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Frequently
Asked Questions
- What is The Writers’
Collective and why are they doing this—and what’s
the catch?
- Oh, yeah? If you’re
so smart, how come you ain’t rich?
- Are you for everyone?
- What's the difference
between TWC and sites like XBooklet and yUniverse?
- Why would writers
of quality choose TWC over traditional publishing?
- But paying “up
front” – isn’t that self-publishing?
- Er… double?
Can you prove that with real numbers? And by the way, as a description
of what TWC does “hybrid” stinks. No offense.
- Thousands of $$$
to publish a book? Why so much when I can go to any online publisher
and read: “POD Setup Fees - $199; Cover Art - $199; Ingram
Catalog Listing - $50.” My book can be published for less
than $500?
- You prefer signing
on already successfully published writers – who doesn’t?
But what about good writers with a good book who are just getting
started; will you accept them?
- I’m already
a publisher, but TWC’s distribution system is better than
mine.
- What’s the
procedure for getting started?
- Hey—how come
you talk in the Royal “We”?
- If this is such
a great idea, why hasn't it been done already?
- What is The
Writers’ Collective and why are they doing this—and
what’s the catch?
That’s three questions, but since they’re all
good we’ll let it slide. The Writers’ Collective
is the first truly new business model for publishing in about
a hundred years. A model based on the premise that until now
there’s been a gap between professional, traditionally
published books that sell in the thousands, and amateurish
subsidy and self-published books that sell in the hundreds
– if at all. TWC was created to fill this gap, to level
the playing field between commercially successful traditional
and self-publishing, and we have, though it’s taken
longer than we thought it would. When you claim you’ve
achieved what the world insists cannot be done, it tends to
be a wee bit skeptical. As for a “catch” –
the only one will be your decision about whether or not to
believe us, though for the record let me say that we’re
not a Collective because we share decision-making (though
we share more than most publishers do), but because we share
the wealth.
Why are we doing
this? Easy. I’m a damn good writer who got tired of
being offered “deals” that were better for the
people offering them than for me, and I decided to find an
alternative that would work for other good writers, too. I
was smart enough, and tenacious enough to figure out a way
to do it.
- Oh, yeah? If
you’re so smart, how come you ain’t rich?
A
question I ponder daily. If you come up with an answer please
send it to L.Grant@writerscollective.com.
Oh, and don’t forget to cc my mother.
- Are you for
everyone?
When
we opened our doors several years ago, we said: “Give
us your tired, your poor, your not-so-humble, yearning to
write free. Yes, anyone. However, I will be as honest with
them as I’m about to be with you.”
We went on for
another three paragraphs, being so painfully honest our fingers
were bruised. Then we discovered that everyone stopped reading
after the word anyone.
This was a problem. One thing about
publishing no one can deny: more books are published than
sold. More writers are published than should be. According
to Publisher’s Weekly, 175,000 new titles were
published in 2003, and 90% of them never earned back their
advance. Thus it is clear that Anyone should probably
keep their day job. The big lie that subsidy as well as vanity
presses perpetuate is that Anyone’s day job is
writing a book. Which brings us to…
- What's the
difference between TWC and sites like XBooklet and yUniverse?
Neither
company (or any of the so-called “POD Publishers”)
will edit your book, insist on a commercial cover or provide
interior design. They will not promote it, actively sell it
(with a paid sales staff) or distribute it. They cannot obtain
mainstream media reviews for your book nor land it on a bookstore
shelf. What can they do? Send it to a printer and keep most
of the profits that accrue by selling it at vastly over-inflated
prices to your nearest and dearest, and to the occasional insomniac
on Amazon at 3 a.m.
Should your manuscript
be selected by TWC for publication (roughly 1 in every 1,000),
it will be professionally edited (at least twice: for content
and for copy, plus proofing), be given a fabulous commercial
cover and interior design, and an index (if non-fiction) created
by a professional indexer. Galleys will be sent to the mainstream
media at least six months prior to publication, and a sales
kit will be created for the paid sales reps of our national
distributor to take to every major bookstore buyer for advance
sales. A top-notch national publicist will be hired to work
on your book’s national campaign, and regular PR updates
will be sent to the sales reps so they can increase sales
once the book is launched. But good as it is, it’s not
the most important question to ask.
- Why would writers
of quality choose TWC over traditional publishing?
Bingo.
What is the real difference between “traditional”
publishing, “subsidy” publishing, and publishing
with The Writers’ Collective?
