Self-publishing explained
Self-publishing is the publication of media by its author at their own cost, without the involvement of a publisher. The term usually refers to written media, such as books and magazines, either as an ebook or as a physical copy using print on demand technology. It may also apply to albums, pamphlets, brochures, games, video content, artwork, and zines. Web fiction is also a major medium for self-publishing.
Definitions
Although self-publishing is not a new phenomenon, dating back to the 18th century, it has transformed during the internet age with new technologies and services providing increasing alternatives to traditional publishing, becoming a $1 billion market.[1] However, with the increased ease of publishing and the range of services available, confusion has arisen as to what constitutes self-publishing. In 2022, the Society of Authors and the Writers Guild of Great Britain produced a free downloadable guide to the various distinct types of publishing currently available.[2]
Self publishing vs. hybrid publishing and vanity publishing
In self publishing, authors publish their own book. It is possible for an author to single-handedly carry out the whole process. However increasingly, authors are recognizing that to compete effectively, they need to produce a high quality product, and they are engaging professionals for specific services as needed (such as editors or cover designers).[3] A growing number of companies offer a one-stop shop where an author can source a whole range of services required to self-publish a book (sometimes called "Assisted Self-publishing Providers" or "Self-publishing Service Providers").[4]
Not to be confused with:
- hybrid publishing, (where the publisher and author collaborate and share costs and risks. In return, the author may be required to surrender some control and/or rights in return for the publisher's financial and other contribution) OR
- vanity publishing, (where the author pays for the cost of all services, but also signs a restrictive contract which usually involves surrendering significant rights).
It has been suggested that the best test for whether a company offers "Assisted Self-publishing Services" or "Hybrid/vanity publishing" is to apply a variant of "Yog's Law",[5] which states the following:
- Yog's Law: Money flows toward the writer.
- Self-Publishing Corollary to Yog's Law: While in the process of self-publishing, money and rights are controlled by the writer.
Therefore if a company offers services to the author without claiming any rights, and allows the author to control the entire process, they are assisting the author to self-publish. Whereas if the company takes some rights, and/or takes control of artistic decisions, they are a hybrid publisher or a vanity publisher, depending on the degree of involvement.
History
Early examples
Historically, some authors have chosen to self-publish. Successful examples are John Locke,[6] Jane Austen, Emily Dickinson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Martin Luther, Marcel Proust, Derek Walcott, and Walt Whitman. In 1759, British satirist Laurence Sterne self-published the first two volumes of Tristram Shandy. In 1908, Ezra Pound sold A Lume Spento for six pence each. Franklin Hiram King's book Farmers of Forty Centuries was self-published in 1911, and was subsequently published commercially. In 1931, Irma S. Rombauer, the author of The Joy of Cooking paid a local printing company to print 3000 copies; the Bobbs-Merrill Company acquired the rights, and since then the book has sold over 18 million copies. In 1941, writer Virginia Woolf chose to self-publish her final novel Between the Acts on her Hogarth Press, in effect starting her own press.[7] Self-publication was also known in music: Joseph Haydn self-published his oratorio The Creation in 1800.[8]
Stigma
Traditional publishers are extremely selective in what they publish, and reject most of the manuscripts submitted to them.[9] In spite of that rigorous selection, they then assign an editor to polish the work even further, a proof-reader to check for errors and a designer to produce the cover.[10] It can be challenging for a self-publishing author to produce a book to traditional professional standards.
Before the advent of the internet and POD (Print on Demand), most self-publishing authors had to resort to a vanity press, which was very costly and acted as a barrier to publication. Now, ebooks can be published at virtually no cost and the market has been flooded with poorly produced books. Some estimate that as much as 70% of published ebooks are so bad, they are unreadable.[11]
However, some self-published authors are now taking a professional approach, using services like critique groups, beta readers, professional editors and designers to polish their work to a professional standard equivalent to traditional publishing. Such authors are achieving success equivalent to traditionally published writers, lending respectability to self-publishing.[12]
Self-publishing is also common among editors of academic journals. The study showed that a quarter of them publish 10% of their own articles in the same journals they edit (which is problematic for ethical reasons).[13]
Technological changes
A huge impetus to self-publishing has been rapid advances in technology. Print-On-Demand (or POD) technology, which became available in the mid-1990s,[14] makes it possible for a book to be printed after an order has been placed, so there are no costs for storing inventory. Further, the Internet provides access to global distribution channels via online retailers, so a self-published book can be instantly available to book buyers worldwide. Advances in e-book readers and tablet computers have improved readability, making ebooks more popular.[15]
Amazon's introduction of the Kindle and its self-publishing platform, Kindle Direct Publishing or KDP, in 2007 has been described as a tipping point in self-publishing, which "opened the floodgates" for self-publishing authors.
