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Warnings About Literary Fraud and Other Schemes, Scams, and Pitfalls That Target Writers

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Print on demand (POD) is the commonly-used term for the digital printing technology that allows a complete book to be printed and bound in a matter of minutes. POD technology makes it easy and cost-effective to produce books one or two at a time or in small lots, rather than in larger print runs of several hundred or several thousand.

POD has a number of applications. Commercial and academic publishers use it to print advance reading copies, or when they can't justify the expense of producing and warehousing a sizeable print run--for instance, to keep backlist books available. Some independent publishers use it as a more economical fulfillment method, trading lower startup costs against smaller per-book profits (due to economies of scale, digitally printed books have a higher unit production cost than books produced in large runs on offset presses). Last but not least, there are the POD-based publishing service providers, which offer a fee-based service that can be described, depending on one's bias, as either vanity publishing or self-publishing.

POD-based Publishing Service Providers

Overview

Print on demand-based publishing service providers (I'm going to call them POD services for short) aren't publishers in the traditional sense, but purveyors of publishing services to writers. They charge a fee for publication, ranging anywhere from a few hundred to several thousand dollars. They don't screen submissions (except perhaps to exclude pornography or hate literature)--anyone who is willing to pay will be published. They don't routinely provide editing, proofreading, or book marketing (though some offer these as add-ons to the basic publishing package, at additional cost). Title to the books belongs to the publisher, often nonexclusively (which means the book could theoretically be sold elsewhere) but not always; some POD services make a nonexclusive or exclusive claim on subsidiary rights. Income to the author is a royalty on sales.

Many POD services call themselves self-publishing services. Some will even let you put the name of your own imprint on your book, set your own cover prices, designate a royalty percentage, and so on. However, there are important differences between the POD services and true self-publishing:
  • Control. With self-publishing, the writer controls all aspects of the publishing process, from cover art to print style to pricing. With POD services, choice is limited to the package of services the publisher offers.
  • Revenue. With self-publishing, the writer keeps all proceeds from sales. With POD services, payment comes in the form of a royalty. Basically, you're paying the publisher twice: once upfront, and once with each book produced and sold.
  • Rights. With self-publishing, all rights remain with the writer, who has full ownership of his/her books. With most POD services, rights are held by the POD service, which has an exclusive or nonexclusive claim on them for a set period of time.
In practice, POD services more closely resemble vanity publishers--which is how they're generally regarded by readers, reviewers, and booksellers.

For writers who don't want to go through the submission process required by commercial publishers, or feel they've exhausted the possibilities of the commercial publishing market, or just want to produce a few dozen copies of a family memoir or genealogy or recipe book for private distribution, a POD service can be an excellent solution. The best of the PODs provide attractively-designed books at a far lower cost than traditional self- or vanity publishing (although costs are steadily rising, and some of the fancier POD packages are nearly as expensive as old-style vanities like Vantage Press), and offer many of the same benefits, including guaranteed publication and the absence of editorial interference. Also, since the book is produced only when ordered, you don't risk winding up with a garage full of unsold volumes.

POD services offer an opportunity to established authors seeking to bring their out-of-print books back into circulation. A number of POD services offer programs specifically targeted to such authors, often in association with professional writers' groups. A POD service can also be a good option for the motivated self-publisher who's able to devote time and money to marketing his/her product--typically, a nonfiction author with a niche market s/he knows how to reach, or someone who tours and speaks extensively and can sell books at these occasions.

But if you're a new writer looking to establish a career, a POD service is probably not a good choice. As noted above, it's widely equated with vanity publishing; it's not likely a book published this way will be considered a professional credit. Nor is publishing with a POD service likely, as some authors hope, to provide a stepping stone to conventional publication. According to a 2004 article in the New York Times, out of the 10,000 or so titles published by Xlibris (one of the largest of the POD services), only 20 had been picked up by commercial publishers.

Too, POD services' policies on pricing and marketing limit their books' availability, resulting in small sales and readership even for authors who diligently self-promote.

Sales Statistics

While there have been some highly publicized successes, the average book from a POD service sells 150-175 copies, mostly to the authors and to "pocket" markets surrounding them--friends, family, local retailers who can be persuaded to place an order. According to the chief executive of POD service iUniverse, quoted in the New York Times, 40% of iUniverse's books are sold directly to authors.

