4 Emotional Obstacles That Trip Writers Up

4 Fears Writers Face Literary Agent (short)

Well, happy summer and happy Friday to you all! Today I’m over on Chad Allen’s blog, where he graciously hosted me for a guest post about the fears I most often have to talk my authors through. If you missed Chad’s wonderful guest post about how editors review and acquire proposals, then hop back there for some great insight.

And if you want to start this gorgeous weekend off feeling a little more ready to conquer the obstacles that lie ahead, here’s a great start:

4 Emotional Obstacles That Trip Writers Up, Plus How to Work Through Them

I often laughingly say that the job of a literary agent is to be a therapist and coach as much as a negotiator and advocate. It’s funny, but it’s true. On an average day we’re just as likely to be talking an author off the ledge as negotiating a contract.

Through this I’ve found one thing to be unfailingly true: the creative process can drive you batty.

I see how authors pour their entire hearts and souls into their books, sometimes sharing the deepest parts of themselves with the world. And I’ve seen how this often leaves them vulnerable to all kinds of fear and doubt. But I’m a firm believer that 80 percent of the creative battle is won in the mind. That’s why authors often need the perspective and encouragement of a friend and agent to talk them through the particularly tough parts.

After walking dozens of authors through the publishing process, I’ve come across many of the same emotional sand traps, just waiting to swallow up an unsuspecting writer. So today let’s pretend we’re sitting across from each other, sipping lattes and catching up, and let’s talk through some of the emotional obstacles that may come up on your path as a writer…

Click here to keep reading this post on Chad’s blog!

 

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4 Fears Writers Face Literary Agent (long)

How to write a book proposal: the 5 things publishers look for

How to write a book proposal: the 5 things publishers look for when reading a book proposal!


Do you know what the good thing about January and February is? They’s sparse, yet full of promise. They’re the months where our goals are front-and-center, still shining bright in our minds, and the weather and life seem to cooperate to keep us inside working on them.

(That also makes it the best time of the year to establish a creative routine that’s actually going to stick through the bumpy ride of spring.)

how to write a book proposal

If anywhere on your goal list you have “publish a nonfiction book” then I’ve got just the thing for you. One of my very favorite articles on c&b walked us through exactly how to write a book proposal, and best of all, it let us see exactly how an acquiring editor at a publisher reviews one.

How to write a book proposal: 5 things publishers look for

It’s all thanks to my friend, Chad Allen, who is rife with wisdom about publishing and up to some exciting new things lately.

Chad was the Editorial Director for Baking Publishing Group when he wrote this piece. He’s now working full-time as a writer, speaker, editor, and writing coach. A 20-year publishing professional, he has worked with many bestselling authors and is creator of Book Proposal Academy, an online course, and BookCamp, a mentoring and community hub for writers. His passion is helping writers get their books into the world, and he blogs at chadrallen.com.

Here’s Chad with an inside peek into the book proposal review process at publishers:

The 5 things publishers look for in a book proposal

Chad Allen

How to write a book proposal

 

This year I will review well over a hundred book proposals, and my personal goal is to acquire at least fifteen high-quality original books within the year.

Just because I present a book in pub board does not mean I’ll acquire it because other publishers will also be pursuing it. Assuming a 50 percent success rate, I need to pick about 30 books to bring to pub board. Other editors may review hundreds of book proposals and have a goal of acquiring more or fewer books, but at least in trade publishing I doubt the math I’ve laid out here changes much from house to house or editor to editor.

We review a humongous number of book proposals and try to acquire a fraction of them.

So how can a writer make sure their book proposal rises to the top of the stack? In this article I’m going to share exactly how I review a book proposal and how you the writer can make sure I keep reading. That should be the goal, by the way: keep us reading. Here we go:

1. How To Write a Book Proposal: The #1 Thing Publishers Look For

Cover Page

The first thing I look at is the cover page, which typically includes the title, subtitle, and author’s name. I look quickly at the author’s name just in case I might know him or her. Then I take in the title and sub. Normally I have an immediate impression of how saleable the concept is just from the title and sub.

