Publisher List
What Not To Do When Submitting Your Manuscript To A Publisher
By Jordana Ryan
Once your manuscript is complete you are ready to begin your search for the publisher that will best meet your needs. Research your genre to find publishers who accept what you have written. Look at books that they have already published and determine where your story will fit in.
Once you have found a publisher who catches your eye, make sure that you take the time to carefully read their submission guidelines. You may have written the most wonderful story in the world, but if you do not follow the publishers specifications, you may find that your manuscript will lie untouched at the bottom of a pile of submissions from authors who did follow the rules.
Once you have read the guidelines, you are ready to work on preparing your submission. You might need to go back and fix your spacing and indentations to the specifications of whatever publisher you are submitting to. You need to now write a query letter that introduces you as an author, your novel and your level of experience in writing. This should include a brief biography and a list of publishing credits. In the query letter, let the publisher know why your story is different, who will be your target audience and how do you plan to market your novel.
The synopsis should be a 2-4 page summary of the story including the ending. It should be well thought out and follow your plot line from beginning to end. Often this is the first sample of writing that a publisher looks at. A publisher knows if it was thrown together at the last minute. You should take as much time and care with your synopsis as you would with any scene of your novel.
Having a plan of action should your novel get published is an important tool of preparation for you. Let your potential publisher know how you plan to get your name out there. Will you do book signings, contests, chats, online signings, book club readings or placement into independent bookstores. Do you have a website? Do you have any special groups that you know would be interested in this type of novel. This is called a promotional plan and some publisher require it. Whether it is required or not, this is a good tool to develop prior to submission.
There are also a number of things that you should not do when submitting a manuscript. First is to send a manuscript with no query letter or synopsis. Publishers like to get an idea of what the story is about before plunging into a novel.
Second, make sure that the guidelines are followed. If the publisher specifies that all submissions should be double spaced in times new roman font, saved as an RTF file. Do not send something that is single spaced in a gothic font saved as a PDF.
Third, do not tell the publisher how wonderful your work is, or how much you think he or she will enjoy it. Stick strictly to the facts.
Fourth, do not write the publisher over and over again asking if they have yet read your manuscript. Most publishers will list an average response time. Only after that time has passed should you contact the publisher for an update.
Finally, when your Manuscript, make sure that your document is appropriately labeled with your name, pen name, title of the book, word count and email address. When manuscripts are sent by email, your document is often saved in another location. This manuscript could quite possibly be passed to various staff within the company in order to find the line that best fits your title. If there is not identifying information on the Manuscript itself, a publisher can not respond to you.
Overall, when you are submitting your work, remember be professional, be kind, be respectful and be patient. The publisher is working hard to review works and put out the best quality pieces to our public. As an author, it is your job to follow some simple guidelines when submitting a manuscript in order to allow the process to go smoothly and your work to be accepted.
Tagged with: publisher list
Filed under: Uncategorized
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!
How does a person go about getting onto a publisher’s list of book designers?
I have just graduated with a B.A in Graphic Design and I am interested in designing book covers. I was wondering, how does a person go about getting onto a publisher’s list of book designers? If anybody can also give me some insiders advice of the industry that would be great.
Well I’m going to say, like a lot of those industries- books, music, film etc there is an element of luck involved in getting employed.
However, I would just find a couple of publishers you are interested in working for and ask them for some work experience, if you can prove in the short time you have as work experience that you are irreplaceable then chances are you will get a job there.
Good luck 🙂
How can I remove myself from all the Chippewa Publishing lists? The publisher is gone & the list is now porn
This publisher folded and the list is now porn. I want off! Jane
if you just write to the publishing office they should remove you from the mailing list
Does anyone know of a publisher/list of publishers who accept via e-mail?
I’ve written a story and I want to get it published. Please don’t give me the link to the website predators and editors or writers.net as I cannot access them at the moment.
HG did you ever actually get published?
Try checking for listings at http://www.writersdigest.com
You could also buy a copy of the book “Writers Market.” They put a new edition out every year.
How do I create a list of numbers in Publisher 2003?
I need to place a long list of numbers onto multiple 8.5×11 pages. The list of numbers will continue on the next page. How do I do it? Mail merge or catalog merge? Please write down the steps.
Thanks!!
In my list of installed programmes, are programmes from publisher OEM safe?
There are two programmes in my installed programmes list on my Windows 7 system – ‘Live Control Center’ and ‘Live OSD’. I am not familiar with the publisher – are these programmes safe? What is OEM?
Any assistance is greatly appreciated.
Thanks for the information gentlemen.
OEM stands for Original Equipment Manufacturer. Your installation disk is normally marked as OEM, which means that the computer manufacturer has installed WIndows under license with it’s own bits added on/configured.
I don’t know what computer you have but you can assume the software comes from the computer manufacturer.
If OEM isn’t trustworthy, nothing is 🙂