Can We All Get Along? Part 1: In Defense of Publishers
Independent publishing is often presented as an alternative to traditional publishing. Either/or. Pick a side. Well, no. I don't wanna, and you can't make me. Nyah. I see merit in both, so I'm devoting a post to each "side." Here's the first one.
- multiple editing rounds
- electronic formatting
- print formatting, layout and design
- graphic design
- product design (aka blurb, tagline & brand creation)
- distribution & followup with retailers
Those things are all expensive. Really, really expensive, both in time invested and in materials costs. Most of them also require expertise that takes years of experience to accumulate. Few publishers in the science-fiction/fantasy market currently offer much in the way of advances or marketing to an unknown author, but that's only the frosting on what a publisher does, not the delicious cake. Yes, we independents can do it all ourselves or find others to provide services in areas where we lack skill but:
- Time spent on production and distribution is time not spent writing. A lot of energy has to be diverted from creative efforts, either in the DIY sense, or by acting as a book general contractor, coordinating and monitoring the efforts of hired experts. Some people thrive on having a big collection of hats to wear. I am not one of them. I would rather write stories. Or play on my blog. Or weed in the garden.
- Did I mention EXPENSIVE? Publishers (good ones) invest in their authors up front. They cover the expenses most indie authors aren't willing or able to pay as a cost of doing business. And they have a vested interest in making their authors look good. We indies only ruin our own reputations if we produce a bad book. The publisher is risking the future success of all their investments every time. That's a tremendous risk for any business.
- The market is rife with predatory service providers who charge an arm and a leg for awful results. It's hard to swim through the sheer number of sharks in the ocean to find a helpful and affordable dolphin. They look so similar. That research takes up time too.
- All the errors, the rough spots, the flaws in a cobbled-together book created in a DIY process...let me be blunt: they make most indie-published books ugly. I can spot print production issues from across the room. More gaffes jump at me soon as I open a cover or click on "Look Inside." (There are stunning exceptions to this, yes. They are exceptions.) Pre-made or budget-bought covers created by people without design skills, inadequate copy-edits, blurbs that don't spark: these all detract from a book's appeal. I will be the first to admit my writing is not as polished as if it went through a publishing-house edit/proof buffing. My covers and blurbs would benefit from the eyes and minds of specialists too. Some readers do not care. Many, many, many more do. Most of us cannot articulate why we don't click "buy." Or we chalk up our disinterest to the wrong causes. Read "Why We Buy" by Paco Underhill. Unnoticed details add up fast.
- I loathe the arrogance of boilerplate editorial rejections, but I understand it. Fact: the vast majority of the writing population produces some awful dreck from a publishing perspective. Traditional publishers aren't hung up on a belief that all indie authors suck. They believe the vast majority of ALL writers suck. Reading slush piles for a week will turn even the most optimistic Pollyanna into a believer on that point. Truly. The better-than-thou attitude isn't a personal insult. It's the weary burnout suffered by people who see the worst words humanity has to offer on a daily basis. There's a lot of ungrammatical drivel out there for sale. Some of them become bestseller indie books. That doesn't make the writing any better, not in any universal sense.
I would give my eye teeth to have a publishing contract so I could leave all the tedious production & distribution crap to someone else. I'm not willing to dive into the submissions process, but I won't pretend what I'm doing is inherently better.
It doesn't have to be like this. |