This underscores the importance of developing a great concept. It is the first thing acquisitions editors review, so it’s important to get it right. To download an infographic and four-minute video on how to come up with a compelling concept, click here.

2. How To Write a Book Proposal: The #3 Thing Publishers Look For

Bio

If the title and sub intrigue me, I read the author’s bio. I want to know who the author is, whether they’re credible to write on this topic, what their platform is like, and what they might be like to work with. To read more about writing a solid bio, click here.

3. How To Write a Book Proposal: The #3 Thing Publishers Look For

Brief Description

If the bio keeps me going, I go to the brief description of the book, which hopefully will flesh out the impression I got from reviewing the title and subtitle. Hopefully the brief description is written in a way that hooks me, that keeps me interested. Here’s a post I did on writing a compelling brief description.

4. How To Write a Book Proposal: The #4 Thing Publishers Look For

Marketing Section

Then I go to the marketing section, which tells me more about the author. The marketing section tells me more about the author and how much work she is willing to invest in promoting her book. Here’s a post I wrote on marketing.

Notice that up to this point I’m bouncing back and forth between concept and author. It’s not until the last step that I look at structure and the writing sample.

5. How To Write a Book Proposal: The #5 Thing Publishers Look For

Chapter-by-Chapter Synopsis and Writing Sample

Then I look at the structure of the book and how well the writer can write, although what I’ve read so far will give me some indication of the latter. If I’ve read your proposal up to this point, I really hope you don’t stumble here. And if you’ve done your homework—if you’ve had other talented people look at your structure and read your sample, and you’ve implemented their input—chances are you’ll be fine.

I review the elements of a book proposal in the above order because these are the things I value most. First and foremost is concept. If you don’t have a good concept, you’re done. “You might as well stay in bed,” as William Zinsser says. Then your bio. I want to know who you are, and would I like to work with you? Finally, the structure and writing. Does the structure make sense and suggest a good experience for the reader? Does the writing draw me in and make me want to stay in the book for a while?

What Happens in Pub Board

If I like your proposal, I first talk about it with my editorial colleagues to see if they have any push-back or ways to make your proposal better. If I come back to you and ask for you to, say, flesh out your marketing plan, work hard! I’m asking because I think this is the one weak link between you and a book contract.

Then I bring your project to our pub board, a group of about fifteen people from editorial, marketing/publicity, and sales. We distribute book proposals to pub board members about a week before we get together.

Each editor has their own style of presenting. We like to keep our presentations to five minutes or less because the point in pub board is not presenting but dialogue. We want to engage with each other about the project, tell each other what we think, why we like it or why we don’t.

After touching on how the proposal came to me, I typically introduce the author—who he or she is and what their platform is. Then I talk about the concept, how the book is constructed, and what I thought of the writing.

Like I said, my shtick is less than five minutes, and in most cases we come fairly quickly to a consensus one way or the other on a proposed book. The three possible outcomes are “Yes, let’s publish it,” “No, let’s don’t,” or “Let’s ask for this first.”


Now that you know the 5 things publishers look for in a book proposal, and in what order, you’ll know exactly how to write a book proposal that catches a publisher’s attention.

Time to get writing. 🙂

You might also enjoy:

how john green sold so many books

how many followers is enough?

is my book idea good

how to get a literary agent


Shouldn’t 2019 be the year you finally DO that big creative goal?

how to write a book proposal

I’ve been so happy to see the enthusiastic response to my new creative essentials subscription, Literary Paper Co., and I can’t wait to see all the things you guys dream and make with it.

This month our habit was all about establishing a Growth Mindset, which is one of the defining characteristics of high achievers. Throughout the month, we’re asking ourselves one powerful question that can transform your Fixed Mindset into a Growth Mindset so that challenges feel like adventures rather than setbacks.

 

Sign up here to grow with us, or click here to learn more!

