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Showing posts with the label traditional publication

A Publisher's Conversation with Authors: Deconflating the Three Types of Publication - Traditional, Hybrid, and Self-Publishing (Relative Costs and Revenue)

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  It is Tuesday. Monday's madness is over, and Wednesday will take us over the hump, so Tuesday it is--for some serious discussion with authors. Tuesday talks mean to address authors in waiting and self-published authors who would like to go a more traditional route or who would at least like to take their steps with a publisher by their side. This week, the topic is one that most first-time authors must confront. Which type of publication is best for him or her? For authors navigating today's publishing landscape, choosing the right path requires more than enthusiasm—it demands clarity. Traditional, hybrid, and self-publishing each carry distinct values, financial models, and degrees of creative control. Let's unpack them, including a critical look at vanity publishing. (Figures given are industry averages based on AI research as of July 2025 availability; note that the publishing industry is volatile--any of the given figures could change considerably as time goes forward...

A Publisher's Conversations with Authors: Self-Publish? Traditional-publish? Hybrid Publish?

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  It is Tuesday. Time to tall turkey. Monday's madness is over, and Wednesday will take us over the hump, so Tuesday it is--for some serious discussion with authors. Tuesday talks mean to address authors in waiting and self-published authors who would like to go a more traditional route or who would at least like to take their steps with a publisher by their side. Today's topic is about whether to seek traditional publication, self-publish, or go the hybrid route. Each of these approaches to publications has advantages and disadvantages. - Self-publish (you do everything yourself):      Pro: You can proceed immediately. You have full control over all content and design. You get all the net income.     Con: You have full control over all content and design--meaning, the book is only as good as your own professional skills (or, you can pay for professional services that a traditional publisher would provide for free). You don't know what you don't know. It wi...