Get a Book Deal and Write a
Bestselling Book
By Dr. Larina Kase
I’ve successfully submitted 6 book
proposals now (for publishers such as Wiley
and McGraw-Hill) and I’ve learned a ton
about what agents and editors look for and
what lands your hard work in the recycling
bin. These ideas will also help you create a
bestselling book.
Here are 6 things the not do in your book
proposal and sample chapters:
- Think that your idea will sell
itself. Unfortunately these days are
looking for books that will sell. Even
if you have the best idea in the world,
it is unlikely that you’ll get a deal
without a stellar marketing plan.
- Represent yourself to the big
publishing houses. If you want a
publisher like Simon & Schuster or
Harper to take your book, you really
need to get a literary agent. They
typically don’t take unrepresented
manuscripts. If you don’t want to deal
with an agent, do your research and find
smaller publishing houses.
- Make your book all about you. In my
studies, I’ve learned that in nonfiction
books, it works best to keep yourself
out of it and build your stories through
case studies. You can put some of your
own examples but too much of this
distracts your reader from your message.
- Sound too smart. Many nonfiction
authors try to build credibility with a
ton of research and jargon. This is
off-putting, especially for self-help
books. Bestselling self help books are
ones that boil complex topics down and
say them simply. This is tough (hence
the year of working on my current
proposal). You can include key details
to show your credibility and uniqueness
of your concept, but overall the idea is
to keep it simple.
- Fail to differentiate your book from
others. One of the primary questions an
editor will ask him or herself is how
your book is different. When you talk
about competing books, you do want to
select books in your category that sell
well (otherwise it seems that there
isn’t a market need) and highlight how
yours is unique.
- Try to do too much. Essentially you
should be able to communicate the idea
of your book in one sentence. Build your
book around one premise and tell the
reader what it is right away so they
keep reading.
- Write what sounds good instead of
what the reader needs. I’ve seen a ton
of great titles, table of contents, and
chapters that sound good but it is
totally unclear why the reader needs and
can benefit from the information. In
sales, customer is king and in books,
reader is king (or queen, as I prefer to
say and women do buy more books than
men.)
If your dream is to get a major book
deal, be persistent, follow these guidelines
(about what not to do) and your dream might
just come true.
Larina Kase PsyD, MBA is the New York
Times bestselling author of The Confident
Speaker. She helps information experts get
book deals, get quoted in the media, and get
speaking engagements to build their
platforms. Get a no-charge audio on how to
create your expertise and content strategy
at
http://www.platformbuildingsecrets.com
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