SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 56
Breaking Into the Nonfiction Market:
Step-by-Step
George Galdorisi
San Diego State University
Writer’s Conference
January 22-24, 2016
A Few Preliminaries….
• Three promises:
– This will be a fast-paced fifty minutes
– We’ll learn something…and we’ll have fun
– You’ll have access to these resources…take notes…or not….
• Three assumptions:
– You all are interested in the non-fiction market
– That includes articles of all kinds as well as books
– You didn’t wake up last Tuesday morning with this notion
• A word about Power Point…
….by way of background….
Let’s talk about writing….
….and isn’t this
the oldest profession?
“History is what the historians and writers say it is.”
Norman Polmar
(Forty books – and counting)
Breaking Into the Nonfiction Market:
Step-by-Step
• Some preliminaries - and non-fiction in general
• Being - or becoming - the expert
• Pursuing a subject - or letting life happen
• Scratching itches - or entertaining
• Getting a publisher to buy your book
• Examples and resources
Some Preliminaries:
Non-Fiction in General
….the dark…and light…
side of writing….
“Now, if you’re getting all fired up and ready to pound the keys, I
might inject a word of caution. Actually, this word comes from
my wife. For most of us, writing is not a team sport. An article for
a trade journal or a short story is no big deal, but if you find
yourself writing a long piece or a book, you probably ought to
have a chat with your spouse. For most of us, writing means
closing off the other people in your life for several hours a day
and it’s something you may want to talk about before you
begin.”
Dick Couch
(Fifteen books – and counting)
Shipmate, April 1993
“If you have other things in your life—family, friends,
good productive day work—these can interact with
your writing and the sum will be all the richer.”
David Brin
I keep six honest serving-men
(They taught me all I knew);
Their names are What and Why and When
And How and Where and Who.
Rudyard Kipling
The Elephant’s Child
Some Things to Consider Before You Write
• Who are you writing for?
• What are you going to write?
• Where are you going to write?
• When are you going to write?
• Why are you going to write?
• How are you going to write?
So Many Non-Fiction Outlets
• A wide array of online media
• Newsletters
• Alumni magazines
• Professional journals
• Popular magazines
• Newspapers
• Portions of non-fiction books
• Non-fiction books
Why Non-Fiction Books?
• It is a hungry market
• Relatively easy to enter
• Lower risk – sell then write
• Can be steady money
• Can query without an agent more easily
• Vastly more non-fiction published than fiction
Being – or Becoming – the Expert
“There are authors and artists and then again
there are writers and painters.”
Ian Fleming
How to Writer a Thriller
Being – Or Becoming - the Expert
• Some essential “first order” questions:
– Is this something you’re passionate about?
– Do you have enough “street creds” that you’re an expert?
– If not, is there a way you can acquire those street creds?
– Do you really want to spend several years doing this?
• If the answer is yes, then it’s all about the packaging:
– First stop – solo or with a collaborator?
– Next stop – the library and the internet – due diligence
– Is it a book – or an article?
– If it’s a book – packaging – query letters and proposals
What Should You Write About?
• Whatever you are passionate about
• “You’re in a bar with your friends”
• What my first agent always asked:
– What are you really passionate about?
– What do I wish I had more time for?
– How would I spend year as a “professional dilettante?”
– What do I think about when I’m alone?
– What do I worry about and what issues concern me most?
– What have I done that people seem curious about?
– Is there a topic where friend turn to me for advice?
Pursuing a Subject:
Or Letting Life Happen
“Being a comparatively successful writer is a good life.
You don’t have to work at it all the time and you carry
your office around in your head. And you are far more
aware of the world around you. Writing makes you
more alive to your surroundings and, since the main
ingredient of living, though you might not think so to
look at most human beings, is to be alive, this is quite a
worthwhile by-product, even if you only write thrillers.”