POD services' own statistics support these low sales figures. The most recent online Fact Sheet for AuthorHouse reported 27,000 authors and 33,000 titles, and a list of corporate milestones claimed 5 million books printed as of December 2006. It sounds like a lot, but averages out to around 150 sales per title.

iUniverse's most recent Facts and Figures sheet reports that the company published 22,265 titles through 2005, with sales of 3.7 million: an average of 166 sales per title. Obviously some titles can boast better sales (Amy Fisher's If I Knew Then sold over 32,000 copies)--but not many. According to a 2004 article in Publishers Weekly, only 83 of more than 18,000 iUniverse titles published during that year sold at least 500 copies. In 2003, only 76 of 15,000 titles published sold at least 500 copies.

Also as of 2004, stats for Xlibris were similar: according to a Wall Street Journal article, 85% of its books had sold fewer than 200 copies, and only around 3%--or 352 in all--had sold more than 500 copies. Things looked up in 2007: according to Xlibris's own internal reports, recently obtained by Writer Beware, 4% of its titles had sold more than 1,000 copies. However, the averages still aren't good. As of mid-2007, Xlibris had 23,000 authors and had published 23,500 titles, with total sales of over 3 million--around 127 sales per title.

One of the most popular and cost-effective of the POD services, Lulu.com, is explicit about its business model. In a 2006 article in the Times UK, its founder identified the company's goal: "...to have a million authors selling 100 copies each, rather than 100 authors selling a million copies each." A Lulu bestseller is a book that sells 500 copies. There haven't been many of them.

Issues to Consider

Apart from the lack of sales and credibility discussed above, there are a number of additional issues to consider if you're thinking of using a POD service.
  • Booksellers don't like dealing with POD services. In order to sell books in significant numbers, you need bricks-and-mortar bookstore placement. Don't believe the hype about the power of the Internet: only around 10% of all new books are bought online. Bookstores are still where most people do their bookbuying.

    Books from POD services are generally available through the service's website, and from Amazon and other online booksellers. Most POD services also list their books in the catalogue of a major wholesaler such as Ingram, which ensures that they'll be available for order at just about any bookstore in the US. But "available" doesn't mean "stocked" (a fact that some of the more deceptive POD services do their best to obscure--see Deceptive Terminology, below). By long tradition, booksellers are accustomed to a particular set of buying protocols--discounts of 40% or more, 60- or 90-day billing, and full returnability. Many POD services don't offer industry-standard discounts, however, and most require that orders be pre-paid. And while some services do offer returnability if authors pay an extra fee, it's usually a fairly restrictive policy that booksellers won't find terribly attractive. All these factors, together with the POD services' reputation as vanity publishers, make booksellers very reluctant to stock a book from a POD service.

    If stores won't stock the books, they should at least be willing to order them. But booksellers' policies on this vary. Some will order any book you ask for. Others are selective--Barnes & Noble, for instance, which owns a minority stake in fee-based POD iUniverse, at one point would only order iUniverse books--and some booksellers refuse to carry books from POD services in their computer systems at all. To make things worse, complicated ordering protocols from wholesalers like Ingram means that books may show up as out-of-stock. Some POD services have taken steps to deal with this, but others have not.

    Authors who are willing to go door-to-door can be successful in persuading local bookstores to stock their books (though often they must sell them on consignment, or agree to buy back unsold copies). By and large, however, books from POD services, like ebooks, are available only through online sources.
  • Books from POD services are expensive. POD services base their pricing on the amount of paper it takes to print the book. Some make an attempt to hold prices down with flat or negotiable rates, but in most cases your book will cost more--often a lot more--than a similar book from a commercial publisher. Readers may balk at paying $25 or $30 for a trade paperback-size book, especially when its commercially-printed counterpart costs around $16.
  • Books from POD services may be of poor physical quality. POD-produced books can be almost indistinguishable from traditionally-printed trade paperbacks. But some POD services skimp on paper and cover stock, and don't pay enough attention to production standards. Books from these companies can be shoddy in appearance, with covers that curl and pages that fall out as you're reading them. POD-produced books are also often bound with a narrow spine, so that they look more like pamphlets than books. Be sure, if you're considering a POD service, to order one or two of its books so you can assess physical quality.
  • Books from POD services are unlikely to be reviewed in professional venues. Good reviews in major newspapers and magazines, as well as trade journals like Publishers Weekly and Library Journal, can be a boost to sales. But trade journals will only review in advance of publication, and POD services rarely produce galleys or advance reading copies--or, if they do, charge extra for it. Also, as noted above, reviewers are wary of books from POD services.
  • Your book will not be publicized. As has already been mentioned, POD services aren't publishers, but purveyors of publishing services to writers. Their primary interest is in selling their service to you. Selling your book to readers is of secondary importance. A listing on the company's website and with various online booksellers, as well as inclusion in a wholesaler's catalogue, is all the publicity most POD services provide. If you want more, you will have to arrange it yourself.

