3 Critical Book
Publishing Mistakes Authors Make... And How You Can Avoid Them!
I want to share three book
publishing mistakes authors make because I’ve seen
and dealt with many people who have these misconceptions and
I can dispel them early on in your writing
career.
Perhaps you won’t have to make some of the
same mistakes that I, some of our authors, and many other
people have made concerning book
publishing.
The first mistake that I want to share
about book publishing is that a book is a book and not
a product.
Many authors don’t approach their book as
though it’s a product that they are trying to sell to
customers. So what happens is they write a book that they
feel good about but haven’t done any market research to see
how other authors in their genre have approached the
topic.
I have talked with many authors who want to
write a book all about themselves. They don’t want to share
anything or formulate their experiences into lessons for the
audience, they just want to write about their experiences
and hope that people will care to read
them.
Nobody cares about our personal experiences
unless they are related to some greater principle or idea
that we are trying to prove. I can’t just write about all
the things that I think in a day and all of the memories
that I’ve had and expect to sell a ton of books. That’s what
blogs are for.
If you want to write a book, then your book
has to accomplish a goal or fill a need. That’s what book
publishing is about; filling people’s need for valuable
information to their lives.
So you must decide what the solution is
that your book provides and use your personal experiences to
prove and bring life to that point. This is the proper
approach to sharing your personal information, life history,
and past experiences.
The second mistake or misconception people
make about book publishing is that people think that just
writing the book will make them successful, without
marketing.
In other words, “If I write it, they will
come.” You may sell a few dozen books that way but many
authors wake up to the rude awakening that just writing a
great book isn’t enough to reach a target audience; the book
must be marketed and promoted for at least two
years.
As a matter of fact, you shouldn’t write on
a subject that you don’t want to commit to promoting for at
least two years.
Before you even write your book you want to
consider your desire to market that book. For instance, you
may be a politician by profession but want to write a book
on investment principles. This may be a real interest for
you but you would do better by writing a book on the
political landscape on.
America or something related to your
career. You would be able to commit more time and money to
marketing a book that you earned a living in because it may
boost your current career.
The third misconception about book
publishing that I want to mention here is that your book
will be an overnight success. I’ve had to sit and listen to
the revolutionary book ideas of some of the strangest people
too many times!
They claim that they will be the biggest
thing since Stephen King…a bigger thing than Stephen! These
people claim that they’re going to dethrone J.K Rowland and
make my publishing company rich with their
book.
Every book has the potential to be the
greatest selling book of all time but that will make the
author the greatest book salesperson of all time. The
success of any book is not based on how great or
revolutionary the book is, it’s based on how passionately
and persistently the author markets that
book.
The potential to have a huge selling book
is in the hands of its writer. You have to commit to the
book; you have to want to be successful; you need drive and
perseverance to become successful.
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