Ian Fleming
How to Write a Thriller
Pursuing a Subject-or Letting Life Happen?
• Beyond the Law of the Sea
• Leave No Man Behind
• The Kissing Sailor
• Other examples
• And this leads us to a question….
Are You Scratching Itches:
or Entertaining?
“I do not over-intellectualize the production process. I
try to keep it simple: Tell the damned story.”
Tom Clancy
Scratching Itches-Or Entertaining?
• Scratching Itches: Beyond the Law of the Sea:
– We had a mission
– We had a message
– We wanted people to do something
– It gave us a platform
• Entertaining: The Kissing Sailor
– We had a mission
– We were on a “Mission from God”
– In some ways, the day the book was published – we were done
– And…the book “percolated” into downstream goodness
• Leave No Man Behind – Both goals
How Much to Tell and What’s Next?
• Getting past: “It’s an article, not a book”
• A comfort zone and an “article to book ratio”
• One book – or a series
• Above all else – the purpose of the book (LNMB)
• At the end of the day – you decide, not the editor
• If you haven’t written articles – now you should!
You’re in the Starting Blocks!
• You know what you’re going to write about
• You know why you’re going to write about it
• You know who is going to write it (solo….or….)
• You know roughly when you’ll write
• You already have the where figured out:
– Solo
– With collaborator (the “how” question)
• Now all you have to do is get someone interested in
publishing the book!
Getting a Publisher
to Buy Your Book
“The toughest hurdle you must scale is getting a
publisher to agree to handle your book. You are a new
name, a new risk to them. They will judge you on what
you send, the thought behind it, the obvious
professionalism, how it reaches them, sometimes your
expertise or previous writing output, and always on
how your book will increase their profit line.”
Gordon Burgett
Before You Write Your First Book
“It’s already
been done, or
it’s on Wikipedia”
“It’s an article,
not a book”
“You don’t have
a platform”You must
overcome
all three!
Getting a Publisher
to Buy Your Book
• Due diligence – with a vengeance!
• Finding the right agent or publisher
• The query letter – address those three circles
• Your book proposal – and some examples
Due Diligence – With a Vengeance!
• Once you get past the “It’s an article, not a book”
roadblock, the next one is…
• “It’s already been done before or enough
information on the subject is on Wikipedia”
• You have to convince yourself it hasn’t been done
and then you have to convince an agent or editor
• How to you do that? (Your “Mission from God”)
Due Diligence – With a Vengeance!
• Meet Your Two Best Friends:
– The library
– The internet
• The library
– Books
– Journals and magazines
• The internet
– Subject searches
– Writer searches
• Other friends
– Your colleagues and fellow travelers
– Bookstores – large and small
What is the End Game –
What Are You Looking For?
• Publishers who publish this kind of book
• Agents who agent this kind of book
• Once you know that, it’s all about the query
• Persistence on steroids!
The Query Letter
• There is a cottage industry of courses on how to write a
query letter
• There are a number of books on how to write a query
letter
• There is a cottage industry of experts on how to write a
query letter – and some of them are here!
• There is a massive amount of information on the internet
on how to write a query letter
• One source:
– Google: http://www.agentquery.com/writer_hq.aspx
– But this is only one, there is a universe of them out there
The Query Letter
The “Bell Shaped Curve” For Most
• The hook
• Mini-synopsis
• Your bio
• Your closing – “where’s the beef?”
– High Concept
– Outline
– Table of Contents
– Sample Chapters
• “Bound the problem” for how much time you’re
going to spend on getting an “A” in query letters
The Magic Words….
…Yes, I’d be interested in reading it
How long will the editor have to wait to
see your proposal?…
“Interest” has a half life….
Before You Write the Proposal
• Come up with a “purpose statement” for your book
and write it down in one sentence
• Then put this into a working question: This book is
the answer to….
• Two sources (there are a multitude of them in print):
– John Boswell – The Awful Truth About Publishing
– Jeff Herman – Write the Perfect Book Proposal
The Proposal – The 100,000-Foot View
• Who would read your book?
