Self-Publishing = Self-Marketing
Written by: Phil Andrews - a freelance English-language content writer specializing in articles, web content and blogging. He is the author of The Best Year Of Our Lives, a historical fiction novel set in 1976 about a group of young people growing up in a restless West London suburb beside the River Thames.
One of the fiercest
debates which has raged in recent times amongst authors, aspiring authors and
the communities amid which they move has concerned the relative merits and
demerits of traditional and self-publishing. Where once only a lucky, or
gifted, few (delete according to preference or prejudice) were able to take the
giant leap from mere aspirant to best-selling author, now anybody who is able
to follow a few fairly simple instructions can publish and sell their works to
a potential market of millions.
The word
"potential", of course, is crucial here, for the downside of
launching one's own work through the relatively new medium of self-publishing
is that the writer is entirely responsible for bringing their work to the
notice of those who might purchase it. Whereas a traditional publisher, having
parted with a sometimes hefty advance payment in exchange for the soul of the
author, would be driven by its own self-interest in recovering its losses and
then making a profit, there is no such other interest at work when the lone
author publishes through a do-it-yourself platform. From day one, the
self-publisher of necessity becomes a self-marketer. With over a million books
already on the virtual shelf and counting, the task is no mean one.
Needless to say the
first thing upon which the success or otherwise of a work will depend is its
quality. A silk purse cannot be made from a proverbial sow's ear, and neither
can a tome filled with typographical errors be reasonably touted as a literary
showpiece. In the world of traditional publishing imperfect manuscripts are
tweaked and toned by professionals until they become perfect manuscripts. Not
so when they are submitted directly to a retailer by means of an unmanned
formatting programme. Get it wrong, and it stays wrong.
On the opposite side of
the coin though the same standard does not hold. To employ an obvious truism an
unseen work of art will remain unseen for as long as nobody sees it, and no
correlation automatically exists between its quality as a piece of work and the
exposure it receives. Once an item is published, no matter how good it is, the
imperative shifts from production to distribution.
Thus in self-publishing
the onus falls upon the writer, who is also the publisher, to become the
marketer as well. Usually the author's family and friends will be the first to
show their support by purchasing copies. Then social media needs to be
exploited for all it is worth, before articles and links from niche forums,
guest posts on relevant blogs and reviews achieved by fair means or not so fair
eventually come into play. If all goes to plan, once these channels have been
exhausted a secondary wave of interest will have been generated by word of
mouth, and so the anticipated process eventually, if rather slowly, rolls into
gear.
Is self-publishing worth
it? For those who are unlikely to find a traditional publisher, certainly. For
those who may do, possibly, as the time saved and the more generous royalties
must undoubtedly also be taken into consideration. But it is no walk in the
park, and for some the writing of the book is actually the easy part.
* Check out this great resource: Purple Snowflake Marketing
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