“Should I self-publish or traditionally publish? Which is the better publishing option right now?”
This is one of the most common questions we get at Scribe.
The problem with this question is the answer can be very complex. There are so many different factors that could possibly come into play, and the answers are not always cut and dry.
But...it’s only complicated for about 2% of authors.
For 97% of authors, the answer is very clear: self-publishing is the right choice.
For the other 1% of authors, the answer is very clear in the other direction: traditional publishing is the better choice.
This post is for that 98% of authors who should clearly go one way or the other, and is designed to help you easily and quickly understand which side you are on.
This post is not written for the 2% of authors who need a long, complicated explanation. For those authors, I wrote another post that really dives deep into the complicated details.
If the author owns the rights and royalties, then the book is self-published.
If the publishing company owns the rights and royalties, then the book is traditionally published.
That is it. Everything else is commentary on that single distinction.
But if you can get an offer, and an advance of $500k or more from the publisher, you should (almost certainly) take the deal.
These are mainly the types of people who can get those deals:
What if you can get a deal with a traditional publishing company, but the advance will be less than $500k? Then it depends. That’s part of the 2% who have a complicated answer, and that is addressed here.
Why should everyone else self-publish?
Because without a big advance from a major publisher, the advantages of self-publishing greatly outweigh the disadvantages.
If not, then self-publish.
If you’re unsure whether you can get a deal or not, read this article. It explains what you need to have to be able to traditionally publish (basically you must have an audience of least 25k+ people waiting to buy your book specifically).
If the answer is status, go traditional. If the answer is validation, go traditional. If the answer is quick money, go traditional. If the answer is long term wealth, self-publish. If the answer is freedom, self-publish. If the answer is creativity, self-publish. If the answer is making an impact, self-publish.
97% of authors should clearly self-publish.
1% of authors should traditionally publish.
The other 2% should take a lot of time and effort and really dive into the details so they can make a hard decision.
I hope this helps. If not, email me and I’ll see what I can do to make it clearer: tuckerscribemedia.com.