• Why would they buy it?
• Where would they use it?
• What else is available like your book?
• How does your book differ from others?
• When did you decide it’s better than Wikipedia?
Think about your competition today – not just books,
but the internet? Is your book better than Wikipedia?
Your Book Proposal
• This is not the time for humility
• Think back to when you wrote your first resume
• Advice from John Boswell: The Awful Truth About
Publishing
– Define the book’s audience
– Describe the book generally and specifically
– Show that your book fills a need for your audience
– Show that you are uniquely qualified to write this book
Today – You Are the Publisher’s
Marketing Department
• Part of your proposal must include how you are
going to do their work for them!
• What is your platform?
– Media of all kinds (talks, interviews, print, et al)
– Internet presence
• Facebook
• Twitter
• And more….
– How you are going to make promoting our book a
constant drumbeat
Let’s look at two examples….
Leave No Man Behind
• The “Hook” – Rescue Story (Clyde
Lassen – Medal of Honor)
• About the Book
• Table of Contents
• Chapter Summaries
• The Market
• The Authors
• Promotion
• Length and Delivery
Leave No Man Behind
“An important and comprehensive work on that most
American of military imperatives--going in harm's
way to get one of our own.” Dick Couch (NYT
bestselling author)
“Leave No Man Behind is a solid piece of history. Well
written, well told, well done!” Darrel Whitcomb
Author of The Rescue of Bat 21
“This story has never been told before! Leave No
Man Behind offers a unique blend of operational
experience and technical description.” Dr. Norman
Friedman – author of over 30 books.
“George Galdorisi and Tom Phillips have provided a
comprehensive, and well-written history of the
development of combat rescue up to the present,
including dramatic accounts of rescues, among them
many never before revealed.” Norman Polmar –
author of over 40 naval books.
The Kissing Sailor
Cover
Quote
Table of Contents
Concept (Why this book?)
Competition (Surely this story has
been told before?)
Timing (Why are we doing this
book at this time?)
Methodology (How are we going
to pull this off?)
About the Authors
Chapter Summary
The Market
Promotion
Length and Delivery
The Kissing Sailor
“What a wonderful detective story
about a kissing sailor and a beautiful
nurse – the most famous couple
celebrating the end of WWII. Famous
but anonymous - until now. I loved it.”
Tom Brokaw, author of The Greatest
Generation
“The Kissing Sailor is a whodunit that
provides once and for all the
identification of the world’s best-
known smoochers…You have to read
this book!” David Hume Kennerly,
Pulitzer Prize winning photographer
Some Iconic Non-Fiction Writers
and Helpful Resources
“There comes a time when you realize that everything
is a dream, and only those things preserved in writing
have any possibility of being real.”
James Salter
“All That Is”
NYT Magazine
December 27, 2015
Some Iconic Non-Fiction Writers
and Helpful Resources
• David McCullough
• Walter Isaacson
• Malcolm Gladwell
• Laura Hillenbrand
• Writers on Writing (I)
• Writers on Writing (II)
• NYT Book Review
• NYT Book Review – Last Page
A Summing Up of What We’ve Covered:
Whew – is it Worth It?
Breaking Into the Nonfiction Market:
Step-by-Step
• Some preliminaries - and non-fiction in general
• Being - or becoming - the expert
• Pursuing a subject - or letting life happen
• Scratching itches - or entertaining
• Getting a publisher to buy your book
• Examples and resources
“Being a comparatively successful writer is a good life.
You don’t have to work at it all the time and you carry
your office around in your head. And you are far more
aware of the world around you. Writing makes you
more alive to your surroundings and, since the main
ingredient of living, though you might not think so to
look at most human beings, is to be alive, this is quite a
worthwhile by-product, even if you only write thrillers.”
Ian Fleming
How to Write a Thriller
Slides Posted:
http://www.georgegaldorisi.com/
E-mail address:
george@georgegaldorisi.com
Slides and Resources:
http://www.georgegaldorisi.com/
For 2016 SDSU Writer’s Conference Attendees
only. Contact me via this website for:
Book proposal for: Leave No Man Behind
Book proposal for: The Kissing Sailor

