The self-publishing career choice

Posted By Sue Collier on August 12, 2010

I’ve been incredibly busy the past few weeks; first it was a week of vacation, then it was the release of my new book The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing, 5th Edition, and working on a promotions plan for it. In addition to that, there has been a delightful influx of new clients, which (of course!) coincided with a two-week lull between summertime babysitter and my son starting preschool — and well, that is my roundabout way of saying that I haven’t written a new post in too long.  

I’ve got a new post for today, and it’s from a guest. Another project I’ve been working on recently is getting an internship program started. I was lucky enough to get a great response from an ad I posted with the Denver Publishing Institute, and I’ve got a couple of young people (I know, that makes me sound really old — but hey, I am!) starting with us. I had them do an initial “assignment” of writing a blog post for me; I was curious what they’d come up with. So here’s the first; I hope you enjoy these fresh new voices!

Guest blogger: Chad Hamilton

It has finally happened. I have been birthed into the world of publishing—and what a wide, blurry world it is.

Nearly two weeks ago I graduated from the Publishing Institute at the University of Denver. It was an intensive, four week course designed to give recent college graduates a crash-course in all things publishing. The once-a-year program primarily churns out future editors for large publishers, and so the curriculum is heavily weighted toward that goal. Yet for those of us who did not swoon at the romantic notion of reading manuscripts well into the night, every night, there were a plethora of other topics covered. From the role of the editor to the subsidiary rights department, we were exposed to nearly every step in the publication process of large and independent publishers of all types of books.

Yet, despite all of the recent growth and future growth potential—self-publishing was not covered. So how have I ended up writing this guest blog for Self-Publishing Resources?

I am a baby in the publishing industry. Though I have been given a head start with experience working for a print production facility, and having attended the Publishing Institute, I have years of proving myself to do. Frankly, I am scared to choose a particular area on which to focus: be it public relations, marketing, editing, or anything else in publishing.

With the industry in flux, the last thing I want to do is specialize in an area that may soon become obsolete. There will always be editors, marketing departments, and PR people to help get the book out, but the traditional ways of doing those things are changing. I am afraid that I will spend my “proving” years learning the wrong processes and that at some point in my career I will have to start over, or worse yet, become obsolete myself.

Self-publishing seems like the perfect opportunity to learn various processes, to remain flexible and open to new emerging opportunities, and ultimately to remain valuable to the publishing industry.

I believe these are some of the same reasons why authors are choosing to self-publish. After all, where to publish is a critical career decision for a writer as well.

Note: Chad Hamilton is a recent graduate of the prestigious Denver Publishing Institute. He also has a bachelor of arts degree in English and creative writing from Colorado State University. His present position as leadership development associate for a publicly traded printing company gives Chad an excellent overview of the production end of publishing. As a new intern for Self-Publishing Resources, he has much to offer. Hopefully, I can teach him a thing or two as well. — Sue

About The Author

Sue Collier
As a writing coach and publishing consultant, I have worked with hundreds of authors, helping them write, edit, and publish hundreds of books. My book The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing is slated for publication by Writer’s Digest in March 2010. I currently own Self-Publishing Resources; we provide book writing, book packaging, and book marketing services for self-publishers and small presses.

Comments

5 Responses to “The self-publishing career choice”


  1. I am trying to learn more about my options, and with the digital age of publishing, this certainly seems like a viable solution. I’m interested to hear more and know why self publishing might be preferable. Thanks for the information!


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  3. Sue,

    It was my pleasure meeting you by telephone.

    Thanks for the information. Please send me a marketing proposal for virtual marketing of the books.

    Bank Secrecy: Financial Privacy Crisis Plan and Resource Guide is the latest book and is nearly ready to go. Expect it to be available as an e-book on our site in 2 weeks. I would like to have it available as an e-book and hardbound book everywhere within weeks.

    Privacy Crisis: Identity Theft Prevention Plan and Guide to Anonymous Living is my first book and is available only as an e-book from our website. Used copies are on Amazon from time to time, I believe. My plan is to bring it back as a paper back in revised or 2nd edition and make it available to the e-book buyers from retail sites.

    Thank you and I will look for your proposal and plan.

    Sincerely,

    Brad

    http://www.PrivacyCrisis.com
    contact@PrivacyCrisis.com


  4. I absolutely love your book the Complete Guide to Self Publishing! It has made a huge difference for me and I am a proud self publisher myself!

    You don’t need a publisher, but you do need a printer, which was a huge task to find! I love my printers Print House International .com. They are fast, have great quality, and I definitely recommend them!

    My friend also use Lulu .com to print and said she liked that. Good luck to all you fellow self-publishers : )

    Jes


  5. Jes–I’m so glad you are enjoying the book! Thanks for your tips on printers…that can be a tough decision. One word of warning about Lulu: Make sure if you do go that route, you have your manuscript professionally edited, your cover professionally designed, and you use your own ISBN number! Otherwise you’ve gotten yourself into a vanity publishing situation, which leaves virtually no opportunities for distribution or marketing and promotion. Thanks, Jes, for stopping by!

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