 


5 quick links for the week

  1. Habits are the new goals. And the best way to make those big habits stick? Start with micro-habits.
  2. I love these kinds of stories. (Especially when they feature a Stonesong book!)
  3. No one wants to abandon a book you’ve already started (what if it gets better?), but it may be good for your reading health to call it off.
  4. All of the best writing, publishing, and literary blogs in one place–and hooray, they were kind enough to include yours truly!
  5. How many synonyms are there for “the best ever”? Stonesong client Deb Perelman compiled a list of 100 different ways to promote your “best ever” recipes. It might be…wait for it…the best ever.

What We’re Eating This Week

If healthy-ish is a thing, then I guess you could say Jarrett and I are on a diet-ish after gaining, oh, 10-ish pounds over the holidays. But I like to think of it as “recalibrating” because, truly, there was something uncalibrated in my brain to think eating two entire Virginia hams and fifty thousand desserts in the span of one month made a whole lot of sense.

Luckily, I’ve invented the best diet-ish ever. You know the Whole30? Well, forget that. This is called The Pasta Diet. It involves me eating whatever pasta I want (Bolognese, cacio e pepe, kale pesto, the varieties are endless…) but (for once in my life) doing so in reasonable portion sizes alongside a nice big heap of vegetables. I’m hoping this makes me less sad, because carbs are my spirit animal. And so far? It has been magical, like the Never-Ending Pasta Bowl at Olive Garden, but, you know, actually good.

Monday: We had the day off and it was negative a billion degrees, so I made a big pot of Pasta e Fagioli. Did you know: this classic Italian soup can be made healthy-ish by swapping the pork sausage for chicken sausage and stirring in big handfuls of kale? Well, now you know. Whether you care is still TBD.

Tuesday: We were craving pasta (ha—I am an addict.) so I made my Spicy Tomato and Olive Sauce to slosh over some whole grain spaghetti. But I ate a salad, too! It was just right.

Wednesday: Out? Takeout? Time to change things up and order pizza?

Thursday: I am horribly, indisputably basic and will be making a Chicken and Broccoli Alfredo Bake. But it’s a skinny alfredo! And there’s broccoli! And lean protein! So I’m actually really cool.  

Friday: Broccoli and Sweet Potato Soup. Except probably not. Probably more pasta. I love my new diet-ish lifestyle.

Cheers!

Get one free tip for reading more + living better each week!

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A 2-Minute Retreat for Writers

guided meditation for writers with anxiety

But first, the publishing stories worth reading this week:

6 Strategies for Getting Your Book Published (Chad R. Allen): This is a must-read post for nonfiction writers. Because it’s true: there is a very set, step-by-step formula for getting a book deal. That’s not to say the steps are easy, but if you stick with it and follow Chad’s advice, you will see agents and editors come a’knockin’!

20 Signs You’re the Biggest Book Nerd in Your Friend Group (Jen Harper on BarnesandNoble.com): “So you think you may be the biggest book nerd in your squad? We’re here to help you confirm it.” I have to say, none of these applied to me. I also have to say: that’s a complete and utter lie. I am guilty, guilty, guilty.

The Top 4 Secrets to Keep Book Sales High Post-Launch (Chad Cannon): “One of the biggest misbeliefs I see in the publishing world is that you can push a book into the marketplace with an awesome launch plan…and then just call it done. The reality? Marketing is never done.”

100 Must-Read Books About Books (Margaret Aldrich for Book Riot): If you love to read books about books (me, me, me!), you need this list. And if you’re fascinated by design and book covers, take a peek, too. Do you see how the cover and title for The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend is so similar to the cover and title of the big bestseller in the category, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society? THAT is how you signal to readers that if they liked that book, they’ll like this one, too. And it works. Broken Wheel was just added to my to-read list.

Everyone’s Getting Into Video. Should You? (Jane Friedman on Writer Unboxed): “Unless you’ve been garreted away working on the Great American Novel—and maybe you have!—you’ve probably noticed that video is becoming a big deal…As a writer, should you care? And if you’re interested, what’s next?”

