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The Profitable Creative
Hey, Creative! Are you ready to discuss profits, the money, the ways to make it happen? The profitable creative podcast is for you, the creative, how you define it. Videographers, photographers, entrepreneurs, marketing agencies. You get it. CEO of Core Group and author Christian Brim interviews industry experts, creative entrepreneurs and professionals alike who strive to be creative and make money at the same time. Sound like you?
Tune in now. It's time for profit.
The Profitable Creative
Publishing Unplugged: Navigating Myths and Realities With Terry Whalin
Summary
In this episode of "The Profitable Creative," host Christian Brim sits down with seasoned author and publisher Terry Whalen to explore the intricate world of publishing. They delve into the common myths and misconceptions authors face, the importance of setting realistic expectations, and the critical role of marketing in a book's success. Terry shares insights from his extensive experience, including the necessity of persistence and consistency, and the often-overlooked opportunities in the publishing industry. Tune in to discover how to navigate the challenges of publishing and turn your writing passion into a profitable venture.
Takeaways
Realistic Expectations: Many authors have unrealistic expectations about making money from their books. It's crucial to understand that writing a book is often more about establishing authority and opening up other opportunities than immediate financial gain.
Persistence and Consistency: Success in publishing, like entrepreneurship, requires persistence and consistency. Authors should focus on consistently promoting their work and engaging with their audience.
Marketing is Key: A well-written book is important, but effective marketing is essential for success. Authors should leverage various platforms and strategies to increase their book's visibility.
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Terry Whalin (00:10.971)
Christian, wonderful to be here with you.
Christian Brim (00:13.666)
So let's start with giving the audience your bonafide. So who is Terry?
Terry Whalin (00:20.785)
I'm a writer, author. I've been in publishing for a long time. It was actually in high school. My high school English teacher noticed something in my writing, encouraged me to join the writing staff, put me on the sports as a sports writer, which is kind of hard for me because I'm...
Christian Brim (00:39.502)
Okay.
Terry Whalin (00:42.917)
I'm not a guy that watches a lot of sports or even knows about sports. So I had to learn all that jargon in order to be able to write those stories. I ultimately became the editor of my high school newspaper. I went to Indiana University, studied journalism there. I've actually written for more than 50 magazines. At this point in my life, I published more than 60 books with traditional publishers. the books are important to me.
Christian Brim (01:05.806)
impressive.
Christian Brim (01:12.076)
Yeah, yes, I can imagine so. Okay. So before we started the show, you said that you work with authors. So talk about like what capacity. So you are an author, but you also work with authors.
Terry Whalin (01:27.823)
Yeah, I actually work for a New York publishing house, Morgan James Publishing. We've been around over 20 years. We're one of the top independent publishers in the country. We've published over 6,000 titles, 20 million books during that period, 29 New York Times bestsellers. So I'm a part of their team that actually finds the books that we publish. We publish...
somewhere between 150, 200 books a year.
Christian Brim (02:00.096)
Okay, now I'm curious. So what do you look for in a book? What do you look for in an author? Yeah, of course. Yes.
Terry Whalin (02:04.219)
Good ones. Good ones. But we know we do a lot of trade nonfiction. We do some novels, very few picture books, maybe 10 of those. It's hard to find those. And then we do a series of Christian books as well. We have a line of those types of books that we sell into the general market stores, but also into Christian bookstores out there.
Christian Brim (02:32.557)
Okay, so what, I'm not gonna let you off the hook. What qualifies as a good book?
Terry Whalin (02:36.017)
You know, I've been doing this for a very long time. I've probably looked at thousands of submissions over the years. And so I can, it's, like what David Hancock, our founder says it's, probably 80 % the author. So I'm looking for, for the right author that has the right kind of personality and such, but also, their content I can, you know, I can, I can read a few pages and, and see if
See if they've got the goods or not at the end of the day.
Christian Brim (03:09.646)
Okay, I'm not asking for trade secrets here. Okay, so let me ask this then after you find them, do you do any work with them when they come on board or no?
