Subscription Publishing: What It Can Do for You and Your Book

By Rachel Guise — PPS Editor
Did your elementary school have book club days? Teachers passed out Scholastic catalogs filled with the newest books that students couldn’t wait to get their hands on! After filling out the order form and including payment in the envelope, students would wait a few weeks until the book orders arrived. Today we’re still living in a subscription-based world. The popularity of streaming podcasts, audiobooks, TV shows, and movies is at an all-time high. Find out what subscription publishing can do for you and your book.

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Let’s Define

Subscription publishing is a “system of obtaining orders (and sometimes payment) in advance to enable publication of a book” as defined by The Oxford Reference. Perhaps you haven’t heard of book-based subscriptions. However, you’ve probably seen subscription offers for newspapers, magazines, and blogs, which have been using this service for quite some time. But what about books?

Publishers and Subscriptions

Publishers have been using subscriptions as a business model for a long time. WNIP explains that this has been effective because publishers have long understood the importance of customer relationships. Let’s look at the jump from print to digital media. Publishers have managed to stay on top of, if not ahead of, changes in how their readers are accessing content. So of course they’ve been offering book subscriptions to their readers.

You and Your Book

Working with a publisher who uses this platform could have many benefits for you.

So whether you’re looking to boost marketing for your book, or get a jump on pesky publishing fees, consider working with a publisher who has experience with subscription-based publishing!