The Espresso Book Machine (a POD device) was first demonstrated at the New York Public Library in 2007. This machine prints, collates, covers, and binds a single book. It is in libraries and bookstores throughout the world, and it can make copies of out-of-print editions. Small bookstores sometimes use it to compete with large bookstore chains. It works by taking two pdf files, one for the text and one for the cover, and then prints an entire paperback book in a matter of minutes, which then drops down a chute.[16]
The Library Journal and Biblioboard worked together to create a self-publishing platform called Self-e in which authors submitted books online which were made available to readers. These books are reviewed by Library Journal, and the best ones are published nationwide; authors do not make money this way but it serves as a marketing tool.[17]
Advantages of self-publishing
- Speed. In traditional publishing, an author must first find an agent, then the agent must find a publisher, then it may take a year or more for the book to go through editing and be allocated a 'slot' in the publisher's calendar. With self-publishing, it is possible to release a book within a few weeks after it is finished.[18]
- No start-up costs. It costs nothing to upload a book to most publishing platforms, and print copies do not have to be paid for until a customer orders.
- Artistic control. A traditional publisher may demand changes to meet market demands.
- Control on pricing. The author decides the price and can change it at any point of time.[19]
- A greater share of royalties. Self-published authors may earn four to five times more per unit than if an author works with a traditional publisher,[20] sometimes 70 percent of the sale price.
- Pitch books straight to the readers. There is no intermediary censoring what might be shown to the public. The route to readers is more direct.
Disadvantages of self-publishing
- Stigma. Self-published books still have to combat prejudice due to the lack of gatekeepers to ensure quality.
- No physical presence. Traditional publishers distribute their books to high street bookstores on a sale-or-return basis, which is unaffordable for a self-published author, and libraries routinely order from the publisher's catalogues.
- No advance. Traditional publishers will usually pay an advance, so the author receives some payment for the book even if it is unsuccessful.
- No free support. Traditional publishers pay all the costs associated with producing the book, and will provide an editor and cover designer at their expense.
- Cost. The obvious corollary of the above is that the self-published author must pay all their own expenses. Though it is possible to publish a book free of charge, marketing and promotion are expensive.[21]
- Marketing and promotion are time-consuming and costly. Marketing is a task that many authors are not skilled at. UK author Rachel Abbott was working "14-hour days" promoting her book Only the Innocent; while she eventually made it to the UK Kindle bestseller chart, she still had difficulty getting the publishing world to take her book seriously.[22] Another writer, Ros Barber, thinks self-publishing is a "terrible idea for serious novelists" since the requirements of marketing and promoting a book will prevent one from writing, and he continues to recommend the traditional approach.[23]
Publishing platforms
In order to be purchased by a customer, the completed book must be hosted on a publishing platform. Amazon's Kindle is the largest of these but there are others.
Apple
Apple sells books via its App Store which is a digital distribution platform for its mobile apps on its iOS operating system. Apps can be downloaded to its devices such as the iPhone, the iPod Touch handheld computer, and the iPad. Apple pays authors 70 percent of its proceeds at its Apple iBookstore where it sells iBooks.
Barnes and Noble
Barnes & Noble pays 65 percent of the list price of e-books purchased through its online store called Pubit.
IngramSpark
IngramSpark lets authors publish digital, hardback and paperback editions of their books. It distributes books to most online bookstores. Bricks-and-mortar stores can also order books from IngramSpark at wholesale prices for sale in their own venues. It is run by Ingram Content Group.
Kindle Direct Publishing
Kindle Direct Publishing or KDP is Amazon's e-book publishing unit (see main article)
Kobo
Kobo is a Canadian company which sells e-books, audiobooks, e-readers and tablet computers which originated as a cloud e-reading service.
Lulu
Lulu is an online print-on-demand, self-publishing and distribution platform.
