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Index
Front Cover Title Page Copyright Dedication Contents Introduction: It Takes Less Than a Minute to Reject Your Book Part One: Editorial Reasons for Rejection
#1. Your Writing Is Crap #2. You Lied to Me #3. You Insulted Me or My Company #4. We’re Already Publishing a Similar Book #5. Your Target Audience Is Too Big #6. Your Target Audience Is Too Small #7. Your Target Audience Isn’t My Target Audience #8. Your Book Is Too Extreme #9. Your Ideas Conflict with My Values and/or My Company’s Values #10. Your Book Tries to Do Too Much #11. Your Word Count Is Too Long or Too Short #12. You Are Not Credible on the Topic You Want to Write About #13. You Didn’t Do Your Homework #14. You Are Lazy #15. You Didn’t Pass the “First Line Test” #16. My Publishing List Is Packed for the Next Eighteen Months #17. I Had a Fight with My Spouse and/or Children Just Before I Read Your Proposal #18. You Didn’t Eschew Obfuscation #19. You Pitched Me Two Awful Ideas in a Row #20. Your Agent Pitched Me Two Awful Ideas in a Row #21. You Don’t Have an Agent #22. You Didn’t Give Me Enough Writing Samples #23. I’ve Rejected This Book Before #24. You Are Clueless about Copyright Law #25. Your Book Is Boring #26. You Took the D-Train #27. Your Project Is Unoriginal #28. Your Cover Letter Was Too Long #29. You Stink at Grammar and Spelling #30. You Didn’t Give Me a Complete Proposal #31. Bottom Line—You Didn’t Do Enough of My Job for Me
Part Two: Marketing Reasons for Rejection
#32. You Have No Idea What It Means to Market a Book #33. You Have No Legitimate Means for Promoting a Book #34. You Don’t Understand the Difference between Features and Benefits #35. You Have No PR-Worthy Accomplishments #36. You Are Not Able to Run a Grassroots Publicity Campaign for Yourself #37. Amazon.com Reviewers Don’t Like You #38. You Have No Internet Presence #39. Your Internet Presence Is Shoddy and Unprofessional #40. You Are Not Engaged/Poorly Engaged in Social Media #41. Your Title Stinks #42. Your Introduction Is Useless #43. You Look Unprofessional #44. You Are a Poor Verbal and/or Informal Communicator #45. You Demonstrate No Knowledge/Faulty Knowledge of Your Competition #46. There’s Too Much Competition for Your Book #47. You Aren’t Able to Significantly Differentiate Your Book from the Competition #48. You Can’t Quickly Evoke the Right Emotions When Talking about Your Book #49. You Can’t Provide Impactful Endorsements for Your Work #50. My Marketing Team Tried to Promote a Similar Book in the Past, and It Failed #51. My Marketing VP Is Unfairly Prejudiced Against You #52. My Marketing VP Doesn’t Care about Your Topic—and Doesn’t Think Anyone Else Will Either #53. Bottom Line—You Weren’t Good to Mama
Part Three: Sales Reasons for Rejection
#54. You Are Not a Celebrity #55. There Is No “Brandwagon” Trend You Can Latch Onto #56. You Have No Sales History to Speak Of #57. You Have a Sales History, and It Sucks #58. You Self-Published Yourself into Oblivion #59. Women Just Aren’t That Into You #60. My Sales VP Thinks of You as an Unknown (the “No Froofies” Rule) #61. My Sales VP Is Hostile toward Me or My Editorial VP, and Is Sabotaging Our Careers by Undervaluing Proposals We Bring to Publishing Board #62. My Sales VP Can’t (or Won’t) See the Future #63. You Are the Wrong Gender #64. You Have Unrealistic Expectations about Your Publishing Potential #65. You Don’t Know Why People Buy Books #66. Other Books We’ve Done Similar to Yours Did Not Sell According to Expectations #67. Nothing Similar to Your Book Shows Up on Industry Bestseller Lists #68. You Can’t Identify Specific Sales Channels That Your Book Will Sell Through #69. Your Book Costs Too Much to Make #70. You Want Too Much Money #71. Your Novel Is Not a “Romance” #72. My Sales Team Is Struggling to Sell Our Current Line of Books #73. There Is No Real Sequel Potential for Your Book #74. My Sales VP Asked a Spouse/Friend/Baby-sitter if They Would Buy Your Book, and the Response Was Unenthusiastic #75. My Sales Team Asked a Few Key Book Buyers if They Would Stock Your Book, and Their Response Was Unenthusiastic #76. Your Book Failed a Focus Group #77. Bottom Line—Not Enough Profit Potential
Afterword Appendix: Recommended Resources for Writers Acknowledgments About the Author Back Cover
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