How to Get
Someone Else to
Pay for Publishing Your Book
By Diane Eble
Are you thinking
of self-publishing your book and nearly fainting at the costs involved?
Well, here's a way that you can get someone
else to pay to publish your
book--while you keep all the rights and royalties (unlike what happens
with "traditional" publishers, who hold most of the rights and pay you
a pittance of a royalty).
Have you ever noticed brand names in a movie or
television? Maybe it's a cereal box of Kellogg's Cornflakes on the
kitchen counter. Or the mention of a "Bluetooth" in a crime show.
Remember how E.T. was lured from his hiding place with Reece's Pieces?
Why Corporations
Would Pay
Guess what--corporations pay big bucks for
product placement. It's much more powerful than running a commercial,
because the movie, TV show or star acts as a sort of subliminal
endorser of the product. (It works, too. My kids get excited when they
see "that's the same phone we have!" Underlying message: If it's on TV,
it must be the best.)
You can do the same thing with your published
book. How?
Let's say you write a book on sales strategies.
You can mention several network type marketing companies as examples of
people who have adopted this approach and are doing great. Before you
publish the book, you go to one of the head marketing person of each of
those organizations and let them know what you're doing, how you're
featuring them as one of your "stars." It won't look like advertising
because it's part of the editorial content, and because you mention
other companies, too, the credibility is high all around. You ask if
they would like to sponsor publication of the book. You can do this for
more than one.
Or let's say you're working on a murder
mystery. Pharmaceuticals are involved in the crime investigation. You
go to the marketing director of the pharmaceutical company and see if
they would sponsor the book.
Here's another idea. Let's say you publish a
romance that takes place on a tiny island in the Caribbean--say, St.
Croix, in the American Virgin Islands. You could contact the director
of tourism there and ask if they'd like to sponsor publication of your
novel.
Structuring the Deal
You could approach the deal in two ways. You
can ask them to sponsor publication of the book, or you can ask them to
buy X number of copies for whatever the cost of your self-publishing
(which you would have to research ahead of time). Either way, they
subsidize the book. In the latter case, you already have built-in
sales, and you could even work in a profit margin.
Here's an important part of the deal: You must
give the sponsor or buyer one condition: They can only either give your
book away free, or sell it for the full cover price. This prevents them
from undercutting you, the author, on price.
This can work for major companies, government
agencies, or other large organizations such as professional groups. Why
would they do this? Because advertising costs so much, and compared to
that, underwriting the cost of a self-published book is cheap. A
single-page ad in a magazine can cost $20,000 or more. Publishing 3000
copies of your book might only run them $10,000. Plus, sponsoring a
book is more effective, because of the perceived endorsement value. A
published book is seen as one of the most credible forms of endorsement
there is. You're giving them a promotional tool that will cost them
very little of their total annual budget.
Next Steps
So how do you go about this?
First, write the book. Do not publish it; keep
it in manuscript form.
Brainstorm a list (at least 20) of companies
that could benefit from either your topic, your setting, your
direction, your examples, the entertainment value, or whatever else
your book could offer them in terms of a mention.
Make one copy of your manuscript and include
the specific product mention. Send that copy to the targeted company's
marketing with your proposal that they sponsor the project. Start with
the most likely company first. (By most likely I mean the one that is
mentioned most powerfully and naturally.)
If that company sponsors it, you win. If they
refuse, you move on. If this will take too much time, do simultaneous
submissions, being careful to keep good records. If you get more than
one offer, you can either do more than one publication, include several
companies and work out separate deals, or whatever works for you, them,
and your book.
Diane Eble has 28 years experience in the
publishing industry as an editor (magazines, fiction and nonfiction
books), author (11 published books, more than 400 articles), and
copywriter. She is now a book publishing coach as well, helping people
to write, publish, and make money with books and other information
products. This article was excerpted from her free "Your Book
Publishing Coach" newsletter. Diane's latest book is a downloadable
coaching session, Jump Start Your Book: 12 Questions You Must
Answer Before You Write Your First Word.Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Diane_Eble
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