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'Net Selling
Mike Ashley of FirstBooks
Library contacted me before I'd heard of the company. A
real go-getter, Mike wrote to ask for the names of any of
my editorial clients who might be interested in placing
their books on the internet with FirstBooks. I gave Mike
a list, which included me, and after asking a lot of questions
I decided to go with the company myself. FirstBooks placed
my book on the web within a few weeks of the time I submitted
my manuscript in the summer of 1998.
I liked the way FirstBooks
included the cover I'd commissioned an artist to paint for
my book, and I liked the consideration given me on the company's
site. I paid extra to obtain materials about registering
the book with the various standard services (copyright,
ISBN, CIP, others) and copies of books on self-publishing,
like Dan Poynter, The Self-publishing Manual (Santa
Barbara: Para Publishing, 1997), now in its tenth edition;
Tom and Marilyn Ross, The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing(Cincinnati:
Writer's Digest Books, 1994), in its third edition; John
Kremer, 1001 Ways to Market Your Books (Fairfield,
IA, Open Horizons, 1998), in its fourth edition; Joe Vitale,
Cyber Writing (New York: Amacom, 1997.
All these books gave helpful
suggestions, although I had already done so much promotion
work on my earlier books and on my husband's books that
not a great deal was new to me. Kremer and the Rosses direct
their help specifically to self-publishers, while Poynter
also addresses small companies who publish the work of others.
Kremer operates Open Horizons Publishing in Fairfield, IA,
and Poynter runs Para Publishing in Santa Barbara, CA, both
of which offer materials and personal consulting on publishing.
The Rosses operate About
Books, Inc., from Buena Vista, CO, and they do consulting
as well as operating a trade association, Small Publishers
Association of North America. Another source of help in
publishing is The Jenkins Group, Traverse City, MI, whose
head is Jerrold Jenkins, author of books on small press
publishing; he also operates a trade association, Independent
Publishers Network. Source: Michael Alesko, www.gohome.com/Sections/Marketing
Net Support
FirstBooks did send out some
releases, although the releases gave more information about
FirstBooks than they did about me. But, in my experience,
even commercial publishers perform only a limited amount
of promotion, and authors really need to do much of their
own, using their special knowledge of the book's subject
for possible tie-ins, locating clubs that might be interested
in the subject, and thinking of ways to get their message
to the right readers.
Sales of the internet version
of my historical novel, The Sceptre, were negligible,
but they gave the book some exposure and got me some columnist
mentions and interviews.
Net Plus: Print-on-Demand
Then I discovered Xlibris,
an internet company that not only puts authors' books on
the web, it prints them in hard copy, too, for very much
less than vanity presses charge because of efficient electronic
preparation and storage of these books.
Remember that FirstBooks
and Xlibris are technically not publishers; they're distributors
of authors' works. The authors themselves are the publishers.
So because authors of internet books retain the rights to
their work, I didn't have to withdraw from FirstBooks, or
get the permission of FirstBooks, to use another company
as well. I could retain Xlibris, too. (This situation doesn't
apply to all ebook vendors; if you choose another one, check
the agreement you sign with that distributor.)
Xlibris uses on-demand printing
and charges about a fifth of what vanity presses do, although
authors still pay for the books themselves, buying them
at a discounted price. The books that Xlibris produces are
indistinguishable from any of the good-looking paperbacks
and hardcovers you purchase at your corner bookstore, complete
with barcode. Xlibris gives authors and their books a nice
presentation on their site, complete with an excerpt from
the book itself.
Drawbacks
Working with Xlibris proved
slower than expected (the company is being swamped with
requests). And I was disappointed in one editorial policy:
contracting all of the ellipses in the text so that they
failed to show the standard spacing I was used to editing
into my own clients' work. But putting standard spacing
back into these ellipses might have delayed publication
another month, so I decided to forego that change. The foreign
words in my story that contained diacritical marks caused
some problems, too--one diacritical mark on the first page
of the book is still wrong--but most of the typos got corrected
when I received paper proofs and worked with the typographer
on the phone.
Also slower than anticipated
is Xlibris fulfillment. The company collects orders and
sends them to its printer once a week, then has the books
printed and delivered to its own office, where they are
checked before being mailed to buyers. (Occasionally, the
printer puts the wrong jacket on a hardcover.) Sometimes
six weeks elapse between the date of the order and the delivery
date, so I warn bookstores to order early. And some store
managers balk at the Xlibris policy of giving bookstores
only twenty percent discount instead of the more usual forty
percent.
On the whole, Xlibris gave
me a good experience with internet-company publishing of
hard copies. The book looks beautiful in both softcover
and hardcover.
Of course, you could always
hire Lightning Print, a division of Ingram, to "print
on demand" and ship books to stores within 48 hours,
but to use Ingram's service you need a minimum of 25 titles.
Edit, Promote and
Publicize
Xlibris does no editing,
but since I have for more than thirty years been a professional
editor, that policy posed no problem. Xlibris also performs
no promotion or publicity, but I'm used to doing it myself.
To promote the book I had
thousands of postcards printed and sent to bookstores I
thought would be interested in my work, using address stickers
purchased from PCS Mailing List Company in Peabody, MA.
The stickers were expensive, and many addresses proved to
be out of date, but I received enough interest to set up
a summer book-autographing tour of stores that responded
to my cards. I wrote and sent out many promotional pieces
describing the research, the background, and the story line
of my book, and as I collected endorsements from friends
in the publishing business and reactions of thrilled readers,
I collected and summarized them for promotion purposes.
