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The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » You searched for rejection » Page 16

Search Results for: rejection

But My Book is Unique!

By Dan Balowon January 20, 2015
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Excerpt from author cover letter: (not real)

“Dear (Agent or Publisher),

The enclosed book proposal contains never-before-seen information to help the most important of all human relationships. It identifies six different kinds of languages of love, combines the findings of extensive studies from all cultures and is endorsed by every important person living within one hundred miles of my home. It contains a stirring story how I went to heaven and met the Apostle Paul in person. He agreed to write a foreword, which I expect to receive any day. Throughout the 15 years it has taken me to research and write this 350,000-word manuscript, I have sweat actual blood. I am convinced this is a best seller for the ages.”

Agent and/or Publisher: (thinking)

“Oh, another marriage book.”

You pour yourself into writing something and after carefully pointing out the uniqueness of your work to an agent or publisher, the pigeon-holing and rejection begins:

Memoir – they don’t do memoirs.

Marriage – too much competition.

Science Fiction – nope.

Poetry – oh my, no.

Bible study – already have some.

For men – men don’t read.

Parenting – too many.

Theology – not enough letters after your name.

Devotionals – can’t sell them.

Children’s Story – isn’t that cute, no.

So let’s take a deep breath here and try to figure this out. You see your work as never before explored territory, but an agent or publisher doesn’t see it that way.

Why?

Imagine standing near a grove of trees. Each one is different. A few pine, others are magnolia, ash, maple, and oak. Each one is different from the other. The very makeup of each tree, from the height, to the hardness of their wood to the shape of their branches, texture of their bark and leaves are different one from another. Underground, their respective root systems have distinct characteristics.

You live on the ground and see the trees clearly. And because you can see the trees so clearly, you can’t see the forest. (Insert common metaphor here)

The agent or publisher on the other hand lives at 30,000 feet. (The lack of oxygen at that level would explain a lot what goes on in agenting and publishing) Sellers of books might live a little lower, but not much. At this altitude, the beautiful grove of trees where you can see every nuance and unique feature is merely a green outcropping on the vast landscape below.

If publishers were in charge of forests, there would be neat groupings of oak trees over here, maples in a cluster over there and willow trees would have their own imprint.

Publishing is generally the art and business of doing new things that are like things done before.

For authors trying to be creative and distinguish themselves from everyone else, it can be very frustrating because just about every person or company that touches your work after it leaves your computer serves in one or more of the following roles:

  1. Curator
  2. Categorizer
  3. Commender

The curator is that job of a quick subjective decision that decides if it fits with that agent or publisher. The categorizing determines what the book is like, or similar to, so we know how to think about it from a business perspective. Once determined to fit and where it fits the agent and/or publisher will be become an advocate for it and commend it to others.

As an agent, I function as all three at one time or another.

This might seem rather silly, but the phrase that strikes fear in agents and publishers is, “This book is unlike anything you have ever read.”

While your intention is to communicate the highly creative nature of your work, unintentionally you have said, “This book is immune to any attempt to categorize it, at best making your job more difficult or worse, very frustrating.”

Increasing the pain for a publisher is not a good start to a successful writing career!

Being easily categorized is a good thing. Don’t fight it.

A final note related to all this, whether you publish traditionally or indie, your book will need to be given a written description. That description will need to include certain key words to describe your book. And whether you like it or not, some of those words need to be the same old words as everyone else uses to describe their novel, marriage book, devotional or whatever.

Intentionally avoiding those key words in an attempt to be creative and different will leave your online search results lacking. And with the majority of books now being sold direct to consumers online, this is more important today than ever before.  Product descriptions are to be written with great care. Take your time. It might be the most important thing you do for your book.

Traditional publishers have people doing this, but it never hurts for the author to know a bit about it as well. Collaboration is a good thing.

There are online resources that can help you. Click here for Amazon’s take on it.

Remember, if people can’t find you, they can’t buy you.

