Start Here: How to Write a Book Proposal
This post is a companion to Start Here: How to Get Your Book Published. My expertise on this topic comes from more than a decade of acquisitions experience at a traditional publisher, where I reviewed thousands of proposals. Originally written in 2012, this post is regularly updated and expanded.
What exactly is a book proposal?
Book proposals are used to sell nonfiction books.
A book proposal argues why your book (idea) is a salable, marketable product. It acts as a business case or business plan for your book that persuades a publisher to make an investment in your and your project. Instead of writing the entire book, then trying to interest an editor or agent (which is how it works with novels), you write the proposal first. If a publisher is convinced by your argument, it will then contract you and pay you to write the book.
If properly developed and researched, a proposal can take weeks, even months, to write. While proposal length varies tremendously, most are somewhere around 10–25 pages double-spaced, not including sample chapters. It’s not unusual for a proposal to reach 50 pages, even 100 for complex projects once sample materials are included.
New writers might find it easier to simply write the book first, then prepare a proposal—which isn’t such a bad idea, since many editors and agents want assurance that an unknown writer can produce an entire book before they commit. But having the manuscript complete does not get you off the hook when it comes to writing the proposal.
Side note: You may occasionally hear someone refer to novel proposals, which includes a query or cover letter, a synopsis and/or outline, and a partial or complete manuscript—along with any other information the editor or agent requests. This bears little to no relation to a typical nonfiction book proposal.
Your book’s business case usually matters more than the writing itself
People don’t like it when I say this, but for most nonfiction books, the artfulness of the writing doesn’t matter nearly as much as the marketability of the book or the author. (You can see this played out in the rejections received by award-winner Rebecca Skloot.)
If your book’s purpose is to impart useful information or benefit readers’ lives, then you’re selling it based on the marketability of your expertise, your platform, and your concept. The book proposal persuades agents/editors that readers are willing to pay $20 or more for the benefit that your book provides. While everyone expects the writing to be solid, they’re not expecting a literary masterpiece. To learn how to lose weight, readers don’t need a poet; they need a clear communicator who can deliver her ideas and methods in a way that will help readers achieve their goals.
Especially in fields such as health, self-help, or parenting, your credibility and platform as a professional in the field may be most critical, since no one will trust your advice without recognized credentials. Your background must convey authority and instill confidence in the reader. (Would you, as a reader, trust a health book by an author with no medical experience or degrees? Would you be OK reading a serious guide on how to invest in the stock market by someone who is living in a van down by the river?)
Some types of nonfiction can be credibly pitched by anyone with proven journalistic or storytelling skills. (Think of a narrative nonfiction book, such as Seabiscuit). If your book must succeed based on its ability to artfully weave a story, then your strength as a writer becomes more and more important. It’s still necessary to prove there’s a market for that story, but you won’t be successful in your pitch if you can’t deliver on the writing.
If your book doesn’t require a narrative structure, then your skills as a writer mainly have to be up to the task of producing and revising a book manuscript with an editor’s or agent’s guidance.
The gray area of memoir
Memoirists will find that submission guidelines vary tremendously when it comes to pitching their work to agents and publishers. Some agents don’t require a book proposal for memoir, while others want only the book proposal and the first few chapters. Some agents may even ask for both the proposal and the complete manuscript if you’re an unpublished author.
While this is a broad generalization, I find that professional, published writers can typically sell a memoir based on the proposal alone, if they clearly have writing chops or publication credits to back up the proposal. New, emerging writers who have no publishing track record will likely be asked to submit a complete manuscript to prove they can write, sometimes in addition to the book proposal itself.
Your memoir is not salable unless you’re confident of several things.
Your writing must be outstanding. If your memoir is your very first book or very first writing attempt, then it may not be good enough to pass muster with an editor or agent.
You must have a compelling and unusual story to tell. If you’re writing about situations that affect thousands (or millions) of people, that’s not necessarily in your favor. Alzheimer’s memoirs or cancer memoirs, for example, are common, and will put you on the road to rejection unless you’re able to prove how yours is unique or outstanding in the field.
You have the start of a platform. If you have a way to reach readers, without a publisher’s help, then you’re more likely to get a book deal.
Finding a literary agent (and do you need one?)
If you are writing a book that has significant commercial value, or you want to publish with a New York house, then you’ll need to submit your work to literary agents. Projects that don’t necessarily require agents include scholarly works for university presses, regional works likely to be published by regional or independent presses, and works with little commercial value.
3 key questions every book proposal must answer
While these questions are not explicitly addressed in the proposal (e.g., with specific sections), these questions will be running through the mind of every publishing professional who considers your project. As a whole, your proposal must effectively answer them.
