I’ve been away for quite a while. After trying for nearly a year to get an agent interested in my first novel, Red Mojo Mama, I decided to self-publish it. This turns out to be one of the best decisions I ever made but it’s been quite a learning curve, one that’s not complete by any means.
First, why did I decide to self-publish? It was mainly because I was stuck in waiting mode and couldn’t move on. I realized that there was certainly more than one book in me. At best, I would be completing something and at worst, I wouldn’t sell many copies. Not many copies sounded much better to me than no copies.
To date, I’ve sold about 44 copies. But I’ve barely begun marketing “Red”. I was sidelined by family situations for almost two months. Also, there’s a remarkable statistic – only 1/3 of all books published sell more than 100 copies – which I stumbled across in a book I bought to guide me through the marketing process “Plug Your Book”. As the author, Steve Weber, so aptly points out, with publishing through an established publisher, if your book is slow out of the gate – selling 500 or less – it disappears from their line-up. With self-publishing, you can keep that book online – selling slowly but surely forever.
Going forward, with the new fiction titles I’m working on, I will still try to find an agent and therefore a publisher. But I’ve got a non-fiction book that I’ll be putting online as soon as I can get it revised.
I encourage anyone who just needs to see a book of theirs in print, and feels strongly that this first book is just the beginning AND who has already tried for a significant period of time to interest an agent, to jump in and self-publish it.
1 comment:
I hope to one day self publish art books and mini art magazines... another year yet until I finish university and think about all that! Nevertheless this was an interesting post to read as I have little knowledge of the publishing industry!
Thank you for sharing and I wish you all the best with your books!
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