Terry Whalin (03:13.177)
I understand.
Terry Whalin (03:26.377)
I do, I'm always available to them and I help them at different points in the process, but the team actually helps them do the production part on their book and get the cover designed and the interior and all that part of the process. But I'm always game to help them if they get stuck or at any point people do reach out to me and I respond to those kinds of things as well. I like what David says.
No publisher does enough, but I do believe we do more than most publishers to really help them get out there and be successful with their book.
Christian Brim (04:05.238)
Okay, so also you mentioned before we started the show that a lot of times you're working with authors on their mindset. So what does that look like?
Terry Whalin (04:18.895)
Well, what it looks like is helping them really manage their expectations about what's going to happen with the book. Part of the reason I wrote this book called 10 Publishing Myths is because authors have very unrealistic ideas about what should happen with their book. So for example, the very first myth is that I will make a lot of money with my book. And sure.
Christian Brim (04:26.414)
Mm-hmm.
Christian Brim (04:46.345)
That in fact is false.
Terry Whalin (04:46.639)
You may make some money with your book, but that's not usually the primary reason why you write a book in the first place.
Christian Brim (04:55.264)
Yeah, I mean, I am a self-published author myself and knew nothing going into that. And after working through the process, realized that most authors don't make any money.
I've also I also have another podcast called the profitable creative where I interview creative entrepreneurs and I I've interviewed several authors and publishers and Yeah, it I mean It's kind of crazy How many people how many books are published, right? and then like the expectation that you're going to
make money is, in most cases unrealistic. Like I think, I don't know what you what your experience is, but like you you did say there needs to be another reason to to
to write the book rather than it just be your living. One author I interviewed that's, he's not self-published, J.V. Hillard. He was talking about like he wanted to write a book and then the publisher's like, well in this genre you've got to write three books. Like you can't just write one, it's not gonna work. So then all of a sudden he's got to do more work than he had expected. But he talked about,
Terry Whalin (06:03.247)
Yeah.
Terry Whalin (06:21.329)
Yeah
Christian Brim (06:29.367)
process of building a fan base. like going to Comic Con. So he's he's a fantasy science fiction. So like going out and meeting the public and like building the fan base. I also interviewed an actor, fairly successful actor that talked about like he had gone from movies to TV and like the thing that
he talked about was like, have a brand as an actor. And so I have to work that brand with my fans. That's my business. It's not necessarily the product that I'm producing like that, the TV show or the film. It's about harnessing that.
And so I'm going to say all of that to tie back into what I think you're talking about is setting expectations as an entrepreneur, whether you're an author or not. You know, most entrepreneurs fail at least once. And I don't know if that translates to authors, like, know, entrepreneurship is really hard. And we see success stories all over the place, right?
Terry Whalin (07:54.949)
That's right.
Christian Brim (07:55.854)
And so when we start out, we have this expectation that we should be like all of these success stories. And I think that's a bad place to be as an entrepreneur. Like you're setting yourself up for failure.
Terry Whalin (08:10.257)
You are. You are. And you know, we write a book for a number of really good reasons, for example, are to, you know, show that you're an authority in the topic that you're writing on, to open up other opportunities such as to speak and go to Comic-Con and meet your fans. All those kinds of things open up for you if you have a book and you're using it.
appropriately to get on podcasts like this, to get on radio shows. That's the opportunity that you have if you're out there with your book at the end of the day. yeah, your mindset and your expectations. And part of the reason I wrote 10 Publishing Myths is because there's so much of the publishing process that's really outside of anything that we as an author can control. And so what I really tried to emphasize
Christian Brim (08:40.853)
Right? Right?
Christian Brim (09:05.293)
Hmm.
Terry Whalin (09:07.799)
in these different chapters was practical information that the author could take control over. So, for example, I don't have any control over over Facebook or LinkedIn or YouTube or any of those. We call them rented platforms in the in the business, but I do have control over my own website, my own blog, my own newsletter.
Those are the kinds of things that are really under my domain and something I can do something about at the end of the day.
