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From the Publisher’s Desk: How Book Publishing Looks from the Other Side
Many writers aspire to writing books. Writing a book is a long, involved, difficult process. Book publishing is
harder. A writer may submit his book time and time again only to be turned down again and again. He may eventually
be successful. Wouldn’t it have been easier to have just gotten published the first time? Is that possible? You can
improve your chances if you understand a little bit more about what happens at the publisher’s desk.
Book publishers are busy people with several projects crossing their desks every day. They
must make fast decisions about what will sell. They must also delegate their time efficiently in order to
keep the business running. Only occasionally do publishers actually seek out work. Maybe understanding the
work day of a publisher will help you to get a book published.
Persistence Has a New Meaning
You all know that writers must be persistent. Regardless of how many times you get shot down and your ideas are
thrown in the trash, you have to keep going back for more discouragement. The idea is that eventually you’ll make
it in the door. If you can get all the way through, you will finally get to the place where more of your work is
accepted than declined. When working with the book publishing world, the rule is the same. If you have a book that
you know will sell, you can’t give up on getting it onto the publisher’s desk again and again.
You probably won’t be sending the entire book, but excerpts from it. As you continually send
your manuscript again and again to publisher after publisher, you should try to market it in different ways.
Publishers are looking for a particular kind of writing and will dismiss anything that doesn’t look like what
they are looking for. Variation in your marketing techniques may turn a rejected book into an accepted
book.
The Right Stuff
Book publishing is a strange area of business. The people’s tastes are somewhat fickle and a book publisher has to
keep up with what kinds of books will sell. It seems that technically written mysteries will always have a place on
the bookshelves, but it is unclear how many authors readers are willing to get to know. That market may be tied up
until Crichton and Grisham are finished. That is just one example from one genre of books though. Publishers have
to keep track of what is selling in all areas of literature. The best way for you to get your work noticed is to
make it look like the other writing that is selling. Be careful not to imitate style or voice of another author.
Write with your own unique words while imitating the use of popular public opinion. Another way to improve your
chances of getting your work onto the right publisher’s desk is to find out who’s publishing what.
Are You Barking Up the Right Tree?
Some publishers specialize in a certain kind of writing. If you are writing a novel, it won’t do you any good to
send it to the people who publish technical manuals. How do you find out who is the most likely candidate to
publish your work? There are reference manuals at your library that will tell you the kinds of book publishing that
is happening. It will contain valuable information leading you to children’s book publishers, novel publishers and
textbook publishers. If the handbook at your library is not quite up to date, your next option is to check out the
new release and best seller rack at the book store. Buy a few books and read them. You’ll have a much better feel
for the market if you are a consumer.
Book publishing is a difficult field to break into. It can be helpful to approach the issue from the direction of
the publisher. Before you send out your manuscript again, there are things you can do to improve your chances.
Change your marketing style so that you just may grab some better attention. Make sure that you are a book consumer
yourself. You’ll get a better feel for what’s selling and therefore what a publisher will buy. You’ll also find out
who is publishing which types of books. Finally, by buying the product you are trying to sell, you will improve the
book economy all together. Publishers need to see people buying books before they can commit to publishing
more.
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