I recently addressed a meeting of the Institute of Management Consultants in NYC. I was asked to present on the comparison between traditional publishing and the emerging practice of self-publishing and print-on-demand. The complete text appears at http://www.yourbookpublisher.com/talk_on_pod.htm
It includes a comparison of the economics and finances of the two methods and tackles the reasons for the traditional publisher's rejection of most manuscripts it considers. It should be useful to authors seeking to choose between the two methods.
I believe that as POD comes to be accepted by author, reader, and distributor as a legitimate way to produce and publish books it will grow more and more away from the appearance of vanity publishing among those POD publishers who are careful to adopt a policy that results in the positive quality of the content of the books they release--that the economies of POD provide the means by which the scope and number of titles made available to the reader will be far greater than now and that this greater number can actually be of higher quality than those which existed before POD.
The concept of an omniscient book editor who screens to discover and provide only the very best is a myth. My talk demonstrates the opposite--that books are chosen based only on their potential for sale in the greatest number. Authors discovered this some time ago and readers too are coming around to this realization in noting how limited their choices are becoming at their local book supermarket. It's a wonderful opportunity for POD to step in and save the day.
I'd love to hear your comments and discuss any questions that may arise. Thanks.
It includes a comparison of the economics and finances of the two methods and tackles the reasons for the traditional publisher's rejection of most manuscripts it considers. It should be useful to authors seeking to choose between the two methods.
I believe that as POD comes to be accepted by author, reader, and distributor as a legitimate way to produce and publish books it will grow more and more away from the appearance of vanity publishing among those POD publishers who are careful to adopt a policy that results in the positive quality of the content of the books they release--that the economies of POD provide the means by which the scope and number of titles made available to the reader will be far greater than now and that this greater number can actually be of higher quality than those which existed before POD.
The concept of an omniscient book editor who screens to discover and provide only the very best is a myth. My talk demonstrates the opposite--that books are chosen based only on their potential for sale in the greatest number. Authors discovered this some time ago and readers too are coming around to this realization in noting how limited their choices are becoming at their local book supermarket. It's a wonderful opportunity for POD to step in and save the day.
I'd love to hear your comments and discuss any questions that may arise. Thanks.