ForeWord Publishing Insider
Industry leaders highlight current trends and the latest headlines
 Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Warning — May Cause Nightmares.

Book industry numbers are cold-sweat terrifying for publishers and authors alike. According to Nielsen Bookscan, 3,000 books are published per day in the United States alone (as reported on www.deadlyprose.com). ForeWord can review at most a few thousand per year. Publishers report an average of 2,100 submissions per year, totaling 132 million submissions. Just under one percent are accepted for publication.

In the face of these staggering odds, is there any hope for authors and publishers?

The Majority of Books Sell Fewer than 99 Copies
Of the 1.2 million titles tracked by Bookscan in 2006, only 2.1% sold more than 5,000 books, 16.6% sold fewer than 1,000, and a terrifying 79.6% sold fewer than 99 copies. The 99 copies are no doubt the reason only one percent of authors’ submissions make it through the arduous publisher-review process.

This is all the stuff of wake-in-a-sweat nightmares: 63,000 publishers vie for readers with their wonderful author lists (according to Dan Poynter’s ParaPublishing.com).

The terror is no less for authors: only six conglomerate publishers publish fewer and fewer debut authors and less and less fiction. Then the real horror story commences as a book makes it into distribution. The bestseller dreams of authors and publishers are splashed with the cold water of real numbers.

Negative or Naïve?
Am I being negative or naïve? Perhaps both. The naïve part of the equation is my firm belief there are ways to break through these barriers to success. Kunati  was founded with this goal in mind, and has proven it can work.

Heather Shaw touched on one important element of the success formula in her insightful Blog on book covers. When competing with 1.2 million titles, first impressions (impact) and credibility are vital. These are the twin functions of a cover.

What Works for Selling Books?
Websites, book videos and novel trailers, author critique groups, social marketing, author Blog tours, old-fashioned but still-important book signings, and publicity are the proven methods for marketing. I hope to focus on these in future Publisher Insider Blogs in a more how-to format.

Innovation begins with a study of what works. Read every Blog in the ForeWord archive and every article in the magazine. Visit the sites of successful publishers—the innovative publishers who lead with new ideas such as novel trailers, Blog touring, online publicity. (hint, hint, Kunati). Read every page on sites from innovative publishers.

Getting Noticed is the Primary Goal
My message is simple. With these horrifying numbers, being noticed is almost the only thing that matters—for both authors and publishers. Many authors are creative, even brilliant, yet if they can’t market their “author brand” no publisher is interested.

The publisher faces an epic battle analogous to a Tolkien quest to get attention in the marketplace. The publisher must build the authors’ brands, edit the manuscripts for the market, arrange distribution, obtain reviews from magazines (which choose from millions), then sell to wholesalers, retailers and finally readers.

The Retailer
How does a retailer choose which titles to carry? The average retailer chooses to stock a few thousand copies per year, far less than 1% of the titles available—similar in numbers to the reviews published annually by ForeWord. That’s not a coincidence.

Publisher and author success relies on buzz, which is a combination of review exposure, social networking, book cover designs, author activities such as Blogs and signings (the two types of touring, virtual and tangible). The last part of the equation is wonderful content.

Innovative Authors Look Beyond Good Prose
With the knowledge that more than 80% of books published are going to fail, how can a publisher risk taking on new, unproven property? How can an author convince a publisher to take them on?

There are certain musts in an author presentation, and in our evaluation of the author:
• Is the query well-written? An author who doesn’t polish a query until it becomes the choicest morsel of prose ever written has no chance at all.
• Is the idea compelling? Yes, tell us the comparables (claims of being the next Da Vinci Code or Harry Potter are overused though!), but what’s the UNIQUE aspect—the high concept. No matter how small, there must be one.
• The sample chapters? Same story. If those three chapters aren’t pure masterpiece, the editor will tend to move on.
• Did they read the submission guidelines on the website? One mistake here disqualifies most authors. Take the time to study your prospective publisher.

