My #1 top tip for authors who are approaching agents and publishers is:
Present yourself as a professional author.
That means a one-page query letter (sometimes 1.5 pages but that’s unusual).
And, for nonfiction, a book proposal with sample chapters.
For fiction, authors should create a two-page (single-spaced) synopsis and a half-page or 1 page biography at a minimum. Also consider generating a two-page (single-spaced) marketing opportunities sheet. This should provide ideas that you have for marketing the book yourself, all things that can be done while the publisher markets to bookstores.
Tag Archives: book publishers
Jobs at Literary Publisher for Authors
Anaphora Literary Press is seeking three interns. One will write a book review every week plus possibly get some editorial credits; the second is a design intern for artwork; the third is a marketing intern.
None of the positions pay but they could be a good entry point into publishing for authors who want to make connections.
Full listing here.
Contact Anna Faktorovich,Director
E-mail: director@anaphoraliterary.com
World’s Largest Publishers
If you’re working on academic or professional projects for adults or academic projects for juvenile readers, you’ll want to keep an eye on the top publishers. As of mid-2014, they were:
Pearson
Reed Elsevier
Thomson/Reuters
Wolters Kluwer
Pearson posted $9.33 billion in revenue for 2013. All four held the same positions for 2012.
The largest trade publisher was Random House, with revenues of $3.66 billion in 2013.
McGraw-Hill, which includes McGraw-Hill Global Education Holdings (higher education, professional, and international operations) and McGraw-Hill School Education Holdings (elhi and testing) had revenue of $1.99 billion that year.
Along with Cengage Learning, these publishers accounted for 54% of total revenues generated by the top 50 publishers worldwide.
7 Ways to Make an Agent or Publisher Say Yes!
Traditional publishing is growing again. Sales are up, ebooks have become another channel rather than the death of books, and disruption is creating beneficial changes. Here are 7 ways to make an agent or publisher say, “Yes!” to your manuscript.
1. Write a fantastic manuscript. Tap into your passion and write something that relates to that. You’ll produce a much better manuscript that way.
2. Run the manuscript through beta readers. Use your writer’s group, friends who are readers and writers, or a professional editor to spot those critical flaws you’ve missed because you’re too close to the story.
3. Create a professional query letter (see Dec 18 post for more).
4. Create supporting submission materials. For a nonfiction book, this is a book proposal. For fiction, this means a bio that includes your platform, a synopsis, and an overview of marketing opportunities the author can fulfill. Juvenile fiction and nonfiction needs an author bio as well as an overview of current trends, additional books from the author, and marketing opportunities.
5. Contact the right agent or publisher for your project. Rather than blasting out hundreds of emails, select one agent or publisher every day to contact. You’ll also save yourself time in the long run and eliminate a lot of frustration.
6. Approach agents before you approach publishers. Once you’ve submitted to a publisher, agents generally can’t resubmit on your behalf. A rejection is a rejection in the minds of the publisher. Don’t sink your agent’s ability to represent you to their full network before you even begin. Help an agent say yes by letting them do their job.
7. Keep moving foward. Mention your next project…then stay busy with it while you wait to hear back.