So what? What’s the reason for your book’s existence? What’s the unique selling proposition that sets it apart from others in the market?
Who cares? This is your target readership. A unique book is not enough—you must show evidence of need in the marketplace for your work.
Who are you? You must have sufficient authority or credentials to write the book, as well as an appropriate marketing platform for the subject matter or target audience.
Editors care about one thing only: A viable idea with a clear market, paired with a writer who has credibility and marketing savvy. Knowing your audience or market—and having direct, tangible reach to them (online or off)—gives you a much better chance of success. Pitch only the book you know has a firm spot in the marketplace. Do not pitch a book expecting that the publisher will bring the audience to you. It’s the other way around. You bring your audience and platform to the publisher.
The most common book proposal sections
The following sections belong in every book proposal.
Competitive title analysis
This section analyzes competing book titles and why yours is different or better. Whatever you do, don’t claim there are NO competitors to your book. If there are truly no competitors, then your book might be so weird and specialized that it won’t sell. Overall, your competitive title analysis should include around 5-10 titles. You might be okay discussing just a few titles if your book is on a very specialized topic or for a very narrow audience.
For each entry in your competitive title analysis, begin by listing the title, subtitle, author, publisher, year of publication, page count, price, format, and the ISBN. If it has a specific edition number, include that, too. You don’t need to list things such as Amazon ranking, star rating, or reviews. You also shouldn’t worry about not including or knowing the sales numbers of the competing titles. (There’s no way for an everyday author to find out that information, and the agent or editor know how to look it up for themselves.)
Then comes the most important part: for each competitor, you briefly summarize the book’s key strengths or approach in relation to your own. This is where you differentiate your title from the competition, and show why there’s a need for your book despite the existence of the others. This is usually about 100 words or so.
Resist trashing the competition; it will come back to bite you. And don’t skimp on your title research—editors can tell when you haven’t done your homework. Plus researching and fully understanding the competition and its strengths/weaknesses should help you write a better proposal. (I discuss the research process here.)
Keep in mind that for some nonfiction topics and categories, the availability of online information can immediately kill the potential for a print book. Travel is a good example—its print sales have declined by 50 percent since 2007. Many book ideas I see pitched should really start out as a site or community—even if only to test-market the idea, to learn more about the target audience, and to ultimately produce a print product that has a ready and eager market once it’s published.
Target market or target audience
Who will buy your book? Why will it sell? In as much detail as possible, discuss an identifiable market of readers who will be compelled to spend money on your information or story in book form. However, avoid generically describing the book buying audience in the United States, or—for example—broadly discussing how many memoirs sold last year. Publishers don’t need to be given broad industry statistics; they need you to draw a clear portrait of the specific type of person (beyond “book buyers”) who will be interested in your book. We need to be able to envision who the readers are and how they can be marketed to.
It can be very tempting to make a broad statement about who your audience is, to make it sound like anyone and everyone is a potential reader. That doesn’t help you at all.
Avoid generic statements like these:
A Google search result on [topic] turns up more than 10 million hits.
A U.S. Census shows more than 20 million people in this demographic.
An Amazon search turns up more than 10,000 books with “dog” in the title
These are meaningless statistics. The following statements show better market insight:
Media surveys indicate that at least 50% of quilters plan to spend about $1,000 on their hobby this year, and 60% indicated they buy books on quilting.
Recent reviewers of [X books] complain that they are not keeping up with new information and trends.
The New York Times recently wrote about the increased interest in military memoirs; [X and Y] media outlets regularly profile soldiers who’ve written books abour their experience.
Marketing plan
What can you specifically do to market and promote the book? Never discuss what you hope to do, only what you can and will do (without publisher assistance), given your current resources. Many people write their marketing plan in extremely tentative fashion, talking about things they are “willing” to do if asked. This is deadly language. Avoid it. Instead, you need to be confident, firm, and direct about everything that’s going to happen with or without the publisher’s help. Make it concrete, realistic, and attach numbers to everything.
Weak
I plan to register a domain and start a blog for my book.
Strong
Within 6 months of launch, my blog on [book topic] already attracts 5,000 unique visits per month.
Weak
I plan to contact bloggers for guest blogging opportunities.
Strong
I have also guest blogged every month for the past year to reach another 250,000 visitors, at sites such as [include 2-3 examples of most well-known blogs]. I have invitations to return on each site, plus I’ve made contact with 10 other bloggers for future guest posts.
Weak
I plan to contact conferences and speak on [book topic].
Strong
I am in contact with organizers at XYZ conferences, and have spoken at 3 events within the past year reaching 5,000 people in my target audience.
