‘Golden age’ of self-publishing for indie authors ‘no longer strictly choosing one route or the other’ ‘Golden age’ of self-publishing for indie authors ‘no longer strictly choosing one route or the other’
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Hot Q: is the relationship between tradpub and indie publishing is analogous to, "Make your song go viral on TikTok and get a million followers; then I'll stoop down to grant you a record deal"?‘Golden age’ of self-publishing for indie authors ‘no longer strictly choosing one route or the other’ ‘Golden age’ of self-publishing for indie authors ‘no longer strictly choosing one route or the other’
Hot Q: is the relationship between tradpub and indie publishing is analogous to, "Make your song go viral on TikTok and get a million followers; then I'll stoop down to grant you a record deal"?
Because markets CAN prove an artist before a deal is struck, it makes a great deal of business sense to let them. Never take on more risk as a business than you need to.
Many would gladly put themselves in the slow and impersonal tradpub pipeline if they don't have to put out newsletters and pay for ads and pay for line editing and be on social, and, and, and.
Yeah, this is becoming the norm unless you're a big name.I don't know if it's true, but I keep hearing that traditionally published authors have to do a lot of marketing themselves. Including buying ads on Amazon.
If that's true, it's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. They need to negotiate a better deal with a more reputable publisher.I don't know if it's true, but I keep hearing that traditionally published authors have to do a lot of marketing themselves. Including buying ads on Amazon.
Yes. But all publishers offer the same deal unfortunately. Not much wriggle room for negotiationIf that's true, it's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. They need to negotiate a better deal with a more reputable publisher.
I know you're expected to do interviews and push on social and stuff, but buying your own ads on Amazon for tradpub? Pardon my incredulity. Perhaps it was a hybrid publishing deal?Yes. But all publishers offer the same deal unfortunately. Not much wriggle room for negotiation
You get very little of the 'marketing budget' if you are not a big name. I doubt they expect you to pay for your own ads, but if you want to get anywhere it's probably the thing to do.but buying your own ads on Amazon for tradpub?
Some predictions are trad publishing doesnt really survive. With Biden out of office, trustbusting is no longer on the radar. Tho rechnically 5 publishers still exist, Simon and Schuster will be swallowed up by some big media concern in the near future and then there will be 4.Yes, that stuff is in there about dissatisfied trad published authors going indie. But my question is about how tradpub survives this new landscape long term. The existence of a vital indie pub scape must be leveraged in their favor. That is how businesses adapt.
Like I said, companies do not take on more risk than they must. Letting markets prove authors before offering them deals or representation could be a profitable strategy alongside accepting unpublished manuscripts.
Indie publishing is hard. It's hard to get noticed and it's hard to sell. Many would gladly put themselves in the slow and impersonal tradpub pipeline if they don't have to put out newsletters and pay for ads and pay for line editing and be on social, and, and, and. The margins are much higher on indie pub, but trad pub has bookstores, big marketing budgets, relationships with critics. If you really don't like the business side, even the prospect of making the same net profit off your projects as you did being indie could be attractive enough to switch. ![]()