Christian Brim (09:40.44)
Well, it would seem to me that authors probably haven't considered all of those factors. mean, you know, first time authors for sure, like they don't know what the publishing process is, the editorial process, you know, the promotion, the marketing process. And so do most of them come to you with this certain amount of naivety that
you know, there's a lot more to you know, you want to do this thing that you like you like to write you want to do this thing but you know, that's like 10 % you get you got a whole other 90 % that you've got to do is that fair to say
Terry Whalin (10:17.137)
Right.
Terry Whalin (10:25.071)
I would say that's fair. And Christian, even experienced authors sometimes don't understand what they need to do in order to be effective. I had really a wake-up moment in my own life. In 2007, Mark Victor Hansen, the co-author on Chicken Soup for the Soul, was having this big event out in Los Angeles called Mega Book Marketing University.
Now at that point in my life, I was a literary agent. I had a little literary agency in Scottsdale, Arizona. And so he invited me to come. And so I went out there and took pictures from people. At that point in my life, I'd written about 50 books for traditional publishers. So publishers were making books. They were getting them in the bookstores. They were pretty books, all that kind of thing. Now, when you do that kind of publishing,
maybe once a year, maybe four times a year, quarterly, a publisher will send you a financial statement about how your book is doing. They call that a royalty statement. And all of my statements back then were in the minus category. Sure. Maybe they, maybe, maybe, I know I'm not, I'm not making any money on my books. And so I knew I was, must be doing something wrong, but I couldn't figure out what in the world I was doing. So I,
Christian Brim (11:32.146)
That's not good, Jim. That's not what you want to say.
Terry Whalin (11:45.233)
At mega book marketing university, I sat there with all 400 people that were there. We had these big notebooks and we're listening to all this stuff in 2007, 2007. And one of the speakers there was, was Jack Canfield, the other coauthor on Chicken Soup for the Soul. And Jack has this book that I have on my shelf called the success principles where Jack has really studied, does it take to be successful?
Christian Brim (11:51.863)
No, when was this? I'm sorry. Okay, sorry, go ahead.
Terry Whalin (12:13.233)
And the very first success principle says that I will take a hundred percent responsibility for my own success. Now, none of us want to take a hundred percent responsibility. We want somebody else to do it for us. But while I was at that event, I suddenly realized how little I was doing myself in order to be able to promote my books. Sure. I had a terryweyland.com website, but I was doing hardly anything else to be telling people about my books. So.
Christian Brim (12:19.504)
Mm. Mm-hmm.
Terry Whalin (12:43.869)
I decided that I was going to change and I was going to take 100 % responsibility for my own success. I was going to be out there. So blogging was new back then. So I started blogging and you know, I've been blogging every week since that period and I have over 1700 entries that are in my blog. There's a lot of content in that blog.
Christian Brim (13:07.743)
Impressive.
Terry Whalin (13:09.861)
I actually have a little thing that searches for my name online and about a year ago I found this article listing the top 27 content producers that were out there. It said in this article there's over 600 million blogs and my name was listed as one of the top 27 content producers and hey it's not that I'm doing anything big. I'm just writing this article about publishing once a week, sending it out, doing it over and over and
being consistent about that. And that's one of the keys, I think, for any entrepreneur is to figure out what you wanna do and then do that over and over. It's that persistence and consistency that really pays off for you in the long run.
Christian Brim (13:41.697)
Mm-hmm.
Christian Brim (13:59.341)
Yeah, I think. Yes, the the that statement about you're 100 % responsible for your success is is I think the distinction between an entrepreneur and a non entrepreneur. I I think that's one of the biggest challenges when people show up and they say, hey, I want to start a business, you know,
want to write a book, whatever it is. And they make that leap into entrepreneurship. And why I think so many fail is they don't understand that if you're not an entrepreneur, you're, you're casting most of your decisions on someone else, right? And they take care of that they they, you know, and then you earn significantly less because of that.
Terry Whalin (14:51.845)
Absolutely.