    Some POD services offer marketing packages or media kits for an extra fee. But prices can top $1,000, and packages tend to be based on minimally effective methods such as press releases, postcard mailers, and mass solicitation of media contacts (for a more detailed discussion of the inadequacies of these marketing techniques, see the Writers' Services page). They're usually a complete waste of money.
  • There may be extra expenses. The cost of a POD service can be substantially increased by additional costs not included in the initial package: renewal fees, extra charges for cover design, extra charges for obtaining an ISBN number or copyright registration, etc. Be sure, when you're assessing a service, to check for these kinds of costs.
  • Your contract may be nonstandard. In commercial publishing, contracts vary in their particulars, but tend to share a basic boilerplate. With POD services, there's no standardization. Many of the services offer decent time-limited, nonexclusive contracts, but others can be very author-unfriendly.
  • Royalty income may be less than you think. POD services are likely to base royalties not on a book's retail price, but on its net price--the retail price less discounts and/or the publisher's overhead (sometimes not specified, so you're not sure exactly how much will be deducted). What looks like a high royalty percentage may not actually work out to a lot of money.
  • Terms and conditions may be changed without warning. One of the largest POD services has changed its operating model a number of times since starting up--eliminating its free service, raising prices for services, changing its royalty structure, increasing book prices. This company at least notifies its authors before changes take effect, but I've heard from authors with other services who didn't find out about changes until after the fact. This is a good reason not to sign a contract that ties you to the publisher for more than a year or two.
  • Delays are possible. Some POD services have trouble with timeliness in book production and order fulfillment. Before choosing a service, it's a good idea to scout for complaints, and to contact writers who've used the service.
  • Last but not least: take the hype with a (very large) grain of salt. POD services often portray themselves as a revolutionary new publishing model that's opening up a world of opportunity for writers locked out of the market by the narrow standards of the monopolistic commercial publishing industry. Heady terms like "paradigm" and "democratization" are tossed around. But there's nothing new about paying to get published--or about the opportunity it offers, which is mainly for the publisher to make a profit. Most of the traditional difficulties faced by authors who pay to publish are duplicated in the POD service model.

POD-based Independent Publishers

A growing number of independent publishers rely on digital technology to produce their books. This saves money up front by eliminating cash outlays for large print runs and reducing the need for warehousing. The tradeoff is the higher unit production cost for digitally printed books, which means that the publisher realizes a lower per-book profit, especially if it makes an attempt to keep its prices in line with those of larger commercial publishers. And of course any print-on-demand-based independent publisher has to deal with the POD stigma described in the next section.

There are digitally-based indies that function very much like their commercial counterparts--rigorously screening submissions, professionally editing and designing books, and marketing to the book trade. Some have garnered substantial critical and sales success. Such publishers tend to have a hybrid business model that combines POD and offset (for instance, doing an initial print run with offset, and switching to POD for subsequent orders), since offset is far more cost effective for print runs of more than a few hundred. Success inevitably drives publishers away from primary reliance on POD technology.

However, POD technology makes it easy and cheap for unqualified or unscrupulous people to set themselves up as publishers. The result, over the past few years, has been an explosion of dubious publishing companies. These come in several flavors--amateur micropresses run by people with abundant goodwill but little or no expertise, vanity publishers masquerading as legitimate independent presses, and "author mills" that seek to turn a profit on enormous author volume. In all cases, the bottom line for writers is the same: no meaningful distribution or promotion, and tiny sales.

Some tips to help you evaluate POD-based independent publishers:
  • Is there a fee? Many indies can't afford to pay advances, but they don't ask for money. A fee, no matter where you encounter it in the publishing process, is a sign of a vanity operation, or of a publishing service like the ones described above.

