Tips for Authors
Three Rules Of Publishing
Author: Jerry D. Simmons
The business of publishing is old world, mature, and has
changed only incrementally over the past fifty years. One thing that can be said
about publishing is that the biggest companies lead and the rest tend to follow.
This is why little has changed in the way these publishers conduct business. The
biggest are the most stodgy and the result is an industry that continues to
shrink, while technology and the new marketing of the 21st century speed ahead.
Book are published, marketed, sold and distributed the same way
they have been since the birth of the business. Certainly prices have changed
dramatically, shipments are better coordinated, cover designs have evolved,
merchandising has improved, but the basic business rules have not. Today there
are still three general rules that apply to the business of publishing.
Rule number one : Every book is guaranteed to the
bookseller, meaning, if they don't sell at the bookstore, the publisher
guarantees they'll take them back. Returned books are as common place as paper
and ink. Books have always been returnable. There are few if any retailers still
in existence that will purchase newly published non-returnable books. The
fallacy of this is that today, 2008, there are still some publishers that force
their authors to pay several hundred dollars for the right to have their book
considered returnable. Returnable books should be standard for any book
contract. This is a clear example of how some publishers are not fluent in the
ways of the business, and as a result they take advantage and prey on the
pocketbooks of unsuspecting, and uninformed authors.
Rule
number two : The business is about revenue, selling books. However there are two
ways to look at revenue. For the Independent publishers and authors, revenue is
when a book is sold and the money changes hands, that is a sale and represents
the cleanest form of revenue. For the biggest publishers and all the others that
want to compete in the marketplace, revenue is both gross and net. Gross is the
number of copies multiplied by the cover price. This does not account for the
returns that will eventually arrive at the publisher's warehouse. The net price
is what is left after all those books have been returned and counted. The big
companies play with these numbers in a variety of ways and if you plan to
compete in this market, you must be aware of this fact.
Rule
number three : Bookseller real estate is for lease. When you walk into a
bookstore and notice all those wonderful displays with multiple copies of the
bestsellers, then you stroll down the aisles and look at the covers laying face
up on the tables, keep in mind -- this is not accidental. These retailers aren't
doing any favors. All of that space has been leased by the publisher of those
titles for a specified period of time. In fact, virtually all of the floor space
is for lease, if you can afford the price. Typically the front of the store is
the most expensive real estate and the price goes down slightly as you move to
the back of the store. Bottom line, retail space in major retailers, including
bookstores and mass merchants, is for lease.
If you want to
compete in the traditional marketplace, you must keep these three rules in mind:
It's how the business operates.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/writing-articles/three-rules-of-publishing-434766.html
About the Author:
Jerry D. Simmons is the author of WHAT
WRITERS NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PUBLISHING. He is the creator of TIPS for WRITING
from the PUBLISHING INSIDER an eNewsletter that can be found at
WritersReaders.com. He is also the founder of the leading social networking
website for writers, authors and readers Nothing Binding . For comments or
questions you can reach Jerry via email jerry@writersreaders.com .



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