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Taming The Book Proposal

Even if you want to self publish, a book proposal serves as a sort of business plan for your book

. The time and energy spent on research, evaluation and comparison of your ideas at the outset pays off down the line many times over. After all, wouldnt you rather find out now that someone else has said similar things more eloquently and have a chance to amend your manuscript, than publish the darn thing only to read terrible or worse no reviews

The process of polishing your book proposal is also an exercise in discipline and focus. It brings the purpose of your book, its scope, depth and message into sharp relief. It will get your thinking muscles into the best shape ever to produce the most marketable book of which you are capable. However, you must dedicate the necessary time and energy to educate you, move through multiple drafts and polish this behemoth of a document to perfection, or else hire someone who knows how to do just that.

Here are some answers to questions you may be asking right now

What is a book proposal


A book proposal is a document intended to sell a publishing staff on publishing a particular nonfiction book. It is the way most nonfiction books get published by major publishers. It reads very much like a business plan about the book proposed. It can be anywhere from 10 100 double spaced, 12 point 8 1 2 X 11 pages most are 20 60 pages, including sample chapters. It generally uses a very specific format and specialized language to make its case.

What does the book proposal do

It answers a series of typical questions that different departments of book publishing companies need answered when deciding which tiny handful of proposals, out of hundreds, to take a chance on. It acts on you and your book s behalf to answer questions like, Why this book over all the others in its class Why now Why this author

Who sees my book proposal first, an agent or a publisher

It depends on whether you choose to have an agent represent you, or go directly to publishers. Many publishers will not accept unpatented material, so make sure you check a given publishers guidelines first.

What does the book proposal contain

Generally, a book proposal contains a cover sheet, table of contents, along with the following sections overview, author bio, author s marketing plan, market analysis of buyers, comparative and/or competing books, outline, and sample chapters.

The overview contains a hook, or means of enticement, draws the editor in, and gives a general summary of the books purpose. Its sort of like an article about the book. It should make you want to read the whole thing!

The author bio puts any and all of your experience related to writing the book, in its best light. Its different from a resume or CV. It looks a lot like the about the author blurbs you see in the back of published books, below the authors photo.

The authors marketing plan, or what the author will do to promote the book, shows the publisher that you know what it takes to sell your book, and details how you plan to do it. These days, ironically, publishers dont put much money into publicity, unless youre already famous. An author with a well thought out marketing plan will stand out from most of the others who pay far less attention to this section, thinking instead that the publisher will take care of it.

The complementary and competing books section identifies and describes books that both directly compete with and also that complement the proposed book. The purpose of this section is to show the editors what has been done before, and how your book fits in. The reason for this section is twofold One, many editors are too busy to keep up to the minute records of whats being done in every field, and so rely on the author to educate them about what else is out there. Two, just as many editors know exactly whats out there, and want to know how your work purports to compare.

There s a paradox here On the one hand, you want to point to X, Y and Z books as evidence that this topic youre writing on is really hot. On the other hand, you want to make a strong case that yet another book namely yours is still necessary, and why. So you have to point out strongly yet tactfully you never know what relationship the person reading your proposal bears to your competition what yours will do that others haven t.

The market analysis makes the case for the size of the books audience. It usually covers a broad view of current interests and buying patterns in the larger culture that bode favorably for the book. It may include recent movies, documentaries on television, and facts about memberships in organizations or clubs, social or ethnic groups whose constituents would be likely buyers of the book. For example, a book with an exercise theme might cite the circulation of major fitness magazines, membership in health clubs or recent TV shows on related topics. This approach can be adapted to whatever the subject: parenting, cancer, gardening, dogs, mental illness, business, or entrepreneurship.

The chapter outline tells chapter by chapter what your book contains, and the sample chapters, usually about 30 pages worth, represent the best samples of your writing.

Why are so many book proposals rejected

Most book proposals are rejected because the ideas presented in them fail to convince the publisher that the author has a worthwhile read: marketable project. Making a project appealing to a publisher is a specialized skill, very different from creating the project itself.

In my experience, authors, whether of fiction or nonfiction are by nature creative people. If youre reading this, chances are at some point in your life, you became enamored of an idea or ideas, and felt the urge to move your thoughts into the world in book form. Your mind is alive. You have something to say.

A successful book proposal, on the other hand, is a specialized marketing document that follows a particular form, and answers very specific questions in a way that gets a Yes from publishers. Unless your field is marketing, and in particular, the marketing of books to publishers, chances are you dont have expertise in creating a book proposal. And why should you? Its nowhere near as much fun for most authors as working and playing with their own ideas.


The majority of my clients who give me book proposals to review, even those who have read books Ive recommended and claim to have followed them, give me proposals almost certainly slated for rejection. An excellent book proposal is a tough document for most authors to produce on their own. However, help abounds!

If you are determined to write your book proposal on your own, can really, truly follow directions, and have the patience it takes to polish your work with dozens or hundreds of revisions, I recommend Michael Larsens book, How to Write a Book Proposal, and Jeff Hermans Write the Perfect Book Proposal. Read them, study them, write your proposal, rewrite it several dozen times no, Im not joking and have it professionally reviewed by someone who really knows what they are doing. Polish it to perfection in this business, in which 99% of all proposals will get rejected, good enough simply isnt.

Then, if you want an agent, make sure you find one with a successful track record of selling work like yours, otherwise your polished proposal may gleam, twinkle and shimmer for unappreciative and unqualified eyes. Unless the agent has specified otherwise, query them first via a one to one and a half page letter. For the query, read and study John Woods How to Write Attention Grabbing Query and Cover Letters. Then have at it. Spend at least three weeks on this query letter, and get feedback from at least three people, at least one of whom truly knows the field.

by: sunder
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