Because the book's main setting
is in Ohio and I am an Ohio author, I was able to arrange
a formal presentation in the Cleveland Public Library's
new auditorium and other presentations to groups at my two
Cleveland universities. The rest of the action takes place
largely in Austria, where I did considerable research and
interviewing, so I capitalized on my Austrian contacts.
Now I'm searching for a European publisher to buy foreign
rights.
To keep myself up to date
on current possibilities for promotion, I subscribe to Book
Marketing & Publicity, a newsletter that suggests journals,
media, and other resources for promoting and publicizing.
It's costly, but it's useful. To keep up with industry changes
I have long subscribed to Publishers Weekly, and
I study the New York Times Book Review as well as
checking various internet sites that sound as though they
might offer help.
Summary
I recommend Internet-plus-hard
copy publishing by a electronic company that uses on-demand
printing.
Some Important
Book Distributors
Ingram Book Company, One
Ingram Blvd., P.O. Box 3006, La Vergne, TN 37086-1986, Ph.
615-793-5000, www.ingrambookgroup.com. Ingram states that
it is "a leading national wholesaler of trade and professional
books."
Baker & Taylor Books,
44 Kirby Avenue, Somerville, NJ 08876-0734, Ph. 908-722-8000,
www.baker-taylor.com. B & T claims it is "the largest
book wholesaler in the world."
Bookpeople, 7900 Edgewater
Dr., Oakland, CA 94621, Ph. 510-632-4700, www.bponline.com.
Bookpeople is employee-owned and operated.
BookWorld Services, 1933
Whitfield Park Loop, Sarasota, FL 34243, Ph. 941-758-8094.
www.bookworld.com. BookWorld says it's "one of the
top three American distributors."
Independent Publishers Group,
814, N. Franklin Avenue, Chicago, IL 60610, Ph. 312-337-0747.
National Book Network, 4720
Boston Way, #A, Lanham, MD 20706, Ph. 301-459-3366, www.nbnbooks.com.
Specializes in general interest or trade books. Claims to
be "the fastest growing national book distributor in
the United States" and declares that in Publishers
Marketing Association's 1998 survey, it came out the highest-rated
book distributor in North America.
Partners Book Distributing,
2325 Jarco Road, Holt, MI 48842, Ph. 517-694-3205, http://bookexpo.reedexpo.com.
Distributes for independent presses.
Quality Books, 1003 West
Pines Road, Oregon, IL 61061, Ph. 800-333-4241.
Small Press Distribution,
1814 San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94702, Ph. 510-549-3336,
www.spdbooks.org. States that it handles poetry, innovative
fiction, and "cultural writers." Distributes to
libraries as well as bookstores.
Internet
Self-Publishing
Besides FirstBooks Library
and Xlibris, other internet companies offer to list,
publish, or distribute books on the internet. Some will
merely list the manuscripts and/or classify them by genre;
others sell or permit free downloading of all or parts of
the listed manuscripts. Technically, authors who use these
services become the publishers. These companies prepare
the work as a "virtual" book and host a site where
the book can be offered for sale or sold. Some also publish
in hard-copy.
World Wide Weblications,
www.weblications.net. Postings include author bio, synopsis,
writing sample, and author's email address. Potential readers
or conventional publishers contact author directly.
The Writing Mill, www.writingmill.com.
Posts a 400-word synopsis but offers no writing samples.
Heavy with playwrights' scripts. Primarily a listing site,
a showcase for author materials available to commercial
publishers, who can download a book for $12.00.
Light Communications, www.light-communications.com/author.
Mainly published and self-published books categorized by
genre, but some unpublished manuscripts are posted.
Pure Fiction's Electronic
Slush Pile, www.purefiction.com. Excerpts from selected
unpublished manuscripts are posted, at no cost to the author.
Author's Interface, www.authorsinterface.com.
Restricts queries to agents and editors via a password.
Writers can include lengthy excerpts here. Requested manuscripts
are mailed out.
Authorlink! www.authorlink.com.
Some of the 200 titles published have already been self-published
in hard copy.
Lonely Blue Coyote, www.lbcoyote.com.
Writers featured on web pages with bios, photos, and excerpts.
Online Originals, www.onlineoriginals.com.
Selective about what's published. Here's where the Booker
Prize winner appeared.
Hard Shell Word Factory,
www.hardshell.com. Charges no fees at all, and does some
editing. Fairly selective: likes authors to have some publishing
credits. Publish "quality" and "finished"
work. Ask for "exclusive rights" to publish and
sell in digital format. Offers 25 per cent royalty but only
on net earnings.
Boson Books, www.cmonline.com/boson/authors.html.
Currently not accepting manuscripts; has enough.
Buy Books on the Web, www.buybooksontheweb.com.
Besides offering the service of preparing and presenting
books on the web, this company offers a great deal of helpful
technical direction, so even if you don't select this service
you should look at the site. Performs some promotion and
advertising, and offers 200 printed postcards free.
Trafford, www.trafford.com.
A Canadian site, in Victoria, British Columbia. Emphasizes
on-line services and on-demand publishing. Presents a "talent
pool bulletin board." Some of its services are made
available via software. Sells books for $10.00 Cdn.
WritersNet, www.writers.net.
Inclusion is restricted to published authors, and each entry
contains a listing of published works as well as a bio and
contact information.
Source: Writers' Journal,
March/April and May/June, 1998.
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