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What To Do When Someone (Inevitably) Wants to Change Your Book

Meghan Stevenson
2 min readApr 29, 2024

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When I send out finished book proposals to literary agents, my clients and I receive at least one message that says

I love this but . . .

Followed by suggestions to —

  • Change the audience (from individuals to couples!)
  • Switch up the positioning (less business, more big idea!)
  • Make the title or subtitle worse (“it’s too bold”*)

. . . And my authors email me almost instantly.

What do you think?

Is my idea TERRIBLE?

Are they right?

Is EVERYBODY going to think this?

Meanwhile, I’m at my desk completely unsurprised because this is a normal day in publishing. Every single one of my clients has received an email like this . . . and usually not from the literary agent or editor they end up with.

Something you need to know is that one of the more aggravating and confusing aspects of publishing — both for authors and pros like myself — is that a lot of the decisions made are subjective.

In other words, these are opinions. And remember what Salt-N-Pepa had to say about those?

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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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