Christian Brim (14:59.31)
And I think a lot of entrepreneurs starting out see that like, I'm making this person a whole lot of money, like I could do this and make more money, right? And that's their initial thought. But then they don't understand what else is all going on there, the back end, and why they're only getting paid a fraction of what the company makes from them is because there's all this other stuff that has to be done. And
A lot of people hit that buzzsaw and they're like, this isn't for me. So I would challenge people that are considering being an entrepreneur to have a full, you're not gonna have the full, it's like trying to explain to people that don't have kids what having kids is like. You gotta experience it, right? But at least have an idea of the breadth and scope of what you don't know.
Terry Whalin (15:43.537)
Yes.
Christian Brim (15:52.3)
and what you are now 100 % responsible for. Because there's no one else that is going to do it for you.
Terry Whalin (15:58.353)
That's right. And what people don't realize, it's like a forgotten fact almost out there Christian, is that even these Chicken Soup for the Soul authors that have sold millions and millions of their books, they were rejected over 160 times before they actually found a publisher. That's a ton of rejection. They finally found a little publisher in Florida that would publish that first Chicken Soup for the Soul books. Now they told their publisher,
Christian Brim (16:14.787)
Mm-hmm.
Terry Whalin (16:27.653)
They were going to sell a million books during the first year. And that publisher laughed at them. They'd never sold a million copies of anything at that point. It took them a year and half to sell their first million copies. But what they decided to do, and they talk about this, is they practiced what they call the rule of five. They got up every day and they did five things to be telling people about their book.
Christian Brim (16:33.056)
I would laugh at them. Yeah, yeah.
Christian Brim (16:39.15)
That's still very impressive.
Christian Brim (16:53.987)
Hmm.
Terry Whalin (16:54.033)
You know, they did a radio show or a podcast or a book signing or a newspaper article. I mean, there dozens of things that you can do, but the fact that they did five of them and that they did them over and over and over ultimately is what happened. It caught on and now they're very successful with what they do.
Christian Brim (17:12.066)
Well, that goes back to what you said about persistence and consistency. I think persistence, a lot of entrepreneurs don't have any problem with. mean, like if they get over the hurdle and they say, I am responsible for all these things and get going. The persistence, a lot of people that are entrepreneurs are
persistent, you can you can flip that around and say that character my character trait might show up as stubborn. But you know, it's the same it's the same, you know, But the persistence, I mean, the consistency is a different animal, because it's almost contradictory to the persistence. It's not a lot of entrepreneurs get real frustrated with the mundane.
Right? They like to do the problem solving, the novel thing, thinking, creating, the problem solving. Like that's what they like. But then when you've got to manage people or, you know, manage marketing or manage finances, like all those things that go along with business, it's like, I don't want to do that part. And so you have to balance those two.
to be successful in the long term. I agree, like the consistency thing is, is huge. And a lot of entrepreneurs like myself are impatient. It's like I know I see the vision, I want it now. And it's like it doesn't work that way.
Terry Whalin (18:57.333)
No, and it's really hard. mean, we do a lot of boring stuff, you know, over and over and over. mean, I post on social media, you know, 12 or 15 times a day that I do. But I have a system that I've worked out. I only take about 30 minutes a day to do that. But that's why I have 175,000 followers on X or Twitter. And I have 19,500 connections on LinkedIn is that I'm
Christian Brim (19:20.152)
Right.
Terry Whalin (19:25.529)
I'm consistently working on that kind of thing.
Christian Brim (19:30.168)
So going back to the I'm going to choose to be responsible for my success. That decision so like I want to kind of dive into that like, where was your headspace there? Were you like you went to this and you'd looked at your royalty statements and normally I'm not making any money. Like, where was your head at? Like, were you were you frustrated? Were you like
disappointed in yourself? what was your mindset at that point?
Terry Whalin (20:01.743)
Yeah, was frustrated and confused actually. I didn't know what I was supposed to do. And you're right, when you were talking about how entrepreneurs face a lot of failure, we fail a lot with what we do. you have to just keep, part of it is just keep trying different things to find the right path for you on this journey. There's no one, two, three kind of formula to...
