You can publish a book.
And you can do it much sooner than you think, actually.
How do you do this? Not by wasting years writing articles or obsessing over writer’s conferences and book proposals.
All you need is a blog.
No other activity (including years of freelance writing) has brought me closer to my dream of publishing a book than blogging. It took me about six months to get a book contract with a publisher.
And you can do the same.
But why would want to publish a book?
Because:
- Being a published author makes you an “expert” in your field.
- Traditionally-published books tend to be of a higher quality.
- Publishers can help you with marketing.
Let’s be honest: You don’t publish for the royalties. You won’t be retiring after your first book goes to print. But if you have a message the world needs to hear, going with a traditional publisher may be the right thing for you. Here’s how you can do it in six months:
Month 1: Build and Launch a Blog
All publishers want to know if you have a “platform.” A platform is an asset you own that gives you the authority to speak on a certain topic.
If you can build a website that attracts a good tribe of followers, you have a good chance of getting noticed and eventually published. A blog is a great way to do this.
Getting started
You can sign up for a free blog on sites like WordPress.com, Tumblr.com, and Blogger.com.
Or, you can spend some cash on a self-hosted WordPress.org blog. For less than $100, you can have your site up and running in two hours. (Follow this guide for step-by-step instructions.)
How to launch
The first four weeks of your new blog should be focused on creating content, not marketing.
At the end of the month, you should be fully launched with your core content and have easy ways for people to subscribe (you can do this for free via Feedburner), follow you, and interact with your writing.
Then, you can send an email to friends and colleagues letting them know about your new site.
Month 2: Start Promoting
In the world of social media, promotion looks like connecting with people who can help you. However, you need to make sure you have the right tools.
Your social media toolkit
If you haven’t already done so, you need to do the following
- Sign up for a Twitter account.
- Set up a Facebook page. (You will need a Facebook account first.)
Once you’re on those social networks, don’t go crazy with promotion and mindless following. Start small and personal, and build from there.
Guest posting
There are lots of ways to earn blog subscribers and get noticed online. The best I’ve found is guest posting. Reaching out to other bloggers and websites and writing for them is a great way to build a readership and get your name out there. Make sure you are smart about it, though. Target sites that focus on your topic and have a large enough readership that it will be worth your time.
For more on this, read these six tips on how to be a good guest blogger.
Interviewing experts
Another way to grow an audience and build influence is to do interviews. Seek out other authors and bloggers in your niche and ask to interview them. This allows you to deliver value to your readers, while building relationships with influential people. Soon, people will think of you as the expert — which is exactly what publishers are looking for.
For more on this, check out this series: How to Conduct an Interview Like a Journalist
Month 3: Write a Manifesto
Once you’ve built a blog and started generating an audience, you can now work on a manifesto. A manifesto is a short eBook that helps you connect with an audience that shares your beliefs. You can also use it to build an email list by giving it away for free.
This is a short eBook — less than 10,000 words — which you should be able to write in a few days (or less). The shorter it is, the more people will read and share it.
For more on this, check out this seven-step guide to writing an eBook.
Month 4: Grow Your Brand
Every author needs a brand. You want people to recognize your name, as they would Stephen King or J.K. Rowling. What’s the best way for a blogger to do this? Get social.
Connect on social media
Social media is a great way to find fans and friends who will spread your work. It’s free, and most people are pretty approachable. The trick is to not focus too much on yourself. If you show interest in other people and add value, you can make meaningful connections and build a following that is actually worth something.
On Twitter, follow popular hashtags that focus on your topic. On Facebook, “like” relevant pages and engage in the comments. Use common interests to build rapport that leads to relationship.
Pick up the phone
Once you’ve connected with someone via social media or email, the best way to take the relationship to the next level is to get on a call together. If you’re comfortable giving out your phone number, you can do that. Or you can Skype, which is free, and can actually be more personal if you do a video chat.
Meet in person
The whole point of all this is to lead to deeper connection. So once you initiate an online relationship, you’ll want to take it to the next level. A few ways to do this are:
While this may require some investment of time and money, it’s worth it. There really is nothing like in-the-flesh relationships. All you have to do is ask.
Month 5: Find an Agent
Once you’ve started to build a platform and are connecting with important people, it’s time to find an agent.
Work your network
Build off of existing relationships if you can. The best way to get an agent is through referral. If you don’t have a friend who can refer someone to you, then you may need to revert to “cold calling” by writing a query letter. However, if you’ve succeeded at building a platform, an agent may come find you.
Do you need an agent?
Of course, you don’t have to use an agent. Without one, though, you’re on your own.
The downside to having an agent is you share your royalties with them (the market rate is around 15%). The upside is authors with agents typically get better deals. Agents also help negotiate the terms of the contract and make sure you don’t get ripped off by a publisher.
For more on this, check out: How to Find a Literary Agent
Month 6: Get the Contract
Finally, it’s time to start working on the book itself, but not actually write it. Not yet.
Most publishers will want a say in your book, so it’s not productive to start writing before you have a contract. What you can do, though, is work on your proposal.