GmbH[24] BoD (2001; since 1997 as Libri[25] GmbH),[26] is the "original" in self-publishing.[27] [28] [29] [30]
Scribd
Scribd is an open publishing platform which features a digital library, an e-book and audiobook subscription service.
Smashwords
Smashwords is a California-based company founded by Mark Coker which allows authors and independent publishers to upload their manuscripts electronically to the Smashwords service, which then converts them into multiple e-book formats which can be read on various devices.
Web fiction
A major development in this century has been the growth of web fiction. A common type is the web serial. Unlike most modern novels, web fiction novels are frequently published in parts over time. Web fiction is especially popular in China, with revenues topping US$2.5 billion,[31] as well as in South Korea. Online literature in China plays a much more important role than in the United States and the rest of the world.[32] Most books are available online, where the most popular novels find millions of readers. They cost an average of 2 CNY, or roughly a tenth of the average price of a printed book.[33] [34] Shanda Literature Ltd. is an online publishing company that claims to publish 8,000 Chinese literary works daily. Joara is S. Korea's largest web novel platform with 1.1 million members, 140,000 writers, an average of 2,400 serials per day and 420,000 works.[35] Joara's users have almost the same gender ratio, and both fantasy and romance genres are popular.
Self-published bestsellers
While most self-published books do not make much money,[36] there are self-published authors who have achieved success, particularly in the early years of online self-publishing.[37] The number of authors who had sold more than one million e-books on Amazon from 2011 to 2016 was 40, according to one estimate.[38]
- Fifty Shades of Grey by E. L. James was originally published online as Twilight fan-fiction before the author decided to self-publish it as an e-book and print on demand.[39]
- The science fiction novel The Martian, by Andy Weir, was originally released as chapters on his personal blog, and then self-published as an eBook in 2011.[40] The rights were purchased by Crown Publishing which re-released it in 2014; the novel went on to become a bestseller and then a major motion picture starring Matt Damon.[41] [42]
- Blogger Alan Sepinwall's self-published book The Revolution Was Televised became an instant hit, winning a prominent review within two weeks of publication by critic Michiko Kakutani in The New York Times.[43] Sepinwall hired an editor and spent roughly $2,500 on services to get his book ready for publication.
- Minnesota social worker Amanda Hocking uploaded several books in 2010 and sold a few dozen copies. She published several more manuscripts and within a few months was making enough money to quit her daytime job.[44] She later won a deal with Macmillan publishers, and went to being a millionaire in a year. She sold her series to St. Martin's Press in 2011 for two million dollars.
- Swedish author Carl-Johan Forssen Ehrlin wrote a book in 2010 which helped get children to go to sleep; his The Rabbit Who Wants to Fall Asleep title featured amateurish illustrations with "clunky prose" and a monotonous storyline, but parents bought it for the catchy subtitle of "A new way of getting children to sleep".[45] He released it on CreateSpace and it became a bestseller.
- Erotic romance author Meredith Wild sold 1.4 million digital and print copies of her books, and founded her own publishing company called Waterhouse Press; she founded the firm in part because she felt that her novels were "not being taken seriously" as an indie author. An advantage of having her own imprint is that it is easier to get books into chainstores and big-box retailers.
- The breakout hit Wool by Hugh Howey was self-published originally and garnered more than a million dollars in royalty monies, and has generated over 5000 Amazon reviews.[46]
- James Altucher's Choose Yourself (2013) sold 44,294 copies in its first month, debuted at No. 1 on Amazon's top non-fiction list, and was a Wall Street Journal bestseller.[47]
- Victoria Knowles achieved notoriety in July 2014 when her self-published book The PA reached the number one spot in the iTunes chart for paid books.[48]
- Matthew Reilly's self-published Contest, the first of his action-thriller novels, in 1996.[49]
See also
Notes and References
- Jennifer Alsever, Fortune magazine, 30 December 2016, The Kindle Effect, Retrieved 9 November 2017, "...has become a $1 billion industry..."
- Web site: News The Society of Authors . 2022-12-22 . societyofauthors.org.
- Web site: 2013-05-15 . The Real Costs of Self-Publishing a Book . 2022-12-23 . MediaShift . en.
- Web site: 2022-08-28 . Self-publishing, Hybrid & Vanity Presses: A Simple Guide . 2022-12-22 . en-GB.