    Fee-charging publishers are often inventive about hiding their fees. They may bury them in the fine print, so it's not until you actually read the publishing contract that you realize you have to pay a "setup" charge. Sometimes the fees are shifted to items unrelated to producing the book--for instance, you may be required to pre-purchase or pre-sell a large number of copies, or pay for editing, or sponsor your own publicity campaign, or hire cover designers from a list the publisher provides.
  • Is there an advance? An advance, even of just a few hundred dollars, suggests a professional operation. Don't be fooled by token one- or two-digit advances--this is usually a marketing ploy designed to produce an appearance of legitimacy, rather than a sign of legitimate practice.
  • How long has the publisher been in business? POD-based independent publishers spring up and wither like mushrooms. This can work out badly for you, because a publisher that liquidates or goes bankrupt can tie up your rights, or may pass them on to third parties without your permission. This is a possibility with any independent publisher--small publishers' finances are often precarious. But if you go with a publisher that's just starting up, or has been in business only a few months, you are really taking a risk.

    Look for evidence that the publisher has been in business for a year or more, and that it has a backlist of published books. This indicates at least some stability, as well as the capacity to take books all the way through the production process.You'll also be able to obtain a book to check physical quality, and you'll be able to judge by the existence of professional reviews and/or bookstore presence whether the publisher is marketing to the book trade.

    For a more in-depth discussion of why it's a good idea to avoid brand-new publishers, see this post from Writer Beware's blog.

    While you don't want to choose a publisher that hasn't proved its ability to publish, there's risk at the other end of the spectrum too--namely, the "author mills". Author mills base their business model on author volume (selling small numbers of books from a very large number of authors) rather than on book volume (selling large numbers of books from a limited number of authors, as commercial publishers do). Some of these publishers' catalogues include thousands of authors, most of them first-timers. Author mills don't usually charge fees, and often misleadingly present themselves as "traditional" publishers (see Deceptive Terminology, below)--but in practice they more closely resemble the POD-based publishing service providers, with the same open acceptance policies, high prices, bookseller-unfriendly business practices, and minimal marketing and distribution.
  • Are the books professionally-produced and of good physical quality? Order one or two. Have they been edited? Does the print look good? Is the formatting uniform? Is the text free of errors? Bad writing, sloppy formatting, and large numbers of typos or grammatical errors indicate a less-than-professional operation.

    Questionable or amateur POD-based indies also often produce shoddy, badly-designed books and ugly, unprofessional-looking covers. Good physical quality and attractive covers are no guarantee that a publisher is legitimate, of course, but their absence does indicate a lack of professional expertise, and won't enhance your book's appeal.
  • Is the pricing reasonable? As noted, POD has a higher unit cost than offset, and prices can be correspondingly higher. This can be a substantial discouragement for readers--who wants to pay $30 for a trade-size paperback? A reputable POD-based publisher will make an effort to keep prices at least generally comparable to traditionally-printed trade paperbacks, which run between $12 and $18.
  • Does the publisher accept returns? Again, this is a sign of a more professional operation, and gives the publisher a better chance of selling its books into stores. Beware, though--some POD-based independents put so many restrictions on their returns policies (for instance, limiting the return period to three months, or offering returnability only on bulk orders) that booksellers won't find them attractive. If the publisher tells you it has a returns policy, be sure to ask for details.
  • Are the books reviewed in professional venues (Booklist, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, etc.)? Reviews in these publications, which are read by booksellers and librarians, indicate that the company is sending out advance reading copies--an important component of marketing to the book trade. (Note: amateur book review websites don't count, as their reviews are rarely of professional quality.)
  • Is there bookstore presence? Not all indies are able to get their books into stores, so lack of bookstore presence doesn't necessarily mean the publisher isn't reputable. If there is bookstore presence, however--even if it's only regional--it's another indication that the publisher is actively marketing its titles.
  • Can you order the publisher's books in a brick-and-mortar bookstore? Even if a bookstore isn't willing to stock POD-produced books, it should at least be able to order them. Publishers whose books can be obtained only from the publisher's website, or from online booksellers like Amazon, are further limiting already limited availability.
  • What's the focus of the publisher's website? Is it designed to promote the publisher's publishing services, or to promote the publisher's books? A reputable publisher's marketing will be book-focused--it will publicize its authors, and try to attract readers. A questionable publisher's marketing will be service-focused--it will promote itself, and try to attract writers. Be wary of any publisher whose website contains large amounts of verbiage about how closed-minded the "traditional" publishing industry is, or tells scary stories about how hard it is for new writers to find publication, or touts itself as providing revolutionary opportunities for overlooked writers. Be suspicious also of a publisher that solicits for authors, either in print, online, or by direct mail.
  • Is the contract standard? The Internet- and POD-fueled explosion of startup publishers has resulted in a proliferation of atrocious publishing contracts. A reputable POD-based indie will try as much as possible to adhere to basic industry standards. A questionable or amateur POD-based indie, on the other hand, can ask you to sign your life away and then some.