Christian Brim (20:31.116)
Mm-mm. No.
Terry Whalin (20:31.697)
to be able to do it. In other words, if there were, every book would be a bestseller and instead, you know, there's over 11,000 new books that are published every day, counting the self-published stuff. So it's a, there's a huge volume of stuff that comes out of there and the people that really make it at the end of the day are trying different things and finding that path that really works for them at the end of the day.
Christian Brim (20:58.232)
What would you say, because I've been accused of, and I know I'm not alone in this as an entrepreneur, I've been accused of shiny object syndrome. like entrepreneurs are like raccoons. We get distracted very easily with new and novel things. And that's, guess, what I'm tying back to the persistence, not the consistency problem, is like,
Terry Whalin (21:18.097)
Sure.
Christian Brim (21:27.362)
How do you approach that where on one hand, you've got to deal with failure and try something new. But on the other hand, whatever you find that works, you have to be consistent at it. And so I've had trouble balancing those things. How do I know I'm not giving up too soon? How do I make that call?
Terry Whalin (21:55.205)
Yeah, and it's really hard to know, but you know, and people in publishing all the time will say, for example, social media doesn't sell books. Well, and I think that's true. It doesn't really sell books, but here's what it does. Social media gives exposure about the benefits to your book over and over to people because they've pretty much proven out there, Christian, that somebody has to hear about your book
you know, seven, maybe 20 times before they actually reach into their wallet and say, that book, want to buy that book. And so that's part of what the social media things are doing is really stressing the benefits of your book, showing them that it's a book that they should be interested in. And finally, they'll come around and say, yeah, I should buy that book. Maybe I should read that book.
Christian Brim (22:33.698)
Mm-hmm.
Terry Whalin (22:52.709)
Maybe I should do some of the stuff that book tells me to do.
Christian Brim (22:57.098)
Yeah, and, and I think about I don't know if this is true in fiction, but you know, in nonfiction, I would think this is true, especially like business books. I I track my I have free resources listed in the book on a URL that people can download free free resources to use, but they have to give their email. And
you know, after a year of tracking this data, 5 % of the purchases, download the free resources. And, you know, I even actually put this in the book in the final chapter, I, you know, is that I know most people are not going to read the whole book, right? And some people are going to buy it and never read it, not not read any of it, right? Especially if it's a
Kindle version that it's, you know, a 10 buck, you know, impulse purchase, or even worse, the the the like Midwest tape that does the the rent where you know, they're paying whenever they access it. So like, you know, the engagement that you think that you're going to get with a reader is not what you think like you think that people are going to
take this home, and they're going to consume it in one sitting, and they're going to take these principles, and they're going to take action on it. And that's not reality. But the reality is that even if they don't buy the book, I have influenced them by the book being there when they know it, right? Exactly. so it's, it's, I guess, going back to what you said initially, it's it's redefining your intentions, like the
Terry Whalin (24:39.077)
You have. You have.
Christian Brim (24:52.147)
and your expectations.
Terry Whalin (24:54.243)
It is. And for example, at Morgan James, we've learned that if somebody gets the ebook version of your book and starts to read that ebook version, even if they get that for free, there is a high probability they're going to turn and buy the print copy of the book. So I did this book years ago called Book Proposals That Sell 21 Secrets to Speed Your Success. I've
Christian Brim (25:12.705)
Interesting.
Terry Whalin (25:23.641)
I've done two book proposals that got six figure advances, Chris. So I do know a little bit about what a book proposal is. And I've read thousands of them through the years. So now we have the revised edition. Somebody could go to bookproposals.ws, bookproposals.ws, and you can get the full version of my book over there for free. All you do is you put your first name and your email address in there and then you can get it for whatever version you want.
Because we've proven that if they start to read that, there's a high probability they're going to turn and buy the print copy. So those free e-books, we lose nothing by giving away those free e-books. We actually drive print book sales by giving away a free e-book. And so it's another unusual kind of marketing thing that Morgan James is doing to encourage our authors to do this type of work.