- Web site: 2014-06-20 . Yog's Law and Self-Publishing . 2022-12-22 . Whatever . en-US.
- Web site: Kobo removes all self-published titles. Is this censorship, an overreaction, or just good sense? . CSM . 15 October 2013 . 20 October 2017 . Husna Haq . ...Retailers including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, the UK's WH Smith, and Canada's Kobo have removed problematic self-published titles after the discovery of a slew of pornographic abuse-themed e-books....
- News: Patterson . Christina . 18 August 2012 . How the great writers published themselves . . London . 17 August 2012.
- The Cambridge Companion to Haydn, p. 151
- Web site: Odds Of Being Published . 2022-12-23 . Fiction Writer's Mentor . en-US.
- Web site: 2017-08-07 . What Happens After A Publisher Says 'Yes?' . 2022-12-23 . Writer's Life.org . en-US.
- Web site: 2016-06-08 . Self-publishing's quality problem… . 2022-12-23 . Shannon Turlington . en.
- News: Henn . Steve . 25 July 2014 . Self-Published Authors Make a Living—and Sometimes a Fortune . en . Planet Money . . . 2022-12-23.
- King . Molly M. . 2023 . Self-publishing is common among academic-journal editors . Nature . en . 613 . 7944 . 445–446 . 10.1038/d41586-023-00028-x. 36646870 . 2023Natur.613..445K . 255940296 .
- Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, Self publishing, Retrieved 5 November 2017
- Web site: Alan Finder . 15 August 2012 . The Joys and Hazards of Self-Publishing on the Web . 20 October 2017 . The New York Times . ...'The biggest thing you have against you in trying to sell your book is that people don't know about it,' he said.
- Web site: Writers embrace self-publishing through instant publishing machine . The Oregonian . 11 June 2012 . 20 October 2017 . Associated Press . ...the Espresso Book Machine by on Demand Books debuted in 2006....
- Web site: Jennifer K. Bauer . 12 October 2017 . Publishing? Glad tidings: Aspiring writers, take note: Library is holding Indie Author Day . 20 October 2017 . Lewiston Tribune . ...free self-publishing platform called Self-e, a collaboration between Library Journal and BiblioBoard.... more of a marketing tool.
- Web site: Lea Franczak . 2 December 2014 . Interview: Sarah Grimm, author of 'Midnight Heat' . 20 October 2017 . USA Today . ...tried-and-true formatters, cover artists and editors who don't cost a small fortune... . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20171107004632/http://happyeverafter.usatoday.com/2014/12/02/sarah-grimm-interview-midnight-heat/ . Nov 7, 2017 .
- Web site: 7 Benefits Of Self Publishing A Book . 2020-10-18 . Inside Brain . en-US . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20201127142717/https://insidebrain.in/benefits-of-self-publishing-a-book/ . Nov 27, 2020 . Sep 30, 2020 .
- Web site: All Things Considered . Robert . Siegel . Audie . Cornish . 4 February 2013 . Self-Publishing Now The First Choice For Some Writers . 20 October 2017 . NPR . ...survey found that the number of self-published books in the U.S. has almost tripled in the past six years....
- Web site: The cost of marketing and selling your self-published book. . 2022-12-23 . The Book Adviser . September 20, 2016 . Jaqui . Lane . en-US.
- Web site: Rachel Abbott . 30 March 2016 . 14-hour days, marketing and dealing with snobbery: my life as a self-published bestseller . 20 October 2017 . The Guardian . ... some festival organisers still believe I don't have as much to say about writing and selling books as a traditionally published author, regardless of their popularity....
- Web site: For me, traditional publishing means poverty. But self-publish? No way: Life as a professional writer is financially depressing, and I've often been advised to self-publish. Here's why I won't do it . The Guardian . 21 March 2016 . 20 October 2017 . Ros Barber . ... With Amazon's Kindle and CreateSpace as the major outlets, it continues to put money in the coffers of the company largely responsible for destroying author incomes in the first place....
- Web site: BoD Locations . BoD – Books on Demand GmbH . 22 September 2022.
- Web site: Presse-broschüre . BoD.de . 22 September 2022 . 2022.
- Web site: Presse . BoD.de . Books on Demand GmbH . 22 September 2022.
- News: Stocker . Frank . Die Laienliteraten . 22 September 2022 . . 13 July 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160909014148/http://www.welt.de/print/wams/finanzen/article130093045/Die-Laienliteraten.html . 2016-09-09 . de.
