The Book Business Is A Business First

Today’s guest,  W. Terry Whalin is a former literary agent and former magazine editor. Also, he has been a book acquisitions editor for over five years. The acquisitions editor is the first person to read the submissions to a publishing house then champions the author’s project in front of a room of publishing executives. Terry knows the inside scoop on what publishers want in a book proposal. To help writers, he has created 12-lesson online course called Write A Book Proposal.

In today’s article, he reveals his experience as an insider in the traditional publishing world.

If you’re going the self-publishing route, you can learn how regular publishers do it so you have an idea on how to run your own publishing venture.

Here’s Terry’s article…

Shocking News To Authors: The Book Business Is A Business First

by W. Terry Whalin

Before I began working inside a book publishing house, I had written more than 50 nonfiction books, ranging from children’s to adult books. I had never self-published a book and always worked through traditional publishers. However, I was unaware of the financial production numbers for nonfiction books and I found it shocking—and something critical for potential authors to understand. The author never sees these figures for their books as the publisher doesn’t reveal them throughout the contract negotiation process. A publisher will produce these financial calculations as simply a part of good business practices.  As an author, understanding this helped me see publishing as a business. Authors have huge amounts of time and emotional investment in their words. When I saw these production numbers, I understood that the publisher, not the author, has the largest out-of-pocket cash investment in a book.

Inside the publisher, the editor will gather a sales projection about how many copies the sales department believes they can sell of your title the first year. That sales figure will be used to calculate the production costs of ink, paper and binding for various amounts of printing (5,000, 10,000 or 15,000 copies). As the initial print number is raised, the cost per book decreases. You may ask, So why not print a large volume each time? The answer is, if the publisher prints a large number of copies, then he has to store those copies in their warehouse (read cost and expense), plus make sure they actually sell those copies within a year’s timeframe. The cost of tying up financial resources in storing and warehousing books that aren’t selling is large. Also the federal government taxes publishers on each copy in storage. These tax rules have forced publishers to think long and hard about how many copies of each book to print.

Inside my former publisher, we calculated the overall printing details of the book (paperback with general publishing look or hardcover with jacket) and the number of books to print before offering a book contract. In short, publishers pour a great deal of work into their books and financial projections before they call you and offer a nonfiction book contract. Understanding this process helps you see some of the reasons it takes such a long time for an author to receive a publishing contract

Often the publisher returns to an author with whom they have already published a book. If the publisher takes a second or third book from the same author, they are investing in that author’s career and trying to build that author’s audience and market. If the author’s books are selling well, then the publisher will be eager for another project. Each week, publishers monitor sales numbers on their books to see if particular authors merit another book contract.

Many writers focus only on the creative aspects of writing a book and getting it published, but the executives inside a publishing house are business people who want to sell books and turn a profit at the end of the day. It’s a delicate balance between creating the best possible product and assuring that each product has the best opportunity to sell into the market and reach the target audience.

 

________________________________________

W. Terry Whalin, a writer and publisher lives in Scottsdale, Arizona. A former acquisitions editor, former magazine editor and former literary agent, Terry has written more than 60 nonfiction books including Jumpstart Your Publishing Dreams. To help writers, he has created 12-lesson online course called Write A Book Proposal.

 

Leave A Reply (9 comments So Far)

  • Rosewhitel

    Isn’t it the case that most’ tradional’ publlishers are now using PRINT ON DEMAND via e.g. Lightning Source. As such there are no expensive inventories to stock.

  • http://www.AuthorBestseller.com Trissa Tismal

    Print on Demand will increase the costs for traditional publishers and decrease profits. I’ve never heard of a traditional publisher who does that. It wouldn’t make sense for them especially if they’ve carefully selected a book and expect it to sell.

  • Tish

    This was very enlightening.

  • http://www.AuthorBestseller.com Trissa Tismal

    Glad to know that, Tish! Good luck on your book!

  • Jurgen Wolff

    We authors love to create content, but the reality is that we need a balance of (at least) 50/50 with marketing what we write, and that’s true whether it’s traditionally published or self-published. The trick is to find ways of marketing that are as creative as your writing.

  • http://www.AuthorBestseller.com Trissa Tismal

    Right on, Jurgen! “The trick is to find ways of marketing that are as creative as your writing.”

    The only thing I’d say different is that to be a bestseller, it should be 10% writing/publishing, 90% marketing.

  • Philip G. Rochford

    Useful information for authors; get the inside story.

  • AscensionForYou

    Certainly a take on how the publishers really feel…in a nice gentle informative piece by TW here. Many thanks for sharing Trissa.  Nb I am about to have a properly coordinated book launch / marketing campaign for my end Dec release of I am I: The In-Dweller of your Heart.
    I know that ideally i should have started a few months ago but for my first 2 books i had no other exposure at all and found it quite frustrating…so fingers crossed it will be better this time!
    ‘Write On’ everyone. :) )   Dave AscensionForYou

  • http://www.AuthorBestseller.com Trissa Tismal

    Good luck on your new book Dave! If you’d like help in making it a bestseller, let me know :)

Get Your FREE EntreprenAuthor Success Articles Here. ($97 Value.)

Will you be America’s NEXT BESTSELLER?

Welcome EntreprenAUTHORS!

Our mission is to help make your book a bestseller so you can boost your brand recognition and skyrocket your income.

Contact us today and make Your Book a Bestseller on Barnes & Noble, Amazon and New York Times.

Gallery

rhonda-britten ali-brown joe-thiesman trissa-tismal-red-carpet Billy Zane Marianne Williamson