Should a writer wait for better times?
June 23, 2012 | Written by admin
Lisa wrote to ask this: “With today’s publishing economy taking a downturn, would you recommend writers, especially new writers, wait for better times to approach you with a proposal?”
I am SO tempted to say, “No, I recommend they call another agent.” But I won’t because people keep accusing me of being snarky.
Um… Lisa, for all the talk of the national debt and the mortgage crisis and government bailouts ruining our economy over the past few years, people still seem to be buying books. In fact, for all the gloom expressed about publishing, there were more new books offered the last couple of years than ever before. And there are more readers in the world than ever before. So sure, I think some publishers are a bit scared (everybody has been retrenching and rethinking the business), and most are reviewing their practices to see how to reshape things in the light of ebooks and free content on the web. But I can guarantee you every publisher is looking for a GREAT idea, expressed through GREAT writing, by an author with a GREAT platform.
Sop if you have all of those pieces in place, don’t wait. If you don’t have all those pieces… well, you probably aren’t ready anyway. But if you have a solid manuscript, and you’ve worked to make it as strong as possible, and you can demonstrate a way to help promote your book to your potential readers, then you should start approaching editors and agents. Don’t wait for the economy to get better. That may or may not happen (does anyone think Obama understands sound fiscal policy? does anyone think Romney has the answer?). But here’s what WILL happen: publishers will acquire, edit, produce, market, and sell a boatload of new books.
Amanda Luedeke: The Extroverted Writer: An Author's Guide to Marketing and Building a Platform
Christina Katz: Get Known Before the Book Deal
Chuck Sambuchino: Create Your Writer Platform: The Key to Building an Audience, Selling More Books, and Finding Success as an Author
Seth Godin: Tribes: We Need You to Lead Us
Noah Lukeman: A Writer's Guide to Staying Out of the Rejection Pile
Noah Lukeman: The Plot Thickens: 8 Ways to Bring Fiction to Life
Renni Browne, Dave King: Self-Editing for Fiction Writers: How to Edit Yourself Into Print
Chip MacGregor & Marie Prys: Prayers of Our Presidents
