They’re
what publishers will ask.
Would
you like a large publisher to say yes to your book proposal?
To
increase the likelihood, make sure you can say yes to most of these
diagnostic questions, recently provided by an acquisitions editor for
a larger Christian publishing house:
“I
could love the writing, but if the author platform doesn’t look
promising, I couldn’t take it to our publishing committee. We’re
using this list with all agents and non-represented authors now.
• What
is the author’s sales history? (If
the author has been previously published, we need to know houses and
numbers and years of publication, as well as the sales numbers being
specifically broken out with hard goods to indicate whether trade or
mass, and with e-books, is any of the total promotionally priced or
free?)
• Does
the author have a website?
• Does
the author blog? How often?
• Does
the author regularly guest blog? Where?
How often?
• Does
the author have a newsletter? How often
does it come out?
• What
are the author’s numbers for social media?
(Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram)
• Is
there anything else we should know
about what the author does to raise his or her discoverability
quotient?
• Are
there any known names who would be
willing to promote the author’s work through endorsements,
recommendations, reviews, etc.?"
As
you prepare your next proposal, or consider strengthening your
platform, these are all questions you can’t afford to ignore. For
your sake, and for all the audience you’d like to reach, I hope you
can say yes to most--and cite specific numbers.
2 comments:
Great list and good post Andy :-) This is a true indicator of what authors are up against.
This is a helpful post. Thank you.
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