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Should I e-publish? It depends heavily on your goals, on the effort you're willing/interested in investing, and on your skill with the various abilities involved with e-publishing. If you aim to...
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#4: Attribution notice removed
Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/3165 License name: CC BY-SA 3.0 License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
#3: Attribution notice added
Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/3165 License name: CC BY-SA 3.0 License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
#2: Initial revision
## Should I e-publish? It depends heavily on your goals, on the effort you're willing/interested in investing, and on your skill with the various abilities involved with e-publishing. - **If you aim to eventually sell your book to a traditional publisher,** then _do not_ e-publish. Traditional publishers will very rarely buy manuscripts that have already been published elsewhere - including as an e-book. - **If you're asking about publishing an e-book _with_ a traditional publisher,** then in this day and age, they'll probably handle that themselves. You can ask all about it when you've got an agent and a contract. - **If you're planning on self-publishing both e-book and hardcopy, and are hoping to achieve commercial success** then an e-book version is probably a good idea. Since in self-publishing you'll be doing all your own marketing and distribution, it's a _huge_ benefit to be able to market a product you can distribute online - something potential readers can get their hands on easily - rather than a physical book that most people just won't come into any contact with. The trick here is, as with most internet marketing, you'll be starting out as a very small fish in a very big tidal wave. You'll have to do a ton of work marketing your book, making it visible, setting it apart from the millions of other self-published books. You'll also need to make sure, on your own, that your work is top-notch and professionally presented - otherwise you'll get bad responses from the people you got with your marketing. - **If you don't care about commercial success or being traditionally published, but simply want your work available,** then you can whip up an e-book, and let it float around the internet. People will read it or they won't; you can put as much or as little effort as you like into marketing it; it will exist and be available - just probably nothing more than that. ## How do I e-publish? I don't know the details, but there's tons of services and e-book sites that'll take you through the minimum requirements. You'll probably want more than the bare minimum, though. Here's an excellent essay by Nancy Fulda offering a ["Mini-handbook on independent publication"](http://nancyfulda.livejournal.com/309139.html), covering a lot of what you'll need (and want) to do if you decide to go the e-book route.