by Jason Sizemore

Even in the best of times, making a small press successful is a tough maneuver that few have accomplished. The current economy exacerbates the difficulty level, as well. All the small presses are hungry for your dwindling spare change. That’s why I find the common notion of many authors to believe that once they sell a book to you, their obligation to the publisher is done, to be confusing and irrational.

From my perspective, this almost feels like the author is saying “Okay, buddy, you’re lucky none of the big publishers grabbed my collection/novel/novella/anthology and paid me the five-figure advance I deserve, so you are granted the right and privilege of publishing my work. Have at it.”

I’m not sure why authors feel this way. Why wouldn’t you want to promote your work? Everybody knows that most small presses pay little to no advance. Apex pays an advance, but it’s about 1/4th professional rates. Any noticeable amount of money you’ll earn will come through royalties. To earn royalties, the book has to sell.

Many small presses have little to no budget for advertising. We advertise in Cemetery Dance, Weird Tales, Albedo1, Fangoria, Rue Morgue, Space and Time, Electric Velocipede, Shimmer, on the ProjectWonderful banner system, on SFScope.com, and on any surface that we can slap our beloved Apex alien head on. Many publishers never get out and run the convention circuit to promote their authors. Not so for us on both accounts. We actively travel to promote our books. We have dealer booths in the halls of at least a half-dozen conventions a year, almost always done at a loss because you (the publisher) have to sell a lot of books to compensate for the costs of the tables, food, gas, lodging, etc.

When a publisher of any repute buys a book from you, it’s a bi-directional assumption of trust. The author trusts that the publisher will do their best to edit, publish, and market your title. The publisher trusts that the author will do their very best to see that their book is a success by taking it on themselves to do a respectable amount of self-promotion.

If you disagree with this notion of ‘bi-directional assumption of trust’, that’s too bad, because it’s the way I feel and the way I will continue to feel and to do business. If you don’t care enough to do a little self-promotion, then we don’t care to publish you. If you don’t care enough to do a little self-promotion, then you’re doing a disservice to me, as the publisher, to our crew of editors who work their asses off to make sure your book is spotless, to our crew of marketing editors who beat the bushes to find reviewers for your products, for all the favors and queries we make lining up interviews for you, for working to get you free guest membership to conventions, for the endless hours we spend behind dealer tables for you, for the hundreds of dollars spent on review copies mailed out, for bleeding ourselves dry trying to make not only Apex a success but you as well.

So don’t be offended if we happen to ask you for a marketing plan if we request a full manuscript. Don’t be offended if I sometimes suggest you give a helping hand with promotion.

Because if you feel you’re a big enough name so that you don’t need to be doing any of that, or you have the attitude that the promotion paradigm of big press and small press are the same, then you better stay out of the small press because you’re in for a world of heartbreak.


Related posts:

  1. Monday Debates: Self-Publishing
  2. Answer to your questions: Apex Books
  3. PRESS RELEASE: ELIZABETH ENGSTROM’S “WHEN DARKNESS LOVES US” COMING NOVEMBER 2009 FROM APEX PUBLISHING