Writers Amongst Dragons, Sharks, Tigers and Publishers - Andrew Crofts
Why does the fate of the applicants
on Dragons’ Den, (or Shark Tank if you are in the US or The
Tigers of Money if you are in Japan , where the show was first
conceived) seem so familiar?
Because that programme’s format is
what every professional writer’s life is like from the day we complete our
first manuscript and go looking for a publisher to the day we finally give up
the struggle.
Just like the Dragons’ Den hopefuls we start with our brilliant ideas, which always seem to us like the most original things ever. We believe they are guaranteed to be bestsellers because if we didn’t we would have trouble getting through the work needed to bring them to life. They are our babies and we pour months and years of toil into their creation.
Then we realise that we need
someone else to see the potential that we see, someone with money and,
hopefully, expertise in the design, marketing and selling of books, someone who
will take our precious ideas, package them beautifully and get them out into
the shops and into the hands of readers.
I don’t know how many people write
in to Dragons’ Den and never even get
seen, but I am willing to bet it’s a lot, probably the equivalent of the
millions of “pitch letters” and the hundreds of thousands of “slush pile”
manuscripts which used to circulate around publishers’ offices in corporeal
form and now fly around in cyberspace as email attachments. In both cases the
majority of these brilliant ideas sink at this point and you are left with the few
which the dragons’ gatekeepers think look promising enough to be considered.
I guess now we have reached the equivalent
stage in the writer’s life cycle as that moment when you get to actually speak
to an agent, who thinks there is a slight possibility that they will be able to
find a willing dragon to back you. There will then be a few exploratory conversations,
maybe even meetings, where everyone and his wife/her husband gives an opinion
on how you could improve your product and your pitch to make it more appealing.
Finally you have got over all the hurdles
and you are wheeled in to the room with the Dragons themselves.
In a writer’s world these are the
commissioning editors from the major publishers who have track records in
making money out of books. They have flashy great glass offices to prove how
good they are at this, but they are also hungry for new products which they can
package and develop just like the ones they have been successful with before. They
are willing to listen to your pitch before they decide whether to swallow you
whole or spit you back out into the street.
You enter their flashy glass towers
shaking with nerves, (just like those poor people you see rising in the lift on
the show), and walk out in front of people who seem to hold all the cards. They
are publishing professionals, insiders with salaries and pensions and access to
the capital and the expertise that you need. You are just a writer, an
outsider, with an idea for a book or a manuscript.
You now have to convince these fire
breathers that your book, (which in most cases they will understandably not
have had time to read in full), has the potential to be like the books they
have produced before. Or you have to convince them that you have identified a
whole new market of potential readers who no-one else knows about, who they
will be able to target with their big budgets and marketing skills.
They, on the other hand, want you
to tell them about your social media platform, your previous track record, the
genre that your book falls into, and how many more books of a similar type you
will be able to churn out in the future if they invest the money to make this
one a success. They want to see how they can brand you and scale your book up
into a business which will keep bringing in money for years ahead.
If you manage to convince them that
your product has this potential for “scalability” then they might be willing to
make you an offer. But they know there are many others like you waiting to come
up in the same lift, so that offer probably doesn’t have to be that generous,
and they can also be sure that you will agree to them keeping the lions’ share
of the profit that results from whatever they agree to invest; a reward for
their generosity in offering to make your dreams come true.
In exchange for doing you this
favour they will also want to have complete control over what the book looks
like, when it will come out, how many copies will be printed, and when it will
be withdrawn from the market. They will also want to own the copyright and it
is unlikely they will ever sell it back to you as long as there is even the
slightest chance that the book might earn anything in the future.
Just occasionally a pitching author
is lucky and manages to convince these dragons that they have the potential to
be the next J.K. Rowling or E.L. James and the dragons will then start
squabbling amongst themselves, offering better and better terms to try to tempt
the author to choose them and not their rivals. It is knowing that these
scenarios do sometimes happen that keeps new writers working and making it a
buyers’ market.
Often on the television programme
the Dragons inform the applicants that they have “nice little businesses” going
and that they should keep it at that level, not trying to run with the “big
boys” (them, obviously). In the analogous writer’s life that is where the small
independent publishers, the hybrid publishers and the self publishers come in.
If you can afford to print up your own book, hire your own editor and cover
designer and, in an ideal situation, your own PR person, then you actually
don’t need the help of the Dragons at all. You can stay out of the Shark Tank, remaining
safe on dry land, keeping control of how your beloved book is presented to the
world and keeping the bulk of any profit that might follow.
There is always a possibility that
if you act as your own dragon you will lose the money that you invest in
becoming or hiring a publisher, but at least you have given it a go and at
least you have avoided the degrading process of having to convince a bunch of
rich business people that you can make them a lot more money.
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