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Am I a new writer?


What is the business model for Creative Commons books?What republication rights do I have?which genres are more successful, publication figures?How Does the Publishing Process Work?Self-publishing / marketing children's bookIf the first book didn't sell well due to going the self-publishing route, is writing the sequel worth it from a business perspective toward agents?Can I pay to win at publishing?Publishing fiction: when do I start looking for an agent?What is the opposite of self-publishing?Can I publish a “revised edition” of my book with a different publisher?













3















I have a very crudely written book that I self published through Amazon in 2013. I did not do any advertising for the book and it only sold about 80 copies. I am now in the process of a query letter to a publishing company, and they have two different categories, published writers and unpublished writers. How should I send it, as a published or unpublished writer? Thanks.










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  • Welcome to Writing.SE Steven. Glad you found us. Please check out our tour and help center to learn more.

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Are you sending query letters for the same book that you published on amazon?

    – Liquid
    9 hours ago











  • The answer to this question depends a lot on which is better. Are you asking if you get to count this book as a publication so you can get into a better submission queue? Or are you asking if you have to include this book as a publication which will knock you out of the running for special projects or promotions for new writers?

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago
















3















I have a very crudely written book that I self published through Amazon in 2013. I did not do any advertising for the book and it only sold about 80 copies. I am now in the process of a query letter to a publishing company, and they have two different categories, published writers and unpublished writers. How should I send it, as a published or unpublished writer? Thanks.










share|improve this question









New contributor



Steven Johnson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Welcome to Writing.SE Steven. Glad you found us. Please check out our tour and help center to learn more.

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Are you sending query letters for the same book that you published on amazon?

    – Liquid
    9 hours ago











  • The answer to this question depends a lot on which is better. Are you asking if you get to count this book as a publication so you can get into a better submission queue? Or are you asking if you have to include this book as a publication which will knock you out of the running for special projects or promotions for new writers?

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago














3












3








3








I have a very crudely written book that I self published through Amazon in 2013. I did not do any advertising for the book and it only sold about 80 copies. I am now in the process of a query letter to a publishing company, and they have two different categories, published writers and unpublished writers. How should I send it, as a published or unpublished writer? Thanks.










share|improve this question









New contributor



Steven Johnson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I have a very crudely written book that I self published through Amazon in 2013. I did not do any advertising for the book and it only sold about 80 copies. I am now in the process of a query letter to a publishing company, and they have two different categories, published writers and unpublished writers. How should I send it, as a published or unpublished writer? Thanks.







publishing first-time-author






share|improve this question









New contributor



Steven Johnson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









New contributor



Steven Johnson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 9 hours ago









Cyn

22.4k149105




22.4k149105






New contributor



Steven Johnson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked 9 hours ago









Steven JohnsonSteven Johnson

161




161




New contributor



Steven Johnson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




New contributor




Steven Johnson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • Welcome to Writing.SE Steven. Glad you found us. Please check out our tour and help center to learn more.

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Are you sending query letters for the same book that you published on amazon?

    – Liquid
    9 hours ago











  • The answer to this question depends a lot on which is better. Are you asking if you get to count this book as a publication so you can get into a better submission queue? Or are you asking if you have to include this book as a publication which will knock you out of the running for special projects or promotions for new writers?

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago



















  • Welcome to Writing.SE Steven. Glad you found us. Please check out our tour and help center to learn more.

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Are you sending query letters for the same book that you published on amazon?

    – Liquid
    9 hours ago











  • The answer to this question depends a lot on which is better. Are you asking if you get to count this book as a publication so you can get into a better submission queue? Or are you asking if you have to include this book as a publication which will knock you out of the running for special projects or promotions for new writers?

    – Cyn
    9 hours ago

















Welcome to Writing.SE Steven. Glad you found us. Please check out our tour and help center to learn more.

– Cyn
9 hours ago





Welcome to Writing.SE Steven. Glad you found us. Please check out our tour and help center to learn more.

– Cyn
9 hours ago




1




1





Are you sending query letters for the same book that you published on amazon?

– Liquid
9 hours ago





Are you sending query letters for the same book that you published on amazon?

– Liquid
9 hours ago













The answer to this question depends a lot on which is better. Are you asking if you get to count this book as a publication so you can get into a better submission queue? Or are you asking if you have to include this book as a publication which will knock you out of the running for special projects or promotions for new writers?

– Cyn
9 hours ago





The answer to this question depends a lot on which is better. Are you asking if you get to count this book as a publication so you can get into a better submission queue? Or are you asking if you have to include this book as a publication which will knock you out of the running for special projects or promotions for new writers?