    Typical problems include demanding all rights for the full term of copyright without an adequate reversion clause, claiming subsidiary rights the publisher isn't capable of marketing, basing royalties on net rather than gross income, retaining a financial interest in the author's work even after the contract has terminated, claiming the right to edit at will without seeking the author's permission, tying next-book option clauses to current contract terms, tying rights reversion to purchase of overstock, and offering a contract that's not negotiable.
  • Is the publisher forthcoming? Will it answer your questions promptly, fully, and without evasion? A publisher that refuses information, or scolds you for asking questions, is a publisher to avoid.

The "POD Publisher" and the POD Stigma

Strictly speaking, "print on demand" describes a type of printing technology, not any particular business model. Over the past few years, however, digital technology has become so firmly associated with a particular complex of business practices that the term "POD publisher" has taken on specific meaning.

What defines a POD publisher?

  • Minimal selectivity. Some POD publishers accept everyone who submits. Others do more screening, but aren't expert enough to ensure high quality.
  • Minimal editing. Some POD publishers do no more than a light copy edit, releasing books that are essentially unedited. Others employ inexperienced or amateur editors, to more or less the same effect. Some POD publishers do no editing of any kind.
  • High cover prices. As noted above, the unit cost for digitally printed books is higher than for books printed on offset presses. Cover prices, therefore, must be correspondingly higher in order for the publisher to make a profit. Depending on length, a POD book can cost more than twice as much as its offset counterpart.
  • Short discounts. Booksellers expect discounts of 40% or more. POD publishers often offer much smaller discounts.
  • Nonreturnability. Booksellers expect to be able to return unsold books to the publisher for full credit. POD publishers rarely accept returns, or if they do, have such a limited returns policy that it's hardly more attractive than no policy at all.
  • Minimal marketing and distribution. POD publishers don't want to cut into their profits by spending money on book promotion. They'll ensure that their books are available for order online and through a wholesaler such as Ingram, but they won't advertise, and will make little or no effort to obtain professional reviews and bookstore placement.
  • Other nonstandard practices. These may include amateurish formatting, terrible cover design, hellacious contracts, and fees of various kinds.
Most of these practices, including the fee, are characteristic of the POD-based publishing service providers discussed above. However, they're increasingly common among digitally-based independent publishers, whose often inexperienced staff may not have the skill to rigorously select and edit (never mind market and promote) the publisher's books, and whose shoestring budgets force them to keep costs as low as possible.

Not all POD-based independents employ these practices, of course. Unfortunately, a great many do. Together with the aggressive policies and poor-quality offerings of the POD services, this has tainted print on demand in general. Many booksellers, reviewers, and readers are wary of POD on principle, and may assume that any publisher that relies exclusively or mainly on digital technology is a "POD publisher," even if the publisher is entirely professional. This is the POD stigma--and it's something that anyone who's thinking of signing a contract with a POD-based independent publisher needs to take into account, because it can make marketing extremely difficult.

Deceptive Terminology

Whether through ignorance or an active desire to deceive, POD-based independent publishers often use misleading terms. Below are some you may encounter.

Available in Bookstores

Many POD-based independent publishers are eager to assure you that your book will be "available in bookstores." Unless the publisher works with a distributor (as distinct from a wholesaler) and actively markets to the book trade, what this means is that your book can be special-ordered by a bookseller, usually on a pre-paid basis, sometimes with an extra charge to cover shipping and handling.

Unfortunately, inexperienced writers often assume that "available" means "stocked," and expect that their books will appear on bookstore shelves. Less-than-honest POD-based indies take advantage of this by failing to explain what "available" actually means, or skewing their use of the word in ways that encourage authors to make unrealistic assumptions.

A POD-based indie that provides honest information about its books' availability gets extra points.

Print on Demand vs. Publish on Demand

Some unscrupulous POD-based indies that charge hidden fees or otherwise operate according to a vanity publishing model attempt to separate themselves from POD services such as iUniverse by claiming that there's a difference between "print on demand" and "publish on demand".

"Print on demand", they say, is the digital technology that allows books to be printed as the market demands. "Publish on demand", by contrast, defines a vanity publishing operation--one that publishes (for a fee) at the author's demand. "POD publisher", they claim, means the latter. Despite their use of digital technology, therefore (and despite the fact that they employ many of the same bookseller-unfriendly business practices that vanity publishers do), they are not a POD publisher.

