How I Work as your Book Coach

I work with small business clients who want ongoing coaching to get their book in salable form, to get it finished and published so they can make the world a better place, become known as the readers' savvy friend, and make enough money to live their life fully to take a yearly vacation or have enough for their children's college education. Depending on the number of sessions, I work with busy people who can only schedule two meetings a month for four or more months or professionals and corporate people who want unlimited assistance either by phone, email or mail for a longer period such as five to ten months. Let me help you manifest your book dream!
The Book Coach Says: A Monthly Column of Book Marketing Advice
This month: How Three Publishing Myths Kill the Author
Agents and publishing houses have their best interests at heart, not the author's. Save yourself from headaches, disappointments, and money down the drain. Become your own independent publisher and produce your book faster and cheaper. All you need is a little help from professionals.Myth: You need an agent or big publishing house to market your book and make big money.
Since big publishers don't look at unknown authors, now is the time to look at what they can do for you. Dan Poynter, self-publishing guru, says that if a publisher can't sell four times as many books as you can, you're better off selling it yourself. Self-publish first because it acts as a test market for your book. If it sells well (over 10,000 in a year), publishers may be interested in your book.
Traditional publishers and agents accept only 1 or 2 percent of authors' submissions, and even if you are one of the "chosen" you may not make much money after printing, bookstore, distributor, wholesaler and other expenses -- probably $2 on a $14 book. Yes, you get an advance, but your sales must meet that and more. And after the initial book tour, the trainee marketing person is on to the next new author. Then, your books disappear from the bookstore shelf unless you, personally, devote a lot of time to marketing them.
Book publishing is a new game today. Think self-publishing, where the profits are all yours. Thanks to Dan Poynter of the Self Publishing Manual for giving us permission to do part of the task ourselves. If you self-publish and decide to print, you need to print only the copies you need (5-500) with the new technology Print on Demand (POD). Even better is Print Quantity Needed (PQN) such as Deharts.com offers. No more unsold cartons of books in your closets or garage. You print as you go, leaving enough cash flow to market your book splendidly.
Myth: To be a respected author, you must invest thousands of hours of time on your full-length book.
The reality is that people today want concise and useful information. You don't have to write a 200-page book to be a real author. Remember The One-Minute Manager and The One-Minute Salesperson? Around one hundred pages. People want information fast and convenient. Create short information products that are between 20 and 99 pages you can sell online, even if you don't have your own website.
If you choose to print your book with Print Quantity Needed (PQN), your perfect bound books will look as good as any book on the bookstore shelves.
Myth: Authors must spend a lot of money to publish themselves.
The printing costs for 1500 copies of a 160-page book might cost $3000, about $2 a unit. Small runs cost even more per unit. That's a lot of cash for anyone to put out all at once, and it's not worth it to many of us to use our home equity or life savings to finance our book. The answer is a small run with Print on Demand (POD) where you can print from 100 to 500 for around $2.40 for 160 pages. Without the high inventory, you can maintain a comfortable cash flow to spend on promotion, the most important part of your book adventure.
You save even more money if you don't print your book. Book publishing is going Internet. You can write small books in less time, market them easily and inexpensively on the Web, and reap profits sooner. Try an e-book. It can be downloaded, it takes no printing costs because your buyer prints or downloads it. You don't even have to have the whole book finished to sell it. Just include your table of contents at the end of each chapter and present it as an e-serial book.
As a book coach, I am an authors' advocate and want you to make money. Going traditional doesn't work. Give ePublishing a chance.
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Judy Cullins works with small business-people who want to write a book that sells well, markets their business, and make a difference in people’s lives. Judy gives 70 programs a year and offers teleclasses and coaching on publishing, online promotion and Web copywriting. Her ten published books include Write your eBook and Print Book at the Same Time and 10 Non-techie Ways to Market your Book Online.
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Judy@bookcoaching.com