– Cyn
9 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4














When this question is asked, many companies specifically exclude self-publishing or require a certain number of copies sold to count. Typically the intent is to find out if you are a proven quantity with a track record.



80 copies with no promotion isn't nothing, but it's not the kind of numbers a publisher will be looking for. So I think it likely comes closest to the intent of the question to describe yourself as "unpublished."






share|improve this answer































    2














    It's about marketing.



    From a purely logical standpoint, you are already a published author, since you did publish a book and you did sell some copies, no matter how few. So, in theory you are a "published writer".



    Yet, some publishing companies may look down on you. Self-publishing on Amazon, I imagine, has not a great reputation among traditional publishers; so telling everyone one that you published there once could play against your own interest.



    Moreover you refer to your own book as "crudely written", so I suppose you're not particularly proud of it. Would you be ok with the idea of editors glancing at your past work and judging you by it? Does it add value to your background or not?






    share|improve this answer
























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      4














      When this question is asked, many companies specifically exclude self-publishing or require a certain number of copies sold to count. Typically the intent is to find out if you are a proven quantity with a track record.



      80 copies with no promotion isn't nothing, but it's not the kind of numbers a publisher will be looking for. So I think it likely comes closest to the intent of the question to describe yourself as "unpublished."






      share|improve this answer




























        4














        When this question is asked, many companies specifically exclude self-publishing or require a certain number of copies sold to count. Typically the intent is to find out if you are a proven quantity with a track record.



        80 copies with no promotion isn't nothing, but it's not the kind of numbers a publisher will be looking for. So I think it likely comes closest to the intent of the question to describe yourself as "unpublished."






        share|improve this answer


























          4












          4








          4







          When this question is asked, many companies specifically exclude self-publishing or require a certain number of copies sold to count. Typically the intent is to find out if you are a proven quantity with a track record.



          80 copies with no promotion isn't nothing, but it's not the kind of numbers a publisher will be looking for. So I think it likely comes closest to the intent of the question to describe yourself as "unpublished."






          share|improve this answer













          When this question is asked, many companies specifically exclude self-publishing or require a certain number of copies sold to count. Typically the intent is to find out if you are a proven quantity with a track record.



          80 copies with no promotion isn't nothing, but it's not the kind of numbers a publisher will be looking for. So I think it likely comes closest to the intent of the question to describe yourself as "unpublished."







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 8 hours ago









          Chris SunamiChris Sunami

          35.3k344128




          35.3k344128























              2














              It's about marketing.



              From a purely logical standpoint, you are already a published author, since you did publish a book and you did sell some copies, no matter how few. So, in theory you are a "published writer".



              Yet, some publishing companies may look down on you. Self-publishing on Amazon, I imagine, has not a great reputation among traditional publishers; so telling everyone one that you published there once could play against your own interest.



              Moreover you refer to your own book as "crudely written", so I suppose you're not particularly proud of it. Would you be ok with the idea of editors glancing at your past work and judging you by it? Does it add value to your background or not?






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                It's about marketing.



                From a purely logical standpoint, you are already a published author, since you did publish a book and you did sell some copies, no matter how few. So, in theory you are a "published writer".



                Yet, some publishing companies may look down on you. Self-publishing on Amazon, I imagine, has not a great reputation among traditional publishers; so telling everyone one that you published there once could play against your own interest.



                Moreover you refer to your own book as "crudely written", so I suppose you're not particularly proud of it. Would you be ok with the idea of editors glancing at your past work and judging you by it? Does it add value to your background or not?






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  It's about marketing.



                  From a purely logical standpoint, you are already a published author, since you did publish a book and you did sell some copies, no matter how few. So, in theory you are a "published writer".



                  Yet, some publishing companies may look down on you. Self-publishing on Amazon, I imagine, has not a great reputation among traditional publishers; so telling everyone one that you published there once could play against your own interest.



                  Moreover you refer to your own book as "crudely written", so I suppose you're not particularly proud of it. Would you be ok with the idea of editors glancing at your past work and judging you by it? Does it add value to your background or not?






                  share|improve this answer













                  It's about marketing.



                  From a purely logical standpoint, you are already a published author, since you did publish a book and you did sell some copies, no matter how few. So, in theory you are a "published writer".



                  Yet, some publishing companies may look down on you. Self-publishing on Amazon, I imagine, has not a great reputation among traditional publishers; so telling everyone one that you published there once could play against your own interest.



                  Moreover you refer to your own book as "crudely written", so I suppose you're not particularly proud of it. Would you be ok with the idea of editors glancing at your past work and judging you by it? Does it add value to your background or not?







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 9 hours ago









                  LiquidLiquid

                  9,79422885




                  9,79422885






















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