Copyright 2006 John Young
Lets say youre a writer who has written a few things that youve tried to get published. Lets say youve even had some success. Youve submitted your novels, short story and poem collections, or magazine articles to New York publishers.
After receiving enough reject slips to cover the walls of your two bedroom condominium you finally managed to place something in an obscure publication located 500 miles away from New York.
Dont break out the champagne yet. It may or may not be a start.
It all depends on how well it sells, what your next masterpiece may be, and how well the editor thinks that will sell. You may soon discover that your first piece didnt sell well and the editor spent so much money on it shes not interested in buying another one from you.
And you still havent broken into New York.
Your initial elation at having finally published drops rapidly into the psychological gutter, and you find yourself back to square one. Youre almost worse off now than if you had never published in the first place. Other editors may shy away from you because you are not writing salable material.
Before you raise a disdainful eyebrow at this scenario, let me assure you. This has indeed happened to more than one writer.
IF ONLY I HAD ONE
Ah Hah! you say. Thats the reaction of discovery. For scientists its the word Eureka!
You elicited this reaction when you discover that real, published authors all have literary agents, and that nobody in New York seriously considers a book that is not presented by an agent.
You have also made the depressing discovery that the creations you sent to publishers like Harper and Row werent rejected by the top editors, but by an 18 year old high school graduate sitting in a small cubicle. Her desk is surrounded by stacks of manuscripts sent by hopeful writers. The stacks nearly reach the ceiling.
After finishing reading your manuscript, putting a canned reject note in the SASE you provided, and tossing it on top of the other stamped manila envelopes overflowing an outgoing bin, she climbs up on a stool to reach the next manuscript, located on top of the nearest stack. Three months ago, yours was at the bottom of that stack.
Thats why it took so long to get your reject slip.
To get your manuscript past this girl and to one of the top editors, you realize you need a literary agent. So, after submitting your manuscript to several prominent New York agents you discover
They only take already published, famous authors. Ever read the novel Catch-22?
Ive got bad news, which for you, probably isnt news at all
THE SELF-PUBLISHING NON SOLUTION
Maybe, just maybe, you can self publish. There are all kinds of Vanity Publishers out there, and some do it on a print on demand basis, receiving their orders over the web. Maybe you are foolish enough to have gone this route, in which case you now have:
1. A garage full of unsold books you must distribute yourself
2. A published book just waiting to be printed as soon as somebody requests it.
3. Reviewers who wont take you seriously.
While option #2 is more desirable than option #1 (since you didnt have to spend $5000 for the first run of 2000 copies) waiting for somebody to discover your book so they will request a printed copy isnt exactly your idea of writing fulfillment.
And, with option #3, there aint no hope of getting your book recognized by magazine reviewers and getting publicity that way nobody takes a self published author seriously.
THE BY-PASSABLE MIDDLE MAN
Another AH HAH (or is it Eureka?)
You spend a few weeks in frustration, with or without writers block, as you contemplate the madness and unfairness of the publishing world until...
You discover you can by-pass the middle man...
You discover you can publish ... and sell ... on the Internet!
Dancing around your computer with joy, you realize that the Internet allows you to dump all New York editors and agents. They no longer control your destiny. Whether or not your book sells and is read is now ENTIRELY UP TO YOU.
YOU CAN GO DIRECTLY TO THE PUBLIC
For copywriters people who write advertising copy it means you can "write copy without a client". You dont have to cold call 300 direct marketing advertising companies in the hope of finding somebody who will let you write your copy on speculation (write it, send it to them, and hope they like it well enough to buy it)
Only to find that they actually didn't reject it they stole it.
You can write the copy and put it directly in front of the public, who will then buy what you have to sell.
Or can you?
When You make this discovery you are ready for your trip Into the Informational Marketing Swamp. Well start our journey in Part 2 of this series |