Your Submission Must Be Electronic and Easily Readable


Every editor needs an electronic submission.

Every writer should have the need to keep growing and looking for
new avenues and ways to market. As an acquisitions
editor
at Morgan
James Publishing
, we receive many submissions—over 5,000 a year for only 150
books that are published. Yes that is high volume but as editors, we are always
looking for the right authors and right material.



About a month ago, I received an author contact from one of my
colleagues. That day, I sent an email to this author letting her know exactly
what I needed and how to submit her material. A few days ago, I got a text from
my colleague asking about this author. I said she had never responded to my
email. Something many people forget is email sometimes does not get
through. I reached out to this author again on email and picked up the phone to
call her (rare for an editor or agent to call).



Later that day I began to receive her submission in hard copy on
my phone—which I could not read. It was pages of a manuscript texted to my
phone. I asked her to email it to me. The email came one page at a time with the
hard copy attached—-many emails. I went back to this author and explained I
needed a single file in an electronic form as an attachment. 



In conversation, I
learned this author had an electronic file for her manuscript and then her
computer crashed. She lost the electronic files with her computer crash. She
only had a hard copy of her manuscript. With this explanation, I understood why
she was trying to get me the hard copy.



I told this author how for years, every publisher requires the
author to send an electronic version of their manuscript or proposal. It is the
only way to get your material into the consideration process with an editor or
agent. Your computer crash and the fact you don't have the file is a barrier to
getting your submission considered. If you have this problem, you
can:



1. Retype your manuscript into a Microsoft Word file.



2. Hire a student or transcription service to type your
submission into Word.



3. Forget about this book and start another one. This last point
is not what I would recommend since the author has invested hours into creating
her book.



I have no idea what this author is writing and whether it has
any merit or not—since I did not receive it in a form where I could read it.
I've reviewed thousands of submissions during my years in publishing and never
seen this particular situation. I point out several lessons from it:



1. Get your manuscript to the editor or agent in a format they
can read
. I've met authors who do not type. If you don't type, then take a
typing course or get a book or figure out your way around this
barrier.



2. Before you complain to the company or editor, make
sure the format of your submission is not the issue. The reality is every editor
and agent receives many submissions. Sometimes things do get missed and we are
not perfect in this process. Just make sure it is not your issue before
you reach out to someone else.



3. Follow the editor's or agent's guidelines. If you don't follow directions, then you
can't get considered.



4. Follow-up to make sure you are giving the editor what they
need. We receive volumes of material and want to help but have limitations on
our own time and resources.



As a writer, you are searching for the right fit for your
submission. It will take effort on your part to find this fit. Good
communication is important every step of the way.  It took some digging on my
part to figure out why I was not connecting with this author and her manuscript.
I'm encouraging her to retype her lost manuscript and get it into the market for
consideration.



Have you been skipping a publishing basic as an explanation why
your submission is not hitting the mark? Let me know in the comments
below.



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Published on July 08, 2018 03:00
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