richard harland's writing tips

home good writing habits the elements characters story language getting published

 

 
Getting Published
 

 

Other Getting Published Topics

 

2.Submitting

3.Contracts, Production, Promotion

4.The Writing Life

 


site map

index

 

1. Understanding Publishers

 

(iv) THE SOCIAL DIMENSION

 

It’s true, publishers form a mini-society. They mostly know one another and mingle at the same events—so, naturally, they also compare themselves to one another. Time for some amateur anthropology!

Like everyone else, publishers want to succeed in the eyes of their peers and fellows. Think of the standing you’d achieve by being the publisher who discovered J.K. Rowling! Or, more practically, the standing you can achieve by being responsible for a whole string of successful titles. An ongoing ability to pick winners is probably more impressive than a lucky one-off super-success.

Sales figures matter, obviously, but a publisher who first creates a trend will be more admired than a publisher who cashes in later. Or, a publisher who uncovers a major new talent will gain more respect than a publisher who poaches an established name from another stable (though I bet that has its own satisfactions!). There are more considerations than sales figures alone.

Awards also matter. Some awards do affect sales figures: top awards like the Guardian Fiction Award will get your book into public libraries, for example. Awards for Children’s and YA fiction like the Carnegie and the Costa Children’s Book Award will almost guarantee that school and public libraries around the UK will order in copies. (One copy that loans out to many borrowers isn’t as lucrative as a book that many people actually purchase, but you’ve got to start a reputation somewhere!) With lesser awards, it’s debatable how much they influence the average book-buyer. But they matter to publishers, which means they have to matter to authors too.

Some successes carry more prestige than others. Let’s face it, cookbooks and DIY/self-help books often top the best-seller charts, but they’re don’t have the glamour of fiction! And, within fiction, a ‘quality’ success rates more highly than an ‘exploitation’ success. For farts bookexample, it’s a known fact that bums-and-farts books for kids can sell well, sometimes spectacularly well, yet publishers often look askance at them.

It’s partly a matter of personal reputation, but it’s also a matter of how the publishing house wants to present itself. A shock/horror/porn book might sell very well as a one-off, but what would it do for the reputation of the publisher’s list overall? Publishers can’t afford to trade down the value of their ‘marque’ for the sake of a single smash hit.

 

OTHER UNDERSTANDING PUBLISHERS TOPICS

 

(i) THE ARITHMETIC OF PUBLISHING

(ii) THE NURTURING INSTINCT

(iii) LUCK & TIMING

(v) WHO DOES WHAT

(vi)) SHORT STORY OUTLETS

(vii) UNDERSTANDING SHORT STORY EDITORS

 
 

 

next

   
 
home good writing habits the elements characters story language getting published
 
 
Copyright note: all material on this website is (c) Richard Harland, 2009-10