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Publishers Don’t Want to Steal Your Ideas.

Meghan Stevenson
2 min readOct 18, 2022

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I was on a call recently with a lovely entrepreneur who asked me about some very common assumptions about traditional publishing. The first, I hear all the time. So let’s be clear:

PUBLISHERS DO NOT WANT TO STEAL YOUR IDEAS.

(News flash: They don’t.)

However, her next assumption is thornier because it’s partly true.

Publishers expect you, the author, to market, promote, and sell your own book.

The fact that authors bear the responsibility to market, promote, and sell their own books is often seen as a bad thing. It’s no coincidence to me that the self-publishing industry perpetuates the idea that sales and marketing is difficult and an undue burden on authors. (Spoiler alert: It’s not.)

Truth is, not every book is the same.

While it’s true that fiction books and narrative nonfiction books (like memoirs) have historically been supported by publisher-driven marketing and PR, prescriptive nonfiction — the how-to books y’all are writing — have always been driven by the author.

That’s because you are the experts, the creators, the generators.

You know who buys books on your topic — not the publisher, who works on thousands of books every day if not every week, month, and…

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Meghan Stevenson
Meghan Stevenson

Written by Meghan Stevenson

I help entrepreneurs, experts and thought leaders create book proposals that sell to major publishers. I also run marathons, save senior dogs and love the Mets.

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