More Related Content

What's hot

What's hot (20)

Non-Fiction: The Hungry Market
Non-Fiction: The Hungry MarketNon-Fiction: The Hungry Market
Non-Fiction: The Hungry Market
 
Leveraging Social Media
Leveraging Social MediaLeveraging Social Media
Leveraging Social Media
 
Non-Fiction - The Hungry Market
Non-Fiction - The Hungry MarketNon-Fiction - The Hungry Market
Non-Fiction - The Hungry Market
 
First - and Essential - Steps
First - and Essential - StepsFirst - and Essential - Steps
First - and Essential - Steps
 
Non-Fiction the Hungry Market
Non-Fiction the Hungry MarketNon-Fiction the Hungry Market
Non-Fiction the Hungry Market
 
First and Essential Steps
First and Essential StepsFirst and Essential Steps
First and Essential Steps
 
First and Essential Steps
First and Essential StepsFirst and Essential Steps
First and Essential Steps
 
Social Media - Challenges and Opportunities
Social Media - Challenges and Opportunities Social Media - Challenges and Opportunities
Social Media - Challenges and Opportunities
 
The Great American Novel
The Great American NovelThe Great American Novel
The Great American Novel
 
Non Fiction: The Hungry Market
Non Fiction: The Hungry MarketNon Fiction: The Hungry Market
Non Fiction: The Hungry Market
 
Establishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online Presence Establishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online Presence
 
The Great American Novel
The Great American NovelThe Great American Novel
The Great American Novel
 
January 13, 2015 - Why Write?
January 13, 2015 - Why Write?January 13, 2015 - Why Write?
January 13, 2015 - Why Write?
 
Breaking into the Non-Fiction Market
Breaking into the Non-Fiction MarketBreaking into the Non-Fiction Market
Breaking into the Non-Fiction Market
 
Establishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online PresenceEstablishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online Presence
 
Why Write? - Jan. 19, 2016
Why Write? - Jan. 19, 2016Why Write? - Jan. 19, 2016
Why Write? - Jan. 19, 2016
 
A Thrill a Minute
A Thrill a MinuteA Thrill a Minute
A Thrill a Minute
 
Chris Stout on Getting Published
Chris Stout on Getting PublishedChris Stout on Getting Published
Chris Stout on Getting Published
 
Breaking into the Nonfiction Market by George Galdorisi
Breaking into the Nonfiction Market by George GaldorisiBreaking into the Nonfiction Market by George Galdorisi
Breaking into the Nonfiction Market by George Galdorisi
 
Narrative-Driven Recommendation for Casual Leisure Needs
Narrative-Driven Recommendation for Casual Leisure NeedsNarrative-Driven Recommendation for Casual Leisure Needs
Narrative-Driven Recommendation for Casual Leisure Needs
 

Viewers also liked

CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016
CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016
CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016
Khoa Nguyen
 
Business Promotion - KB.PDF
Business Promotion - KB.PDFBusiness Promotion - KB.PDF
Business Promotion - KB.PDF
Kevin Barnes
 

Viewers also liked (11)

Cali Trees-2
Cali Trees-2Cali Trees-2
Cali Trees-2
 
Fully_balanced_transimpedance_amplifier_
Fully_balanced_transimpedance_amplifier_Fully_balanced_transimpedance_amplifier_
Fully_balanced_transimpedance_amplifier_
 
Kimbarow LOR
Kimbarow LORKimbarow LOR
Kimbarow LOR
 
CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016
CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016
CV_NGUYEN DUY KHOA 09Jan2016
 
Letter From Apricot (Apricot Hotel, Hanoi)
Letter From Apricot (Apricot Hotel, Hanoi)Letter From Apricot (Apricot Hotel, Hanoi)
Letter From Apricot (Apricot Hotel, Hanoi)
 
Business Promotion - KB.PDF
Business Promotion - KB.PDFBusiness Promotion - KB.PDF
Business Promotion - KB.PDF
 
Unlocking Talent in Children for Effective Ministry
Unlocking Talent in Children for Effective MinistryUnlocking Talent in Children for Effective Ministry
Unlocking Talent in Children for Effective Ministry
 
Project
ProjectProject
Project
 
Social Media - Challenges & Opportunities
Social Media - Challenges & Opportunities Social Media - Challenges & Opportunities
Social Media - Challenges & Opportunities
 
Bjørnar Johnsen
Bjørnar JohnsenBjørnar Johnsen
Bjørnar Johnsen
 
Hungary 2016 OECD Economic Survey investing in the future
Hungary 2016 OECD Economic Survey investing in the futureHungary 2016 OECD Economic Survey investing in the future
Hungary 2016 OECD Economic Survey investing in the future
 

Similar to Breaking into the Nonfiction Market, Step-by-Step

Stout On Getting Published
Stout On Getting PublishedStout On Getting Published
Stout On Getting Published
Dr. Chris Stout
 

Similar to Breaking into the Nonfiction Market, Step-by-Step (19)

You Don't Have to Make It Up: Breaking Into the Non-Fiction Market
You Don't Have to Make It Up: Breaking Into the Non-Fiction MarketYou Don't Have to Make It Up: Breaking Into the Non-Fiction Market
You Don't Have to Make It Up: Breaking Into the Non-Fiction Market
 
Why Write?
Why Write?Why Write?
Why Write?
 