- News: La sélection Renaudot l'a révélé : le boom de l'autoédition en France . 22 September 2022 . . 26 September 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201031204816/https://www.francetvinfo.fr/culture/livres/la-selection-renaudot-l-a-revele-le-boom-de-l-autoedition-en-france_3375667.html . 2020-10-31 . fr-FR.
- News: Toussaint . Benoit . World's biggest book fair explores self-publishing trend . 22 September 2022 . . en.
- Web site: An idea that changed the publishing world . Hamburg News . 22 September 2022 . en.
- Web site: Cheung . Rachel . China's online publishing industry – where fortune favours the few, and sometimes the undeserving . South China Morning Post . 19 June 2020 . 6 May 2018.
- Web site: Top Ten Internet Languages in the World – Internet Statistics.
- http://www.accu.or.jp/appreb/02/02-02/02-02country/02chi.html Isabel Xiang, "Chinese Popular Author Eyes Profits Online", in: APPREB (December 2008)
- Michel Hockx, in: Cambridge History of Chinese Literature, 2010; Martin Woesler, in: European Journal of Sinology (2010) 88–97
- 승환. 이. 웹출판의 발전과 과제(The Development and Tasks of Web Publication). 2020-10-30. scholar.dkyobobook.co.kr. 10.21732/skps.2017.78.97.
- Web site: O . David . 2020-02-15 . Why Most Self Published Authors Make Less Than $1,000 Per Year . 2022-12-23 . Medium . en.
- Web site: Steve Henn . 25 July 2014 . Self-Published Authors Make A Living – And Sometimes A Fortune . 20 October 2017 . NPR . ...Five years ago, printing your own book was stigmatized and was seen as a mark of failure....
- Web site: Alexandra Alter . 30 January 2016 . Meredith Wild, a Self-Publisher Making an Imprint . 20 October 2017 . NYT . ...the ones who are very successful at it are making a lot of money, which ... can be hard to match with the traditional publishing royalty structure....
- Web site: Balson, Ronald H. . 8 October 2013 . Bestseller Success Stories that Started Out as Self-Published Books . 22 July 2015 . . In 1931, Irma Rombauer wrote 'The Joy of Cooking,' with her daughter....
- Web site: The surprising story of how Andy Weir's self-published book The Martian topped best seller lists and got a movie deal . 28 January 2017 . Businessinsider.com.
- Web site: The surprising story of how Andy Weir's self-published book 'The Martian' topped best seller lists and got a movie deal. Businessinsider.com. 28 January 2017.
- Web site: The Martian (Book). EW.com. 28 January 2017.
- Web site: LYNN NEARY . 19 December 2012 . Self-Publishing: No Longer Just a Vanity Project . 20 October 2017 . NPR . ...They used to call it the 'vanity press,' and the phrase itself spoke volumes....
- Web site: Jeremy Greenfield . 29 November 2013 . Companies book profits from self-publishing . 20 October 2017 . USA Today . "… According to Smashwords … the best-selling 1 % of titles net half the sales….".
- Web site: Carl-Johan Forssen Ehrlin, a Role Model for Self-Publishing . NYT . 14 October 2015 . 20 October 2017 . ....In 2010, Carl-Johan Forssen Ehrlin, a Swedish self-help author and life coach, self-published his first children's book, 'The Rabbit Who Wants to Fall Asleep'.
- Web site: Sci-Fi's Underground Hit: Authors are snubbing publishers and insisting on keeping e-book rights. How one novelist made more than $1 million before his book hit stores. . WSJ . 14 March 2013 . 20 October 2017 . Alexandra Alter . ...Hugh Howey's postapocalyptic thriller 'Wool' has sold more than half a million copies....
- Web site: How To Self-Publish A Bestseller: Publishing 3.0. 21 July 2013 .
- News: To her, PA means personal assassin. https://web.archive.org/web/20150709222417/http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/newsreview/features/article1436183.ece. dead. 9 July 2015. The Sunday Times. July 2014.
- The Other Side . 24 January 2017 . Australian Story . Australian Story . Australian Broadcasting Corporation . ABC Television . 3 February 2014 . Program Transcript . http://www.abc.net.au/austory/content/2012/s3937096.htm .