
- Become an expert of the kind of book you’re writing.
- Find books and authors to use as models for your books and your career.
- Be a contentpreneur: produce or collaborate a continuing stream of material in all lengths for all media for free and fees, and take responsibility for the success of your work.
- Maximize the synergy of your work by writing books that sell each other and that you can resell in as many forms, media, and countries as possible.
- Make every word count. Word of mouth and mouse are the most potent form of promotion. No amount of marketing can make a bad book sell.
- Build your platform—your continuing visibility on your subject or kind of book with potential book buyers.
- Build communities of writers and publishing people to help you.
- Don’t be guilty of premature submission. Get feedback on your work from a network of knowledgeable readers while you’re writing and after you finish.
- Maximize the value of your book before you sell it by test-marketing it online and off in as many ways as you can to prove it will sell. That’s the only way to get the best editor, publisher, and deal for it.
- Chicken souperman Jack Canfield said: “A book is like an iceberg. Writing is ten percent; marketing is ninety percent.” Create a promotion plan that proves you will make your book succeed because of what you will do for it.
- Take the long view as well as the short view. Writers usually become successful by writing a series of books that sell each other and build an audience for their work.
- Make nothing more important than your commitment to your craft and your career and you will succeed.
- They can’t write publishable prose, a challenge they can meet in time.
- They aren’t professional enough to get feedback on their work before submitting it.
- They don’t understand that every word counts, that agents only read far enough to make a decision. If a query letter has obvious mistakes, agents assume that the submission will and won’t bother reading it. The given: if they can’t write a letter, they couldn’t write a book.
As an agent: clients, good relationships with a network of editors, trips to New York to see them, other agents to talk shop with, opportunities to meet writers.
- Agents are as variable as writers in their personalities and how they work. Meet with an agent who wants to represent you so you can see if you’ll work well together.
- Agree on how the agent will try to sell your book, when you can expect to hear from the agent, and how you will communicate.
- Ask questions when you have them.
- Remember who works for whom.
- subjects to write about
- ways to get feedback on your work
- ways to reach more readers in more places
- options for getting published
- readers in more places
- more books to choose from
- ways to get books
- ways to promote and profit from your books than ever before. And technology is the greatest gift to writers since the printing press. Persevere and your success is inevitable.