Pswg general meeting
Pswg general meetingPswg general meeting
Pswg general meeting
 
Establishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online Presence Establishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online Presence
 
Establishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online Presence Establishing an Online Presence
Establishing an Online Presence
 
How to get your work into print - Guaranteed!
How to get your work into print - Guaranteed!How to get your work into print - Guaranteed!
How to get your work into print - Guaranteed!
 
The present and future of publishing for writers
The present and future of publishing for writersThe present and future of publishing for writers
The present and future of publishing for writers
 
Stout On Getting Published
Stout On Getting PublishedStout On Getting Published
Stout On Getting Published
 
How to get published - Dr. Chris Stout
How to get published - Dr. Chris StoutHow to get published - Dr. Chris Stout
How to get published - Dr. Chris Stout
 
Books to make you a better investor
Books to make you a better investorBooks to make you a better investor
Books to make you a better investor
 
Trials and tribulations of a self published author
Trials and tribulations of a self published authorTrials and tribulations of a self published author
Trials and tribulations of a self published author
 
A Thrill a Minute
A Thrill a MinuteA Thrill a Minute
A Thrill a Minute
 
From Indie to Traditional Publishing
From Indie to Traditional PublishingFrom Indie to Traditional Publishing
From Indie to Traditional Publishing
 
The Road to Writing & Publishing Your First Book: How to Do It without going ...
The Road to Writing & Publishing Your First Book: How to Do It without going ...The Road to Writing & Publishing Your First Book: How to Do It without going ...
The Road to Writing & Publishing Your First Book: How to Do It without going ...
 
Write Your Book in 90 Days Webinar
Write Your Book in 90 Days WebinarWrite Your Book in 90 Days Webinar
Write Your Book in 90 Days Webinar
 
Interviewing tips
Interviewing tipsInterviewing tips
Interviewing tips
 
Finding the Heart of Your Story
Finding the Heart of Your StoryFinding the Heart of Your Story
Finding the Heart of Your Story
 
Become an Author in 30 days Presented to BAM November 2013
Become an Author in 30 days  Presented to BAM November 2013Become an Author in 30 days  Presented to BAM November 2013
Become an Author in 30 days Presented to BAM November 2013
 
Autumn 2
Autumn 2Autumn 2
Autumn 2
 

More from ggaldorisi

More from ggaldorisi (14)

Writing Naval and Military Fiction
Writing Naval and Military FictionWriting Naval and Military Fiction
Writing Naval and Military Fiction
 
Greater Los Angles Writers Conference
Greater Los Angles Writers ConferenceGreater Los Angles Writers Conference
Greater Los Angles Writers Conference
 
Finding the Heart of Your Story: Your Original Idea
Finding the Heart of Your Story: Your Original IdeaFinding the Heart of Your Story: Your Original Idea
Finding the Heart of Your Story: Your Original Idea
 
The Secrets Behind Everything Successful Novel
The Secrets Behind Everything Successful NovelThe Secrets Behind Everything Successful Novel
The Secrets Behind Everything Successful Novel
 
Finding the Heart of Your Story
Finding the Heart of Your StoryFinding the Heart of Your Story
Finding the Heart of Your Story
 
The Secrets Behind Every Successful Novel
The Secrets Behind Every Successful NovelThe Secrets Behind Every Successful Novel
The Secrets Behind Every Successful Novel
 
Algorithms of Armageddon: What Happens When We Insert AI Into Our Military ...
Algorithms of Armageddon:   What Happens When We Insert AI Into Our Military ...Algorithms of Armageddon:   What Happens When We Insert AI Into Our Military ...
Algorithms of Armageddon: What Happens When We Insert AI Into Our Military ...
 
