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Home > Self-publishing


 Contents
Self-publishing is the publishing of books or other media by those who have written them.

1 Business aspects: author, publisher, and printer

  1. Author
  2. Publisher
  3. Printer
  4. Distributor
  5. Retail store

In this traditional model, the publisher maintains a degree of editorial control over the content, and ordinarily makes choices about the design of the book—the layout of the text, the appearance of the cover, the bookbinding, the quality of the paper, and so on. Then, the publisher pays a printer for the initial press run, usually at least several thousand copies. The books are warehoused, again at the publisher's expense, and made available to distributors who in turn sell them to retailers. The publisher may promote the books through a catalog, distribution of free advance copies to reviewer s, and other means.

The self-publishing model involves fewer entities. Perhaps most often, there are two—the author, and the printer. The author pays for the initial press run, which is often small, and stores the books, perhaps in a home or studio. In many cases the author sells the book directly to readers and other end customers, or may perhaps sell it to or offer it on consignment through retail stores.

Less often, the author prints the books themself, usually using a xerographic process or a computer printerA computer printer is a computer peripheral device that produces a hard copy (permanent human-readable text and/or graphics, usually on paper) from data stored in a computer connected to it. Printing mode The data received by a printer may be: # a string. In some cases, books are printed on demand with no inventoryAn inventory consists of a list of goods and materials held available in stock. An inventory can also be a self examination, a moral inventory. Each country has its own rules about accounting for inventory; this article concentrates on economic theory, Un kept.

The distinctive features of self-publishing are:

2 Printing and production quality

Many self-published books utilize printing and binding techniques chosen for their suitability for short press runs. They may be printed with a xerographic process rather than offset printing. In many cases the lavish full-color cover used in mass-market publishing is not present. Bindings suitable for short press runs, like staples, comb bindings, or wire-obindings are often used rather than the perfect binding or signature binding typical for larger press runs.

Authors using the lower-cost, short-run techniques are often focused on content rather than appearance. They may wish to avoid a polished appearance for reasons that have little to do with cost.

Because bookstores believe that cover appearance and content is important for successful sales, self-publishing authors that plan to distribute their books through mainstream distributors and bookstores often strive to achieve an overall appearance similar to that of the major publishing houses. This in turn mandates a larger initial press run, because of the set-up costs involved for offset press work.

3 Sales literature, political brochures, catalogs, church publications

There are many promotional materials, usually distributed without charge, in order to sell or persuade. Such materials include:

These are usually considered to fall outside the definition of self-publishing, because publication implies an intent to sell the book or other media.



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