Innovative Publishers Look Beyond Agents
Unlike many publishers, Kunati accepts un-agented submissions by email. How can we do this, given the awful odds against a new author’s success?

We certainly acquire agented manuscripts, but the creative-process required for an author to pitch a manuscript is clearest sign of ambition, drive and creativity. We believe in the un-agented submission. It allows the author to prove they can develop their author “brand.” Other things we look for:
• Is the author realistic about his/her prospects?
• Is the author able to work with the publisher at making the book as marketable as possible? Considering the numbers, this might be the most important of all.
• These days, we also look for authors who are savvy about online marketing, blogging, MySpace and social marketing, and who are not shy about public appearances. Some writers are notoriously shy, preferring to hide behind their keyboard.

Successfully Marketing Books Require a Publisher-Author Partnership.
The truth is, only bestselling authors receive major publishing support in marketing. A publisher’s first duty is to market to the trade. That’s a big job. Stores stock thousands out of the millions of titles. Just getting the books into distribution is monumental. Trade ads, reviews, advance reading copies, publicity, great book covers, strong web presence, book trailers—these all help. Even the big conglomerate publishers typically stop there. There’s not much in the way of marketing dollars left for end-reader marketing for 90% of authors. Hand-selling from retailers and buzz becomes the key to success.

Hand-selling and Buzz
Book selling is still very much a word-of-mouth business. Readers don’t always respond to what we think they will. Social marketing, in all its aspects, it the true secret of any book’s success. Books can become bestsellers when just one influential person finds it and starts buzzing (Oprah will do.)  Social marketing involves building a broad network of friends.

Ultimately, the true secret to publishing success is a strong partnership between authors and publishers, working together to create buzz. This is a big topic, and the subject of next week’s Blog.

Posted by: Derek Armstrong

Wednesday, February 13, 2008 1:39:41 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
In the years (okay, decades) that I've been researching the book industry, I've heard these statistics many times. And they're so true. I've also heard how publishers in the US are publishing nearly 200,000 new titles a year. This sheds some light on why my 3 novels aren't on every bookstore shelf. Can you imagine the size the bookstore would have to be to accomplish shelving every title? But it is a common assumption with aspiring or newly published authors that their books will be everywhere, in every store automatically. That's just not the case.

Today's authors have to take on the role of marketing even more than ever if they want to succeed. You can't wait for the sales to happen; you have to go out and get them. Book signings are a plus. I love doing them, meeting people and talking to fans. But most authors, including me, can't afford to tour all across the country 2-3 times a year. And publishers certainly can't pay for all of their authors to do so either. I was the first author from Kunati Books to hold a virtual book tour (VBT). For one month, I blogged, wrote articles, answered intervews, spoke on radio shows--I loved it. VBT's are becoming more popular every year, and I believe that's where author tours are heading. Even bestselling author Margaret Atwood knows the trials of traveling; she invented the LongPen, a device that signs books with the author in one city and readers in another. I've signed up for that too.

I embrace the marketing of my novels and I am excited to do so. With three novels published, I am constantly searching for new ways, new ideas, and the majority of them involve online marketing. From my own experience, I can say that being computer savvy is a huge advantage as more and more authors are turning to internet marketing. Authors experienced in web design, HTML code, navigating the internet, and those who blog regularly and update their websites routinely have a headstart. I believe in working smarter, not necessarily harder.

You're right, Derek. Selling books is a partnership between everyone involved--author, agent, publisher, distributor, booksellers...they each have their role, and the common one is to sell books.

Today's authors have to be bold, daring, open to learning, open to selling, persistent, and driven. That's how you become one of the 2.1% of authors who sell more than 5000 copies.

~Cheryl Kaye Tardif,
bestselling author of Whale Song, The River and Divine Intervention
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 2:02:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
As a debut author with Kunati, my Spring release of Belly of the Whale will come out in April, I have been confronted by several bookstores who tell me the woes of selling fiction. "If you have a great historical novel, it will fly out of the store"...Thanks to Derek and his team at Kunati, their mission statement and their dedication to great books and publishing we can turn the ship around.

