be practical. Try and get an agent. Try and get a publisher.
Why? Because what a publisher actually does — what a good agent and a good publisher between them actually do — is the work that is invisible to the writer until the writer has tried to do it alone. They edit. They design the cover. They print the book and get it into shops. They mount a publicity campaign. They sell foreign rights. They negotiate the audio. They put your book in front of the buyer at Waterstones, the buyer at Barnes and Noble, the buyer in Bombay. None of that is what writing is. All of that is what selling is. They are different trades.
If you are prepared to learn these skills, and execute them, or find a trusted team that can and will, then maybe self pubishing is for you. Otherwise how will readers know you exist (unless you have a large online following prior to publication).
I have been with my publishers for decades. I know how much of the success of my books has been their work, not mine. Pretending I could have done it alone would be both ungrateful and untrue.
And then, there are people who will happily tell you they will publish your book. What they actually mean is they will print it. They will then happily tell you they will get it into the shops — which they will not. They will then happily tell you how many copies they have sold — and they have not sold them.
There are, of course, some very reputable people doing this work. But there are sadly too many simply taking your money because you are desperate to be published. Don’t go anywhere near them.
There are then those who self-publish on Amazon, or on Kindle, and make a breakthrough. Peter May is one example. There are a handful of others. But don’t kid yourself. It’s one in ten thousand. Don’t go into it thinking that’s the way.
If you finish your manuscript and you have done the work — fourteen drafts, fifteen, more if it needs them — send it to agents. Send it in batches. Expect rejection. Fifteen publishers turned down Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less, and Deborah Owen kept fighting. Send it again. Send it to the sixteenth.
Self-publishing should be the option you reach for after the traditional route has been tried and exhausted, not the option you start with. The first author who self-publishes by default is, in my experience, the first author who does not get read.
Be realistic. Be practical. Try and get an agent. Try and get a publisher.