In fact, this is a meaningless distinction. The two terms are used interchangeably throughout the industry, and aren't considered to have different definitions, or to describe different operations. Nor is the distinction recognized by booksellers--for whom, unfortunately, the POD stigma is usually reason enough to avoid any publisher that uses the technology exclusively, no matter what its business policies.

Be wary, therefore, of a publisher that makes a show of denying that it is "POD", despite its use of digital technology.

"Traditional" Publishers

"Traditional publisher" is a term of very recent origin. It was invented by the first of the author mills in order to distinguish itself from the POD services (whose business model, except for the fee, it otherwise followed very closely). The term has no meaning in the publishing industry, which by definition doesn't include vanity and self-publishing operations. ("Commercial publisher" or "trade publisher" is more appropriate.)

Unfortunately, the term has come into common usage, and you'll often see a claim of "traditional" publishing on the websites of POD-based independent publishers. The implication is that though they're smaller, they're essentially just like Random House or Penguin. In fact, all you can count on is that the publisher won't ask for money on contract signing. Other components of the commercial publishing model are often missing (rigorous selectivity, standard discounts, a returns policy, competitive book pricing, effective marketing), and elements absent from the commercial model are often present (nonstandard contract terms and peculiar business practices).

Publishers that call themselves "traditional" aren't necessarily dishonest; many are simply inexperienced. Either way, be aware that the term doesn't have an accepted definition, and tells you nothing about how the publisher selects, produces, and markets its books.



Links

Finding a Service/Publisher and Checking Reputations

  • Clea Saal's Books and Tales website provides comparisons of a number of POD services, as well as a series of articles on the stages of the POD self-publication process (note: Writer Beware has received complaints about several of the companies listed here, including companies that this site rates highly, so be sure to do some extra research).
  • Dehanna Bailee's Print-on-Demand Database also offers side-by-side comparisons.
  • Successful novelist Piers Anthony maintains an internet publishing resource that lists and describes electronic and POD-based publishers, and flags those that have problems or are the focus of complaints.
  • Writer Beware's Thumbs Down Publisher List: the thirteen publishers about which Writer Beware has received the greatest number of advisories and complaints over the past several years.
  • Writer December Quinn provides some excellent tips for evaluating a small press, and contrasts the website of a reputable small publisher with the website of one of the most infamous of the author mills.
  • How to Tell if a New or Small Press is Legitimate: An article from the Write4Kids website that's applicable to all writers.
  • E-mail Writer Beware. SFWA has assembled a large archive of documentation on publishers that engage in questionable practices. Send us the names of any publishers or POD services you'd like to know about, and we'll summarize for you any data that's in our files. If we have no information on a publisher, we'll let you know that too.
  • Preditors and Editors provides lists of agents and publishers, with "not recommended" notations to indicate those that charge fees or engage in other writer abuses.
  • The message board at Books and Tales offers discussions about POD services. Writers who are having problems often post there, so it's a good place to check up on a POD service's reputation.
  • Another good spot to research the reputation of POD services and POD-based independent publishers: the Bewares and Background Check area of the Absolute Write Water Cooler. Check the index to see if the service or publisher you're interested in has already been discussed.
  • Google Groups is a searchable database of Usenet newsgroups, with message archives dating back to 1981. Writers often post publisher questions or complaints to Usenet. If you're uncertain about a publisher or POD service, do a search on its name here to see what you find.

General Resources

Writers' Experiences With POD

  • Print on Demand, One Year Later: this article by Adam Barr, who published a book with POD service iUniverse, highlights some of the difficulties and frustrations authors who use such a service may encounter.
  • From author Jeanette Stricklen, another look at the pitfalls of POD services, especially for writers who believe the services' hype.
  • A more positive perspective on the POD service experience is provided in this series of interviews with writers who published with Xlibris, 1st Books Library, (now Author House) and iUniverse.
  • Author Jamie Hall describes her experience with a POD service. Unlike many authors who use POD services, she did her research and carefully weighed her options.
  • Author Jeremy Robinson, who also went into POD publishing with his eyes open, has had success with Lulu.com.
  • The opposite end of the spectrum: True Stories About PublishAmerica, authors' accounts of their experiences with one of the more infamous POD-based author mills (Writer Beware has received more than 100 complaints about this self-styled "traditional" publisher).


Except for graphics, and where specifically indicated, all Writer Beware contents copyright © 1998-2008 Victoria Strauss

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