 

Category: Book Proposals, Creativity, Get Published, Writing CraftTag: book proposals, Get Published

The Joy of a Client Christmas Card List

By Steve Laubeon December 15, 2014
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It’s that time of year where notes, cards, and gifts are exchanged. A family and friends list of names is one thing (my wife wonderfully handles those), but it is that list of clients where I spend a lot of time. Yes it is considerable work but quite satisfying. Recite the Story When going through the client list it is fun to stop and think about each author before writing their card. Every author …

Read moreThe Joy of a Client Christmas Card List
Category: AgencyTag: Agency, Christmas, Clients

A Picky Reader

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon December 11, 2014
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Having a book rejected by an agent or editor is puzzling, especially when the agent or editor have stated they are seeking just what we’re offering. Almost every day, my office must decline books that should be a fit. Usually the reasons are concrete (too long, too short, writing doesn’t sparkle, insufficient platform). But sometimes we’re just picky. I’ve touched on this …

Read moreA Picky Reader
Category: Book Business, Book Proposals, Craft, Creativity, Get Published, RejectionTag: Rejection

Mao and the Four Pests

By Dan Balowon August 26, 2014
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In the late 1950’s , Chairman Mao Zedong of China implemented the first stages of his Great Leap Forward, an effort to move China away from a predominantly agrarian society to a modern industrial and political power. One of the first parts of the GLF was the Four Pests Campaign. The Chinese government identified four scourges on their society and set out to eradicate them.  They were: rats, flies, …

Read moreMao and the Four Pests
Category: Book Business, Career, The Publishing LifeTag: Career, The Publishing Life

Fun Fridays – June 6, 2014

By Steve Laubeon June 6, 2014
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Next time you receive a rejection letter? Next time you receive a bad review? Next time you tell yourself you don’t have what it takes to be a writer? Next time you fail at what you know you are called to do? Watch the below video and remind yourself of the power of determination.

Read moreFun Fridays – June 6, 2014
Category: Fun Fridays, Steve

Two Important Ingredients for Success

By Karen Ballon March 12, 2014
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  I’ll never forget the day, just after church, when a friend pulled me aside and said, “My son can’t find a job and he needs to make some money fast. So he’s going to write a book. Any advice for him?” Yeah, well, the advice I had wasn’t for him, it was for her: “Don’t ever say anything like that to me again.” Whatever gave people the impression that writing was a get-rich quick …

Read moreTwo Important Ingredients for Success
Category: Book Business, Career, Creativity, Karen, PlatformTag: Career, perseverance, Success

Overcome the Discouragement of Expectations

By Steve Laubeon January 15, 2014
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Guest post by Erin Taylor Young

This is Henry, our dog. Not my husband.
I love my husband. Really I do. But there are occasions I’m tempted to take a sharp, pointy pencil and stab him somewhere non-fatal. Especially when I’m torqued over my anemic word count, frustrated by a recent edit, or discouraged by yet another rejection.
I’m venting why, why, WHY, and my hubby turns into a fixer. …

Read moreOvercome the Discouragement of Expectations
Category: Career, Guest Post, The Writing LifeTag: Career, Discouragement, Expectations

What is Crowdfunding? Is it Right for You?

By Steve Laubeon January 13, 2014
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Guest post by Nicole O'Dell

What is crowdfunding?

Crowdfunding is all the rage these days. And it makes sense because a successful campaign guarantees a successful product (book) launch since the necessary sales happen upfront. Or at least enough so that what comes later is gravy. How awesome is that?

But it can be a horrifying prospect to take your idea and present it to the public for a …

Read moreWhat is Crowdfunding? Is it Right for You?
Category: Book Business, Guest Post, TrendsTag: Book Business, Crowdfunding, Trends

Dear Editors

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon February 21, 2013
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Dear Editors:

When I first started writing, not for a letter grade in college, but in hopes of a paycheck -- or at least a byline -- I solicited you with many articles, devotionals, short stories, and book-length manuscripts. Each was posted with dreams of finding your favor. More often than not, you sliced those dreams with your pens of rejection.

And for that, I want to thank you.

Read moreDear Editors
Category: Editing, Get Published, Personal, Tamela, Writing CraftTag: Editor

“The Great Unspoken” – Why Agents Don’t Critique

By Karen Ballon December 5, 2012
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There’s a secret agents and editors share. Something they seldom discuss with each other, and never with writers. It’s something they dislike. Intensely. It ties their hands when it comes to guiding writers guidance. It’s the #1 reason they turn down proposals, and the #2 (and sometimes #1) reason they’ve gone with form rejection letters. It’s something many inexperienced agents and editors try to …

Read more“The Great Unspoken” – Why Agents Don’t Critique
Category: Book Proposals, Craft, Get Published, Karen, Writing CraftTag: book proposals, Critique, Rejection
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