You’re
about to read a very shocking statement. Minors should exit
the room and writers with weak pens should walk away from
the computer. Now. Just. Walk. Away.
Safe to go on?
Okay then, here it comes:
ALL PUBLISHING
IS SUBSIDY, INCLUDING TRADITIONAL PUBLISHING.
What? Author
subsidizing traditional publisher? Man bites dog? How can
this be? Well, as the great Elaine Benes once declared to
Seinfeld’s Jerry: “Oh, it be.”
A traditional
publisher buys a book, edits it, does pre-press, sends galleys
to reviewers while stoking the sales reps, and loves loves
loves it and the author, while waiting for the great reviews
that will signal the next blockbuster. If those are followed
by happy-dance advance sales, the book “has legs”
and a few bucks will be allocated for PR. If not, no problem;
initial runs are cut by half to cap losses and everyone buys
a new lottery ticket, sure the next one will be a winner.
Everyone but the author that is, who comforts herself with
the fact that she can at least keep the advance, assuming
she hasn’t spent it on hiring a publicist. In this case
the spreadsheet is clear: monetarily at least, the writer
is ahead because the publisher has subsidized her. Of course,
the bad news that comes with the good is a bit of a downer:
her book is officially dead. But what about a successful book?
FOLLOW THE MONEY
Good advice in
politics; even better in publishing. It costs roughly $30,000
to bring out a mid-list book, in terms of pre-press (editing,
cover and interior design), printing/mailing galleys, and
for printing a respectable 10k initial run. Add a $10k average
advance, and the publisher has laid out, or invested, about
$40k. Let’s assume this title is one of the lucky 10%
published in a given year that will pay back its advance,
with a 100,000 copy sale (hard case; $24.95) and an average
20% return. Add the additional costs to print the extra 90k
books, and the publisher is now out of pocket about $182,000.
The author is
ecstatic. For selling 80,000 copies after returns, at 10%
of cover price she’s netted $182,000 – it’s
Cristal time! Oddly enough, it’s the same amount the
publisher spent to produce the book. Poor publisher. Except
of course that the publisher has netted, after those expenses,
royalties, trade discounts, picking, packing and shipping
and paying the sales rep commissions: nearly half a million.
Dollars. That’s right. In this equation the publisher
has recouped its money for all up front risk and expenses
– every penny of it. And that money came directly from the profit
the author could have otherwise reaped had she published the
book herself. In other words, the author paid for the cover
design, the printing and the galleys herself; she just paid
for it over time in the form of low royalties, as if she’d
charged the items on a credit card instead of paying cash
up front. If you’ve ever charged an item on your card
and made minimum payments for it you understand: at the end
of the day your $2500 flat screen HDTV cost you $5000 bucks.
No one has talked
much about this equation or done the spreadsheets to prove
it for several reasons. First, artistes aren’t supposed
to worry their creative little heads about filthy lucre (let
the multi-media conglomerates do that for you, my dear), and
second, until now there hasn’t been a viable alternative.
- But paying
“up front” – isn’t that self-publishing?
Yes.
And everybody knows what that means: A barely literate Neanderthal
scrawls deeply felt, indecipherable prose upon a brown paper
bag with a crayon and proclaims it genius. He sends it to
a vanity press along with a check for $25,000, and in return
a truck pulls up to his garage a month later with 5,000 badly
made books he will use later that winter—and for many
winters to come—to fuel the fireplace. And thus, a cry
went up across the land: THE PARVENUS ARE COMING!
And in a way,
it was true. With self-publishing as it existed before TWC,
every mistake that could be made has been made, like expensive
digital runs (the often misnamed Print-On-Demand or POD) that
lose money on every trade sale. No real distribution (which
means a paid sales team selling the book into the chains for
volume and advance orders), because listed in Baker & Taylor or Ingram
doesn’t count. Add lack of project management, which
means no one standard set for pre-press production. Translation:
non-commercial covers, amateur interior designs; non-professional
editing and indexing, lack of reviews and frankly, a well-deserved
lack of respect. Worse: because self-publishing by definition
means “small,” there was no branding, a large
component of successful pre-sales and mainstream media reviews.
This meant that (unlike a traditional house on the rise)
there was no one imprint under which titles could be brought
in to reap the benefits of a growing reputation for excellence. A reputation
that would enhance every future title published under it.
But every paradigm
has a tipping point, and self-publishing has reached its own.