Linda Merlino, author, Belly of the Whale
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 3:57:38 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Thanks for the great comments Derek. Balancing off the nightmare, fortunately, most of the 200,000 to 1,000,000 books published each year (depending on whose stats you read) are not intended to compete in the general trade market, but have distribution goals that range from self expression to family and personal networks, to highly targeted interest groups.

While at first blush the foregoing does tend to create unfocused clutter, Kunati's emergence demonstrates that the new technologies of publication, connection and distribution have lowered the barriers to the entry of good books into the marketplace where -in the past - without a major gatekeeping publisher, and a substantial publisher investment, an author couldn't get off the ground to reach a reader.

So social networks, target marketing, links, blogs, search, e-tailers and cyberspace at large(in addition to old-fashioned bookstores and libraries) have created a new field of dreams for writers and innovators to explore and in which to meet readers. Publishing as an industry now shares the marketplace with publishing as a natural right of self expression. Sorting all of this out seems to be the adventure of the moment.

Welcome to publishing, and to ForeWord, Derek.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 9:37:08 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I liken these sobering points to what Woody Allen once said: 80% of success is showing up. If the author fails to show up at all the available venues you mentioned, who will know about the story she wrote? Kudos to you, Derek, for keeping this all in perspective!
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 11:23:25 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I can attest to what Derek and my fellow Kunati authors are saying. In fact, Cheryl Kaye Tardif's advice to me when I first met her was, "Raise your Internet profile," and she told me how to do it. I will forever be grateful to her for her guidance.
This has been my journey thus far: I completed the initial draft of my novel, Courage in Patience, around this time last year. I began looking for an agent in March-April. I signed with my agent, Rachel Dowen of Talcott Notch Literary, around June 1. I heard back from Kunati (I had submitted, unagented, to them in April), in August. They made an offer of publication in November; I Fed-Exed the signed contract back to them the weekend before Christmas. Since then, my life has been a whirlwind. I have a "day job", too- I'm a teacher.

The thing I left out was what I did all this past summer; that's when Cheryl gave me her advice about raising my profile. I spent the summer learning the ins and outs of social marketing. I was already in contact with Derek, as well, and he told me about Author's Den ...and ..and ..and .. even though I didn't even have a contract yet, working that hard to get noticed is in large part what got me to this point, today, less than a year after I submitted to Kunati. My book goes on sale for preorder this month, and it releases in September.

It CAN be done. Persistence and (and OCD helps, too, ha ha)-- are the keys. I would like to add that I have about 2000 mailers ready to go out to every school district (literally: every school district-- my book is YA fiction, although it will have a wider audience as well)-- in Texas and just about every public library in Texas, too-- just as soon as my book is up and online for sale.

Beth Fehlbaum
http://courageinpatience.blogspot.com
Thursday, February 14, 2008 12:21:33 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Derek is 100% correct regarding the need for authors to publicize their books. I have been working hard introducing readers to Unholy Domain, my new novel. Basically, I spend all my time marketing. Well, maybe I squeak out 10% of my time writing my next novel.

Actually, I have to admit, most of this marketing is fun. Through Amazon, MySpace, Goodreads, Authors Den and the rest, I've reached several thousand readers. Touched base with several hundred bookstore managers and a bunch of librarians, too. Eight to ten thousand readers visit my website each month, and I try to keep the experience fresh and interesting. BTW, I recently posted the first chapter of Unholy Domain, so take a look when you have time.


Other writers have been very supportive, especially given how busy they are. Piers Anthony and David Brin both provided valuable feedback regarding PeaceMaker, my first novel. Piers, Scott Nicholson, Rick Weber and Simon Wood read UD and provided generous reviews. Thanks, guys.


Blogging has been fun, too. Gives me a chance to express my ideas in a variety of areas. Some are humorous, some are very serious, but they are all focused on exposing my work.

All that, and my novel hasn't even been released yet.