The secret of a marketing plan isn’t the number of ideas you have for marketing, or how many things you are willing to do, but how many solid connections you have—the ones that are already working for you—and how many readers you NOW reach through today’s efforts. You need to show that your ideas are not just pie in the sky, but real action steps that will lead to concrete results and a connection to an existing readership.
Author bio
It can be helpful to begin with a bio you already use at your website or at LinkedIn. But don’t just copy and paste your bio into the proposal and consider the job done. You have to convince agents and editors you’re the perfect author for the book. That means you need to tailor your bio and background for the book idea you’re proposing. Show how your expertise and experience give you the perfect platform from which to address your target audience. If this is a weak area for you, look for other strengths that might give you credibility with readers or help sell books—such as connections to experts or authorities in the field, a solid online following, and previous success in marketing yourself and your work.
Overview
This comes at the very beginning of your proposal; think of it as the executive summary, around two to three pages. I suggest you write it last. It needs to sing and present a water-tight business case.
Chapter outline (or table of contents)
A chapter outline works well for narrative or meaty works, especially those that are text-heavy and anticipated to come in at 80,000 words or more. For each chapter, you write a brief summary of the idea, information, or story presented, usually 100-200 words per chapter.
If writing a chapter outline seems redundant or unnecessary for your book’s content, then use a table of contents. And if you want to use both, that’s completely acceptable. The most important thing is to show how your book concept will play out from beginning to end, and strongly convey the scope and range of material covered.
Sample chapters
If you’re writing a narrative work that has a distinct beginning, middle, and end, then include sample material that starts on the beginning of the book. If your work isn’t a narrative, then write or include a sample chapter that you think is the meatiest or most impressive chapter. Don’t try to get off easy by using the introduction; this is your opportunity to show that you can deliver on your book’s promise.
Common problems with book proposals
They’ve been submitted to an inappropriate agent, editor, or publisher.
The writer hasn’t articulated a clearly defined market or need—or the writer has described a market that’s too niche for a commercial publisher to pursue.
The concept is too general or broad, or has no unique angle.
The writer wants to do a book based on his or her own amateur experience of overcoming a problem or investigating a complex issue. (No expertise or credentials.)
The writer concentrates only on the content of the book or his own experience—instead of the book’s hook and benefit and appeal to the marketplace.
The proposed idea is like a million others; nothing compelling sets the book apart.
If you’re told the market isn’t big enough, maybe you approached too big of a publisher. Is there a smaller publisher that would be interested because they have a lower threshold of sales to meet? Big houses may want to sell as many as 20,000 copies in the first year to justify publication; smaller presses may be fine with a few thousand copies.
The most common problem leading to rejection: no author platform
A sizable platform and expertise is typically required to successfully sell a nonfiction book to a major publisher, especially for competitive categories such as health, self-help, or parenting. (Here’s a definition of platform.) An agent or editor is going to evaluate your visibility in the market, and will want to know the following:
The stats and analytics behind your online following, including all websites, blogs, social media accounts, e-mail newsletters, regular online writing gigs, podcasts, videos, etc.
Your offline following—speaking engagements, events, classes/teaching, city/regional presence, professional organization leadership roles and memberships, etc.
Your presence in traditional media (regular gigs, features, any coverage you’ve received, etc)
Your network strength: if you have good reach to influencers or leaders, or have a prominent position at a major organization or business, that matters
Sales of past books or self-published works
You typically need tens of thousands of engaged followers, and verifiable influence with those followers, to interest a major publisher. Traditional houses are pickier than ever; producing anything in print is a significant investment and risk. They need to know there’s an audience waiting to buy. Plus, given the significant change in the publishing industry, authors shouldn’t consider a print book their first goal or the end goal, but merely one way, and usually not the best way, for making money.
Looking for more?
For more than a decade, I worked at a mid-size publisher that specialized in nonfiction; I was also an editor at an award-winning literary journal specializing in journalism and narrative nonfiction. I’ve prepared book proposals for myself and critiqued hundreds of others. If you need help with your proposal, here’s what I offer.
How to Write a Powerful Book Proposal That Sells ($99)
If you haven’t yet written your proposal, here’s what I can offer you:
A 3-hour video lecture series, broken down into six segments: The Big Picture, Research, Platform, Proposal Writing, Industry Know-How, and Selling
A series of worksheets to aid in your research process that makes writing the proposal far more simple and enjoyable
A book proposal template
Sample book proposals
I’ve taught numerous conference workshops and online classes on book proposals, so my lectures anticipate your questions and address all the most common mistakes and weaknesses I see. To find out more, click here. After your purchase is complete, you’ll get immediate access to the course and all curriculum.
I also offer critique services if your proposal is already written.


Jane Friedman
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