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Five Inspirational Truths for Authors

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Getting to Know the Publishing Industry Better



Chip MacGregor is President of MacGregor Literary Inc., a literary agency that works in both the CBA and general markets.
I frequently have people ask me, “How can I get to know the industry better?” It’s not brain surgery. I can think of a number of things that would help a writer do that...


1. Read frequently.

2. Read outside your genre (for example, if you’re a romance reader, pick up a suspense novel; if you’re a CBA person, read books outside your safety zone).

3. Study the bestseller lists (New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, your local newspaper -- all have them). Spend time on Amazon.com and BarnesAndNoble.com to see what's selling.

4. Note who publishes the books you read and the books on the bestseller lists. (In case you haven't figured it out, not all publishing houses were created equal.)

5. Take a look at trade journals to find what's hot, what's not, and what's happening. These journals would include Publishers Weekly, the email version of Publishers Daily, Publishers Marketplace, Library Journal, Writers Digest, possibly Bookstore Journal. You may also glean some good information in some entertainment journals.

6. Keeps tabs on the economic climate of publishing and bookselling. Right now everybody is talking about Borders going bankrupt, and bemoaning what bad shape the industry is in... but this year there will probably be more book pages published and sold than ever before in history.

7. It's important that you study a publisher before sending anything to them. Harvest House may be the right place for your Amish book, but it's the wrong place for your techno-thriller. So go to web sites and read catalogues to figure out who publishes what. If you research the house and its list, you'll be better able to target the right publisher.

8. Check out market resources like the Writer's Guild, Writer's Digest, Sally Stuart's CBA Market Guide, etc. Go online and check out the best writing blogs. (I happen to be a fan of Rachelle Gardner's excellent CBA Ramblings, as well as Mike Hyatt's blog on the industry. There are plenty of others.) Anybody with internet access can do some basic research -- anybody who can get to Barnes & Noble can do some more. Walk around with a pen and a notepad for an hour or two at a store and see what you can glean.

9. Ask around. If you're part of a critique group or writers organization, you ought to have some connections with fellow writers, editors, publishers, and agents to bounce your ideas around. If you're attending a writer's conference, by all means ask in the sessions or the panel discussions -- or even in a face-to-face meeting.

10. Many publishers will print a style guide. Ask for one, and if they share it with you, follow it. Nothing makes an acquisitions editor unhappy faster than having to wade through a pile of manuscripts that only tangentially relate to the house's publishing focus.

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3 comments:

  1. I agree with all these! I'm not a writer but a book blogger (and my real life profession isn't even publishing related) and I keep up with the industry very closely. I read A LOT (Both Christian and general market books) and I also keep tabs on what is going on in the CBA publishing world as well as ABA. i subscribe to Publisher's Weekly emails, Shelf Awareness, follow literary agents blogs, keep tabs with publishers on twitter. I pretty much do a lot of research so that I know what kind of books I want to read and review on my blog. And I know that there are a lot of book bloggers out there that are doing the same thing. It amazes me then, how many aspiring authors have no clue about any of these stuff, yet they want their book to sell extremely well.

    ReplyDelete
  2. So glad to see your smiling face on here, Chip!

    True, I think more than ever there are great ways to stay on top of what is happening in the publishing industry, especially through Twitter. Thanks for your list, Chip.

    Jennifer

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good advice, Chip. Thanks for sharing.
    (And, Gina, thanks for giving us this opportunity).

    ReplyDelete

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