Christian Brim (26:10.702)
interesting.
Terry Whalin (26:22.445)
and to get out there with your book so that people know about it at the end of the day.
Christian Brim (26:27.342)
That's a fascinating. Yeah. Well, yeah. And I get it because like the Kindle version, know, like Amazon really screwed up the publishing world. And I actually interviewed a gentleman that is working on an alternative platform to self publish that I think his model is fascinating, but
I and I don't know if it'll work. But he was talking about how Amazon really facilitates the self publishing. Because it doesn't matter to them how many books are sold on on of a particular book, because it's just free advertising for them. If someone comes and buys a book.
they're going to get the suggestions from Amazon and they're more likely to buy something else that has nothing to do with the book. And that's part of their marketing strategy is
Terry Whalin (27:32.721)
It is, it is true. And actually at Morgan James, Chris, we actually encourage our authors not to use the word Amazon because you can imagine bookstores right or wrong believe that Amazon's destroyed their business over the years. So a bookstore owner will not care that you have 150 Amazon reviews, but they will care if you have 150 five-star reviews. So
Christian Brim (27:56.333)
Right.
Terry Whalin (28:00.773)
They don't care that you had an Amazon bestseller. They will care if you had a best that you had a bestseller. So we just try to teach them not to not to use that word Amazon when they as they're as they're talking to people about their book.
Christian Brim (28:15.692)
Yeah, but but you know, for people like myself that, you know, had a derivative book off of profit first that was already a best seller. I think he might use his penguin as his publisher. You know, the as part of my licensing agreement, I had to self publish like Penguin said, you can't you cannot publish with a publisher. And I suppose if if I
thought it was going to be good enough, I could have pitched it to them. And Penguin would have published it. But the reality is, is that a publisher was not going to publish that book, even if I could, because, you know, it's not going to sell enough.
Terry Whalin (29:00.721)
Yeah, and even at Morgan James, I tell authors all the time that Amazon is a big customer of ours, but they're only 24 % of our overall business. So the way I look at it, you publish with Amazon, you're missing 76 % of what we do for the book out there. mean, our books are sold into 98 % of the bookstores in North America, including the brick and mortar stores. So, I mean, we saw a target, for example. So I encourage authors, if they've self-published,
Christian Brim (29:09.006)
Hmm.
Christian Brim (29:25.581)
Right.
Terry Whalin (29:30.321)
They should maybe still be pitching me with their book at Morgan James because we have a huge other market that we can tap out there with their book if they want to come with us.
Christian Brim (29:42.434)
Does that mean then that you are you become the publisher or you just providing services?
Terry Whalin (29:48.685)
No, we would ultimately take over their book and become the publisher for their book. there's a lot of reasons to do that, and we fully explain that during the submission process and everything to them.
Christian Brim (29:54.082)
Got it.
Christian Brim (30:02.892)
Yeah. Okay. So what, what if an author is looking at going with a publisher, any publisher, yours, anyone, what, what is the, the publisher's expectation of how many books will be sold? Like there's, there's some minimum that like, if I don't think it can sell 10,000 copies, I'm not going to bother.
Terry Whalin (30:24.335)
Right.
Terry Whalin (30:27.877)
Well, and it'd be different for different publishers. Some publishers do have a high number of 10,000, 100,000 books that they expect to sell of every title. For us at Morgan James, our expectation is to try to sell three to 4,000 copies during the first few years of your book. Sometimes that happens, sometimes not. It just depends. We really work hard to try to choose the right authors at the end of the day. That's part of...
Christian Brim (30:47.128)
Okay.
Terry Whalin (30:57.627)
part of what our publication put us.
Christian Brim (30:57.87)
Well, yeah, and I think that would fall in the realm of capturing a lot of people that are self-publishing. I don't know, we've sold, in a year, think we sold 2,000 copies, which I don't think is bad.
Terry Whalin (31:18.127)
I think that's good. mean, a typical self-published book, it can sell 100, 200 copies during the lifetime of the book. So the fact that you've sold a couple thousand is terrific.