A Two-Minute Retreat for Writers (& A Book Deal Announcement!)

meditation for writers and bloggers with anxiety

A writer’s life is filled with anxieties. Really, the life of anyone who puts their work out into the world is filled with anxieties. Will people like it? Is it any good? Will it succeed? Will it have impact? Should you shred it right now because, oh wow, this is terrible?

I’m a firm believer that 80% of the creative battle is won in the mind. I see it all the time—the most successful authors have fought those show-up-and-just-do-it battles early in their careers, and they’ve made peace with the fact that their work isn’t for everyone.

Even some of my sweetest, softest-hearted authors will laugh about how you can’t please everyone on the Internet. And if you can’t please the Internet masses, you sure as heck can’t please everyone in publishing.

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How to get a literary agent for a self-published book

how to get a traditional book deal if you've already self published

I hope you all had a chance to catch a few lessons from the Profitable Blogging Summit last week! I was following along from the beach in Punta Cana while working on new and experimental kinds of sun poisoning. (Seriously. My skin hates me right now. And yes, yes, I should know better. I have already given myself many demerits.)

I love answering questions at summits and conferences, but the difficult part is that I have to answer questions in 30-60 second spurts. And anyone who knows me knows that I do not excel at brevity. I don’t think I’ve ever had anything but a 6-part answer to a question.

But it’s not because I like to hear myself talk! (I actually very much think my voice sounds ridiculous when recorded.) It’s that publishing is very complex and has so many facets, exceptions, and tangents that there’s no way to provide an honest, hard-and-fast rule about anything.

So today I wanted to give you guys the long, 4-part answer to one of the questions Kirsten asked me: What does it take for a self-published author to get a traditional book deal?

When we chatted about this on camera, I grabbed my copy of The Joy of Less to illustrate a shining example of one author who successfully went from self-published to traditionally published.

The Joy of Less had sold 70,000 copies in just over 4 years by the time I took it on, so clearly Francine had created an incredibly successful and powerful book on her own. But she was ready to see her book in bookstores both nationwide and worldwide. And luckily, we were able to place the book with Chronicle, a wonderful publisher, as well as sell foreign rights in 17 countries.

And because I love ya, I’m going to be giving away 2 free copies of the book to 2 lucky readers today!

The joy of less francine jay book deal

The new edition is gorgeously redesigned, streamlined, and a great example of how a self-published book can live a whole new life with the help of a traditional publisher. I think you’ll love holding it, reading it, and sharing it with other clutterbugs in your life!

To enter to win a free copy of The Joy of Less, scroll down to the bottom of this post!

In the meantime, let me take a big breath and better explain how the self-pubbed to traditional-pubbed process works:

As we all know, the job of an agent or acquiring editor is to make an educated guess about how a book will perform in the marketplace. We all have our own hunches about how marketable a concept is, how well an author’s platform will translate into sales, and how much readers, reviewers, and the press will like the book.

That’s what our jobs come down to: making bets based on hunches. If we make good bets and take on good projects, we do well. If an editor signs a breakout author, she can start getting promoted up the ladder as she works on the author’s next (hopefully as successful!) books. If an agent signs a breakout author, she can negotiate an even better deal for the author’s second book, and then her third and fourth book after that. That’s the part that thrills us to our cores: building lasting careers for authors we admire.

But any agent and editor will also tell you that it’s nearly impossible to predict with total accuracy whether a book will do well in the marketplace. With one big exception: self-published books.

Because self-published books have already had their debut in the marketplace, editors and agents will know exactly what to expect, and they’ll have many more data points when they run their P&Ls.

This can be a great thing if you have a highly successful self-published book, because you’ll be able to show editors and agents that investing time and resources in you will be fairly low risk. But it can also make self-published books with middling sales look like an especially high risk.

So the very first thing I ask myself when assessing a self-published book is:

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