Thursday, February 14, 2008 5:28:41 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Derek couldn't do more to help us authors temper our expectations, but I'm optimistic just the same. I've seen three approaches to book marketing in my relatively short career as an author and Kunati's "raise your profile" approach seems the strongest yet.
My first book, Creative Selling, was a non-fiction prescriptive published by the book arm of a magazine publisher, Entrepreneur Press. It got good exposure in their print publications, decent distribution in stores, and I sold plenty of back-of-the-room copies at seminars (where I made my real living). That was also in 2000, somewhat before Internet users had even scratched the surface for marketers. The first print run sold out, but it was a long-term struggle.
I wrote my second book, a novel titled Hunting Elf, as a lark, published it first as a free podcast audiobook, then self-published the print edition. Given the economics and lack of distribution, even my efforts at marketing it online (and in a few local stores) were doomed to failure. It was fun and didn't cost much in dollars. Time and labor is another matter.
Which brings me to Heart of Diamonds, my first novel coming out in September from Kunati. The blogging has just begun (four so far), the social sites are cooking, and I haven't even really started serious marketing since the book's not even in the Amazon catalog yet. Derek and his team have provided strong support, as have the other Kunati authors, so I remain optimistic that the odds can be beaten.
Thursday, February 14, 2008 8:08:02 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
So much for 'never judge a book by its cover'. Derek's 100% correct of course; people are sold books, if not on recommendation then by first impressions. This requirement to brand your work/self is something that comes as a bit of a surprise to us first time authors, or it did to me at least. Once the initial thrill of getting published began to fade the realisation of the amount of work ahead was daunting. Recycling Jimmy is a dark comedy that on the surface deals with profiting from someone's suicide. How to pitch that and convince people that it is genuinely funny and not in the slightest bit gratuitous? How do you brand yourself effectively across global markets? Thankfully Kunati have a done a great job with the book and all that was left for me to do was take a deep breath and throw myself into the abyss that is blogging. Battling for a piece of that particular pie is difficult and frustrating (ever tried putting a VBT together?), but the rewards are tangible.
Saturday, February 16, 2008 9:47:47 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Armstrong is right on with this article. What's more, selling a second book to a publisher is even harder than selling the first, especially if your first was a flop. Authors must work pointer-in-pointer with publishers these days to get the word out about their books.

Some excellent books have been written on the subject of author promotion (like this one, Blogertize , ) not to mention some interesting articles ( Internet Marketing for Authors .)

Internet marketing has been invaluable for my two novels, Rabid and Callous .

Great article, Derek!

TK Kenyon

Monday, February 18, 2008 9:15:36 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Why do so many write? Given the odds Derek quotes, it seems foolish.

But--like the lottery--it's the prize that lures, that attracts, that seduces with its siren call of fame and fortune. One Robert B. parker, or Stephen King, or J.K. Rowling--that's enough to bring out the treasure hunter in any one of us that thinks we can string some words on a thread of plot.

Tales of literary success evoke visions, not of sugarplums dancing in our heads, but sights of book launches and signings surrounded by breathless and adoring fans. "Why NOT take a shot?" Especially now that the publishing gatekeeping is crumbling with the advent of online access.

The multitude of books creates a background noise that has to be filtered out by the media and the consumer. No wonder why it's so hard to be heard. How do you raise your voice above that din? You have to be good--and you have to be lucky too. AND--you need to have your voice amplified by the ususal suspects: media coverage, internet presence, publisher's advertising, and personal appearances.

Something different can resound or cause deafening silence. My Where'sMyx? blog shows my actual book on tour in a different location every day. Will it make a difference by being different? We'll see.

Can the planets align and have your voice finally heard. Sure--happens all the time. But, only to the small percentage that Derek talks about.

It's a batting average. But, all it takes is one good swing to hit one outta here--become a bestseller. So I, like so many others, am gonna step up and take a few good cuts at the publishing fastball.

Dave Diotalevi, author of MIRACLE MYX
<a href="http://www.myspace.com/davediotalevi>http://www.myspace.com/davediotalevi</a>
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