Christian Brim (31:27.746)
Yeah.
Christian Brim (31:32.919)
I remember, I even though I was self publishing, I did work with a publishing company to provide the cover design and the editing services, you know, format and all that. And so I was I was talking to her early on in the process. And I said, you know, it doesn't, you know, after talking to you, it doesn't sound like a book has to be really good to sell well.
And she said, No, it really doesn't. And and I'm like, well, that's that doesn't sound right. Like, you know, a book should be good. It should be well written. It should be, you know, easy to read, it should deliver on his promise, like. But the reality is that it's, it's more about the marketing of it. Would you agree with that statement?
Terry Whalin (32:25.809)
Yeah, well, the marketing is a big element of it. I mean, I always think you should build your book on the right foundation. the writing is really important to me, that we have a well-written, well-executed book at the end of the day. But yeah, the marketing is important. And the other element that a lot of people don't realize about books is...
You know, if your book sells 5,000 copies during the lifetime of the book, that's a good number for us in the publishing world where there's a lot of other ways to get the word out about your book. And for example, in print magazines, and there's still a lot of print magazines out there, it's pretty easy to reach 100,000, 200,000, half a million people with your book.
And so I always encourage people to take a look at their content and see if there's something in that content that they could excerpt or take out a personal experience, make that into a magazine article, get that out there into the magazine world, because you can influence a lot of people with doing that. That's why I've written for more than 50 magazines through the years and why I continue to write for magazines.
Christian Brim (33:36.981)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Christian Brim (33:49.986)
I love that. So Terry, if people want to learn more about working with you, how do they find you?
Terry Whalin (33:57.873)
Well, one of the things I really want people to do is I've set up a way that you can get this 10 publishing myths book for me for only $10. That includes the shipping along with over $200 worth of bonuses. Now these are not lackluster bonuses. mean, one of my bonuses, I interviewed a guy who self-published this book and has sold thousands of books to public libraries.
Christian Brim (34:08.888)
Seems very fair.
Terry Whalin (34:25.435)
People forget about libraries, libraries have money to buy books. And so this guy would get a list of libraries and he again, consistently called them, pitched the right librarian and would, after the call, pack up the book along with an invoice and sell his book. He sold thousands of books doing this. It's an idea that people don't even think about doing that kind of thing. And so if you go to publishing offer,
Christian Brim (34:49.546)
No? No?
Terry Whalin (34:57.293)
publishingoffer.com Somebody can get this book from me for only only $10 and I also I have an 11th myth Christian Alice Kreider an acquisitions editor when she sent me her endorsement. She said Terry you're missing the 11th myth I'm like, okay Alice. I'll bite. What's the 11th myth? She said well the 11th myth should be that if I send my book to Oprah Winfrey
she'll book me on her show. And I'm like, well, yeah, that's pretty good myth. And so what I decided to do is to write that chapter. And when we designed the book, we designed the chapter to look like the rest of the book. And somebody can get that from me for free if they go to terrylinks.com, plural terrylinks.com forward slash 11th myth, one one th myth. And then you can get that whole chapter from me.
Christian Brim (35:25.452)
Mm-hmm
Terry Whalin (35:51.921)
As far as how people reach me, I actually have my personal email address in my Twitter profile because I want people to be able to reach me. if they go to Terry at Terry Whalen dot com, that's probably the easiest, the easiest way that somebody can reach me. But I, you'll see, I have a lot of material out there online. I want people to be to be able to reach me.
Christian Brim (36:01.443)
Nice.
Terry Whalin (36:18.597)
People call me one of the most accessible people in publishing and I believe that's true a lot of these editors You can't even reach these people They don't even respond but I do try to respond to my to my email and my phone calls and all that
Christian Brim (36:34.126)
love that listeners will have all of those links in the show notes. If you like what you've heard, please rate the podcast, share the podcast, subscribe to the podcast. If not, shoot us a message and let us know what you'd like to hear. Until then, ta ta for now.