Marketing Your Books
Marketing Your BooksMarketing Your Books
Marketing Your Books
 
Pswg sunday workshop
Pswg sunday workshopPswg sunday workshop
Pswg sunday workshop
 
Plot and Narrative
Plot and Narrative Plot and Narrative
Plot and Narrative
 
Heart of the Story
Heart of the StoryHeart of the Story
Heart of the Story
 
Developing a Book's Narrative
Developing a Book's NarrativeDeveloping a Book's Narrative
Developing a Book's Narrative
 
Finding the Heart of Your Story: Nurturing Your Original Idea
Finding the Heart of Your Story: Nurturing Your Original IdeaFinding the Heart of Your Story: Nurturing Your Original Idea
Finding the Heart of Your Story: Nurturing Your Original Idea
 
Plot and Narrative
Plot and NarrativePlot and Narrative
Plot and Narrative
 

Recently uploaded

Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functionsSalient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
KarakKing
 

Recently uploaded (20)

On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsOn National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
 
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
 
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptxICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
 
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdfMicro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
Micro-Scholarship, What it is, How can it help me.pdf
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding  Accommodations and ModificationsUnderstanding  Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
 
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docxPython Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
 
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
 
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functionsSalient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
Salient Features of India constitution especially power and functions
 
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
 
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - EnglishGraduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
 
Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...
Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...
Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...
 
Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
Kodo Millet  PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...Kodo Millet  PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
 
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
 
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptxCOMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
 
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
 
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
 
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptxHMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
 