Neanderthals and vanity presses still exist of course, but
The Writers’ Collective is a new hybrid that matches
the best of what traditional publishers do and offers it to
writers who possess the skills, publishing savvy and titles
that allow them to invest in themselves, and to reap the profit
that once exclusively belonged to members of the Gentleman’s
Club. In fact, when deconstructed, the traditional industry
as we know it today turns out to be little more than an investment
club for books. Publishers purchase, assemble and ship a product
for which they’ve laid out capital, hoping for a return—of
money, not books—on an investment. But since TWC provides
a traditional publishing umbrella as well as a “reputable
brand” for self-published books, successful writers
are beginning to catch on. Why settle for $200,000 royalties
on 80,000 copies when you can net – double.
- Er… double?
Can you prove that with real numbers? And by the way, as a description
of what TWC does “hybrid” stinks. No offense.
None
taken. You’re right, but we’re stumped. We do
everything traditional publishers do—and then some,
since we let writers keep their rights—but we’re
more honest about where the money to pay for the publishing
comes from. We’ve tried “Author-Supported”
but that feels like euphemism, “Co-op” has been
co-opted as a vanity option for some University and small
presses, and we are nothing like 99.9% of all “subsidy”
presses as they exist today. Come up with something better
that means “the best of both worlds” and if we
use it in our FAQ we’ll send you a check for $100 dollars. As for
the numbers…
FOLLOW THE MONEY
II
As a new [insert
a far more apt term here and get a hundred bucks] publisher,
TWC has many advantages over traditional presses, including
being small and nimble. While it can take a traditional publisher
up to a year just to make an offer, TWC can decide on a ms.
in weeks, though we only take on (and please write this down),
fewer than 1 in 1,000 projects (fewer for fiction). And we can launch that manuscript
in a bit less than a year; far faster than the twenty-four
months it’s taking most big houses now. But the most
crucial advantage we have is that we can spread the risk for
every single title we publish among all our authors, while
cutting the work each author would have to do on his own to
bring a book to the commercial marketplace with a reasonable
hope of selling tens of thousands of copies.
Here’s
how it works: TWC has searched for and recruited a top-tier
team of editors, indexers, cover designers, publicists and
offset printers who offer discounts on their services because
of the volume and project management we provide. We are signed
with a major national distributor that provides us with professional
sales reps who sell our titles into the chains, independent
bookstores and libraries. Because TWC has neither a demographic
niche to fill nor stockholders to please, we are free to cherry-pick
the market for manuscripts that are both commercially viable
and artistically good, and we prefer working with authors
who are already successfully traditionally published, whose manuscript could
go anywhere, but who prefer to make real money this time.
What do we call
real money? Let’s return to the 80,000 sold copies ($24.95
hard cover) as an example. The traditionally published author
earning a 10% of retail royalty ($2.40), and who received
a $10,000 advance, would net $182,000. Great! A TWC author
selling the same number of books would, after ALL pre-press
expenses, PR and print runs, net approximately $407,000. Don’t
know about you, but I call that better.
Let’s examine
a few current examples and up front costs. Our authors typically
pay an average of $2k-$3k for pre-press charges which include
a digital galley run. Add another $10k for a 5000 copy print
run (hard cover) and $5k for a publicist, and you’re
up to about $18,000, paid out over the year it takes to launch
the book.
[NOTE: These costs are all paid directly to the
various printers and publicists involved; none is paid to TWC]
If all 5000 copies sold (and we only take on titles
we believe will sell at least that many in the first six to
twelve months), the author will net $21,920 after ALL expenses.
She will break even after the sale of just 2,260 copies sold.
And she will still own all the rights to her book.
Sound like a
lot of books to sell, relative to more “typical”
self-publishing sales? It is, but TWC isn’t typical.
Two cases in point: Good To Be King, by Michael Badnarik,
and The Calcium Bomb, by Douglas Mulhall and Katja Hansen—our
Fall 2004 line, and the first two books to go through the
entire hybrid process. The first title arrived at the distributor’s
warehouse in November, and sold out in 14 days. We've just done a
second run, and there are back orders for nearly half. The second
title also arrived at the warehouse in November, also sold
out in two weeks, and the reprint – 7500 copies –
arrived two weeks ago and is already gone. We’ve just gone
back to press for a third run, and we anticipate
selling 100,000 copies – hard cover – by year’s
end. Who knows – we might have reached that goal by
the time you read this.
What does The
Writers’ Collective bring to the party besides an eye
for books that sell? Just like any traditional publisher,
TWC performs all project management and oversees every aspect
of edits, re-writes (lots of those), pre-press design, mainstream
media reviews and publicity. In fact the book has been, in
every way that counts, traditionally published; we’ve
just diversified the risk. The author makes a monetary investment,
while TWC takes on all time and labor risk and management.