Breaking into the Nonfiction Market, Step-by-Step

  • 1. Breaking Into the Nonfiction Market: Step-by-Step George Galdorisi San Diego State University Writer’s Conference January 22-24, 2016
  • 2. A Few Preliminaries…. • Three promises: – This will be a fast-paced fifty minutes – We’ll learn something…and we’ll have fun – You’ll have access to these resources…take notes…or not…. • Three assumptions: – You all are interested in the non-fiction market – That includes articles of all kinds as well as books – You didn’t wake up last Tuesday morning with this notion • A word about Power Point…
  • 3. ….by way of background….
  • 4. Let’s talk about writing….
  • 5. ….and isn’t this the oldest profession?
  • 6. “History is what the historians and writers say it is.” Norman Polmar (Forty books – and counting)
  • 7. Breaking Into the Nonfiction Market: Step-by-Step • Some preliminaries - and non-fiction in general • Being - or becoming - the expert • Pursuing a subject - or letting life happen • Scratching itches - or entertaining • Getting a publisher to buy your book • Examples and resources
  • 10. “Now, if you’re getting all fired up and ready to pound the keys, I might inject a word of caution. Actually, this word comes from my wife. For most of us, writing is not a team sport. An article for a trade journal or a short story is no big deal, but if you find yourself writing a long piece or a book, you probably ought to have a chat with your spouse. For most of us, writing means closing off the other people in your life for several hours a day and it’s something you may want to talk about before you begin.” Dick Couch (Fifteen books – and counting) Shipmate, April 1993
  • 11. “If you have other things in your life—family, friends, good productive day work—these can interact with your writing and the sum will be all the richer.” David Brin
  • 12. I keep six honest serving-men (They taught me all I knew); Their names are What and Why and When And How and Where and Who. Rudyard Kipling The Elephant’s Child
  • 13. Some Things to Consider Before You Write • Who are you writing for? • What are you going to write? • Where are you going to write? • When are you going to write? • Why are you going to write? • How are you going to write?
  • 14. So Many Non-Fiction Outlets • A wide array of online media • Newsletters • Alumni magazines • Professional journals • Popular magazines • Newspapers • Portions of non-fiction books • Non-fiction books
  • 15. Why Non-Fiction Books? • It is a hungry market • Relatively easy to enter • Lower risk – sell then write • Can be steady money • Can query without an agent more easily • Vastly more non-fiction published than fiction
  • 16. Being – or Becoming – the Expert
  • 17. “There are authors and artists and then again there are writers and painters.” Ian Fleming How to Writer a Thriller
  • 18. Being – Or Becoming - the Expert • Some essential “first order” questions: – Is this something you’re passionate about? – Do you have enough “street creds” that you’re an expert? – If not, is there a way you can acquire those street creds? – Do you really want to spend several years doing this? • If the answer is yes, then it’s all about the packaging: – First stop – solo or with a collaborator? – Next stop – the library and the internet – due diligence – Is it a book – or an article? – If it’s a book – packaging – query letters and proposals
  • 19. What Should You Write About? • Whatever you are passionate about • “You’re in a bar with your friends” • What my first agent always asked: – What are you really passionate about? – What do I wish I had more time for? – How would I spend year as a “professional dilettante?” – What do I think about when I’m alone? – What do I worry about and what issues concern me most? – What have I done that people seem curious about? – Is there a topic where friend turn to me for advice?
  • 20. Pursuing a Subject: Or Letting Life Happen
  • 21. “Being a comparatively successful writer is a good life. You don’t have to work at it all the time and you carry your office around in your head. And you are far more aware of the world around you. Writing makes you more alive to your surroundings and, since the main ingredient of living, though you might not think so to look at most human beings, is to be alive, this is quite a worthwhile by-product, even if you only write thrillers.” Ian Fleming How to Write a Thriller
  • 22. Pursuing a Subject-or Letting Life Happen? • Beyond the Law of the Sea • Leave No Man Behind • The Kissing Sailor • Other examples • And this leads us to a question….
  • 23. Are You Scratching Itches: or Entertaining?
  • 24. “I do not over-intellectualize the production process. I try to keep it simple: Tell the damned story.” Tom Clancy
  • 25. Scratching Itches-Or Entertaining? • Scratching Itches: Beyond the Law of the Sea: – We had a mission – We had a message – We wanted people to do something – It gave us a platform • Entertaining: The Kissing Sailor – We had a mission – We were on a “Mission from God” – In some ways, the day the book was published – we were done – And…the book “percolated” into downstream goodness • Leave No Man Behind – Both goals
  • 26. How Much to Tell and What’s Next? • Getting past: “It’s an article, not a book” • A comfort zone and an “article to book ratio” • One book – or a series • Above all else – the purpose of the book (LNMB) • At the end of the day – you decide, not the editor • If you haven’t written articles – now you should!
  • 27. You’re in the Starting Blocks! • You know what you’re going to write about • You know why you’re going to write about it • You know who is going to write it (solo….or….) • You know roughly when you’ll write • You already have the where figured out: – Solo – With collaborator (the “how” question) • Now all you have to do is get someone interested in publishing the book!
  • 28. Getting a Publisher to Buy Your Book
  • 29. “The toughest hurdle you must scale is getting a publisher to agree to handle your book. You are a new name, a new risk to them. They will judge you on what you send, the thought behind it, the obvious professionalism, how it reaches them, sometimes your expertise or previous writing output, and always on how your book will increase their profit line.” Gordon Burgett Before You Write Your First Book
  • 30. “It’s already been done, or it’s on Wikipedia” “It’s an article, not a book” “You don’t have a platform”You must overcome all three!
  • 31. Getting a Publisher to Buy Your Book • Due diligence – with a vengeance! • Finding the right agent or publisher • The query letter – address those three circles • Your book proposal – and some examples