If we haven’t produced a fabulous, commercially viable
product at a cost the sales reps and the chain buyers will
love love love, we’ve spent a year of production for
nothing.
But if the title
sells well the author gets a drastically rearranged bottom
line—in her favor. That $400k is more money than most
successful mid-list authors will ever see from a traditional
house for 80,000 copies sold even with an advance (which many
small presses don’t even pay these days), but even though
money talks, transparency talks louder. Just seeing their
name in print may thrill new writers, but experienced, best-selling
authors want a lot more than that. Like real numbers for print
runs, monthly reports from the sales reps themselves, real-time
inventory and oh yes, statements more than once or twice a
year, preferably in English. TWC provides those things too.
- Thousands of
$$$ to publish a book? Why so much when I can go to any online
publisher and read: “POD Setup Fees - $199; Cover Art
- $199; Ingram Catalog Listing - $50.” My book can be
published for less than $500.
That’s
not publishing, that’s printing. Digitally, through
Lightning Source, which is owned by Ingram and which is why
the book will be listed there at all. The reason the average
sale per title with online “publishers” is less
than twenty-five copies – annually – is because
“listing” a book with Ingram is like “listing”
it on Amazon. Anyone can buy it, but very few people outside
friends and family do. Not that there’s anything wrong
with that – it’s just not what TWC is about. Our
goal has always been to make self-published books as respected
by the media and as commercially viable as traditionally published
books, and we can now claim some success. Though in all fairness,
it has taken us three years to get here, and we began by being
closer to the model you just indicated and growing (through
learning by experience) to where we are today.
Still, the reality
of the book industry is that whether it’s Random House
that lays out the money, takes the risk and keeps the profit
– or you who lays out the money, takes the risk and
keeps the profit – someone needs to lay out real money
for real publishing.
- You prefer
signing on already successfully published writers – who
doesn’t? But what about good writers with a good book
who are just getting started; will you accept them?
We’re
competing in the same commercial market as the Big Boys and
in that world non-fiction is King, so if you have a great
concept and are prepared to play in their sandbox by working
harder after publication on PR than you did before it, contact
us.
However, even
great fiction is a hard sell today unfortunately. Most of
the time you’re better off putting that first novel
in the desk drawer than on sale. At least the desk drawer
won’t blackmail you ten years from now when you finally
learn to write and want to burn every copy of My Life At Ten
So Far. That book won’t sell - so save your money for
writing classes and good books on craft. Ditto if you’re
still receiving form rejection letters from publishers or
agents. However, if those letters are glowing, but contain
a lot of phrases like: “fabulous writing, but it doesn’t
fit our current demographic niche” – you might
have a shot.
- I’m already
a publisher, but TWC’s distribution system is better than
mine.
No problem. If
you’re publishing other writers’ work, and it’s
got great content and equally great production values we might
be able to accept you as an Associate. Please send a query.
- What’s
the procedure for getting started?
Simple:
send us an email with details about you and your book that
doesn’t begin:
“My manuscript
is out with my agent/friend/grandmother; but if no one wants
it I may consider using TWC. What’s your 800 number?”
Ahem. Request
an interview, and give us the best time to reach you. That’s
the time to tell us about the passion for your work, why you
love it, and why you believe 10,000 strangers will too. We’ll
ask a lot of questions and answer any and all you may have.
If we’re ready (and willing) to review your manuscript
after that discussion we’ll request it. Once we’ve
reviewed your manuscript and had a few more conversations,
we may tender an offer. By that time you’ll be thoroughly
versed in how we do things and what they’ll cost, but
we’ll be sending you a ream of contracts that spell
things out as well. Please take them to an attorney for review
before signing, and plan on seeing your book on the bookstore
shelves about a year from then.
- Hey—how
come you talk in the Royal “We”?
Our
real name is Princess Leia. Next…
- If this is
such a great idea, why hasn't it been done already?
The number of
people able to think out of the box AND work for a fair number
of years in pursuit of that vision without a paycheck is finite.
Make that miniscule. The publishing world (online and
off) is filled with middlemen dipping a lot of hands into an
awfully small stream, and The Writers’ Collective has
created a new business model that stands the old one on its
head. If this sounds like A Good Thing (and you’ve read
all the fine print), ask to join us. If not, we wish you a
brilliant career elsewhere.
But whatever you do — keep
writing!
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