  • 32. Due Diligence – With a Vengeance! • Once you get past the “It’s an article, not a book” roadblock, the next one is… • “It’s already been done before or enough information on the subject is on Wikipedia” • You have to convince yourself it hasn’t been done and then you have to convince an agent or editor • How to you do that? (Your “Mission from God”)
  • 33. Due Diligence – With a Vengeance! • Meet Your Two Best Friends: – The library – The internet • The library – Books – Journals and magazines • The internet – Subject searches – Writer searches • Other friends – Your colleagues and fellow travelers – Bookstores – large and small
  • 34. What is the End Game – What Are You Looking For? • Publishers who publish this kind of book • Agents who agent this kind of book • Once you know that, it’s all about the query • Persistence on steroids!
  • 35. The Query Letter • There is a cottage industry of courses on how to write a query letter • There are a number of books on how to write a query letter • There is a cottage industry of experts on how to write a query letter – and some of them are here! • There is a massive amount of information on the internet on how to write a query letter • One source: – Google: http://www.agentquery.com/writer_hq.aspx – But this is only one, there is a universe of them out there
  • 36. The Query Letter The “Bell Shaped Curve” For Most • The hook • Mini-synopsis • Your bio • Your closing – “where’s the beef?” – High Concept – Outline – Table of Contents – Sample Chapters • “Bound the problem” for how much time you’re going to spend on getting an “A” in query letters
  • 38. …Yes, I’d be interested in reading it
  • 39. How long will the editor have to wait to see your proposal?…
  • 40. “Interest” has a half life….
  • 41. Before You Write the Proposal • Come up with a “purpose statement” for your book and write it down in one sentence • Then put this into a working question: This book is the answer to…. • Two sources (there are a multitude of them in print): – John Boswell – The Awful Truth About Publishing – Jeff Herman – Write the Perfect Book Proposal
  • 42. The Proposal – The 100,000-Foot View • Who would read your book? • Why would they buy it? • Where would they use it? • What else is available like your book? • How does your book differ from others? • When did you decide it’s better than Wikipedia? Think about your competition today – not just books, but the internet? Is your book better than Wikipedia?
  • 43. Your Book Proposal • This is not the time for humility • Think back to when you wrote your first resume • Advice from John Boswell: The Awful Truth About Publishing – Define the book’s audience – Describe the book generally and specifically – Show that your book fills a need for your audience – Show that you are uniquely qualified to write this book
  • 44. Today – You Are the Publisher’s Marketing Department • Part of your proposal must include how you are going to do their work for them! • What is your platform? – Media of all kinds (talks, interviews, print, et al) – Internet presence • Facebook • Twitter • And more…. – How you are going to make promoting our book a constant drumbeat
  • 45. Let’s look at two examples….
  • 46. Leave No Man Behind • The “Hook” – Rescue Story (Clyde Lassen – Medal of Honor) • About the Book • Table of Contents • Chapter Summaries • The Market • The Authors • Promotion • Length and Delivery
  • 47. Leave No Man Behind “An important and comprehensive work on that most American of military imperatives--going in harm's way to get one of our own.” Dick Couch (NYT bestselling author) “Leave No Man Behind is a solid piece of history. Well written, well told, well done!” Darrel Whitcomb Author of The Rescue of Bat 21 “This story has never been told before! Leave No Man Behind offers a unique blend of operational experience and technical description.” Dr. Norman Friedman – author of over 30 books. “George Galdorisi and Tom Phillips have provided a comprehensive, and well-written history of the development of combat rescue up to the present, including dramatic accounts of rescues, among them many never before revealed.” Norman Polmar – author of over 40 naval books.
  • 48. The Kissing Sailor Cover Quote Table of Contents Concept (Why this book?) Competition (Surely this story has been told before?) Timing (Why are we doing this book at this time?) Methodology (How are we going to pull this off?) About the Authors Chapter Summary The Market Promotion Length and Delivery
  • 49. The Kissing Sailor “What a wonderful detective story about a kissing sailor and a beautiful nurse – the most famous couple celebrating the end of WWII. Famous but anonymous - until now. I loved it.” Tom Brokaw, author of The Greatest Generation “The Kissing Sailor is a whodunit that provides once and for all the identification of the world’s best- known smoochers…You have to read this book!” David Hume Kennerly, Pulitzer Prize winning photographer
  • 50. Some Iconic Non-Fiction Writers and Helpful Resources
  • 51. “There comes a time when you realize that everything is a dream, and only those things preserved in writing have any possibility of being real.” James Salter “All That Is” NYT Magazine December 27, 2015
  • 52. Some Iconic Non-Fiction Writers and Helpful Resources • David McCullough • Walter Isaacson • Malcolm Gladwell • Laura Hillenbrand • Writers on Writing (I) • Writers on Writing (II) • NYT Book Review • NYT Book Review – Last Page
  • 53. A Summing Up of What We’ve Covered: Whew – is it Worth It? Breaking Into the Nonfiction Market: Step-by-Step • Some preliminaries - and non-fiction in general • Being - or becoming - the expert • Pursuing a subject - or letting life happen • Scratching itches - or entertaining • Getting a publisher to buy your book • Examples and resources
  • 54. “Being a comparatively successful writer is a good life. You don’t have to work at it all the time and you carry your office around in your head. And you are far more aware of the world around you. Writing makes you more alive to your surroundings and, since the main ingredient of living, though you might not think so to look at most human beings, is to be alive, this is quite a worthwhile by-product, even if you only write thrillers.” Ian Fleming How to Write a Thriller
  • 56. Slides and Resources: http://www.georgegaldorisi.com/ For 2016 SDSU Writer’s Conference Attendees only. Contact me via this website for: Book proposal for: Leave No Man Behind Book proposal for: The Kissing Sailor