Writing a book proposal
If your agent doesn’t have a book proposal template, you can Google “book proposal templates” or follow a publisher’s guidelines. If you need further help, you can get this eBook: Writing a Winning Book Proposal by Michael Hyatt.
To be fair, it may take months to get a contract from a publisher, but I don’t recommend working on your proposal sooner than Month 6. Investing your time in building a platform will give you a much better chance of being taken seriously by a publisher. It can expedite the process, as well.
If you do it right, the publisher may come to you. This is not the “norm” in publishing, but it does happen. It happened to me and to many of my friends who are authors. And it can happen to you — if you build a blog worth noticing and serve your way into influence.
Ready to publish your first book? Start blogging.
(Photo credit: Nicola Romagna)

















Interesting post. I’m not looking to write a book right now but I will definitely take some of your advice as to reaching out to other bloggers and guest blogging. thanks!
Wait. You recommend getting an agent before you even start writing your book? I just read the other day that agents are looking to reject people, and why should they take someone who doesn’t have a finished manuscript over the dozens who do?
Exactly. And if you’ve already developed a significant platform, you better be getting a damn good deal from the publisher. I’d rather self-publish the first book. If the platform is solid, then you know how much you should be demanding for the hassle of dealing with a publisher.
Because they believe in YOU, not just your book.
The secret to getting a book published is to NOT write a finished manuscript (there are some exceptions, of course). Most publishers are going to want you to change a bunch of stuff anyway, so you should build a platform, find an agent, write a proposal, find a publisher, and THEN write the book.
That’s what worked for me and many of my friends. In fact, I know a lot of people who built platforms and the agent found them. An agent isn’t investing in a book; they’re investing in an author.
This is really interesting. I’ve been putting off looking for an agent because I don’t have a proposal finished, but I have a couple of friends who have also agented up without a proposal.
How do you pitch an agent without a proposal? Do you go with an idea? With your stats? Or just with lots of swagger? ;-D
Swagger. :) It’s the platform. I didn’t have a proposal. In fact, I never really had to write one. The platform was enough. You can do the same. In fact, you’ve already got the platform. You should go for it, Alise!
Oh, I’m not sure about the platform. From most of what I’ve read, I’ve got about half of the platform that I need to be seriously considered by an agent.
Believe me, the agent consideration is out there. I just want to make sure I’m not jumping ahead of myself.
Yeah. Relationship is important too.
How do you define a sufficient online platform? And by the way, maybe I missed it, but what is your book?
Nevermind. I filled out the survey and got the free eBook.
“The secret to getting a book published is to NOT write a finished manuscript (there are some exceptions, of course)”
The main exception being fiction. Darren Rowse and Tim Ferriss aren’t novelists. This whole idea of platform is a lot trickier for fiction writers (such as myself). A basic description of platform for fiction writers (who, again, are also writing for the readers, although they often do envelop other writers in their “target audience” early on) is the *nonfiction* elements of your *fiction* narrative. Ex: a historical novel about someone who travels back in time to try and stop Lincoln’s assassination (besides being a blatant ripoff of Stephen King’s new book about JFK), might have a posting about some fun facts regarding Lincoln (besides the old conspiracy joke of “Kennedy’s secretary was named Lincoln; Lincoln’s secretary was named Kennedy, and both were assassinated by men with three names…”), or an open question to readers about what historical event they’d most like to witness or change or be part of, or, heck, an Amazon link to buy the full series of Quantum Leap. ;-) Maybe a fake interview with Geraldo about a planned TV special to find Jimmy Hoffa buried in Foster Grant’s tomb. XD
Along with that, you’re expected to update the readers (of the blog, who may or may not be potential readers of the book… so it sometimes gets confusing, and a lot of fiction writers chiefly interested in point-of-sale wonder what the point of a novel’s platform even is) about your progress writing the book. The irony is that blogging and platform-building cut into a lot of time that could actually be spent, well, writing the damn book, since the going advice is to start building one before you’ve even got “Chapter One” written on the page (or screen, in this case). I often wonder how many fiction bloggers ever do finish, and if they do, how successful they are because of the platform, not to mention how well-written the book actually is. Not saying everything needs to be War & Peace, but the whole rise in self-publishing has seemingly reduced the need for quality professional editors and (like them or not) the VERY necessary “gatekeepers” that the self-publishing “movement” has grown to despise (literary agents). I personally compare traditionally published novels to self-published Kindle works as something like MGM versus public access TV.
Furthermore, a 10,000-word non-fiction “manifesto” is roughly the length of a short story if it were fiction. A 75,000 to 90,000-word novel takes much longer to write. Hence the need for temperance and clarification when it comes to fiction writers’ murky area of “platform.” The growing consensus is that the internet is anathema to the intense levels of focus *and* of creativity needed to complete a novel or other creative work; hence, many fiction writers actually give up the internet entirely while working on their manuscripts. Jonathan Franzen said it best: “Anyone with an internet connection at his workplace is not likely to be a good writer.” (Example: …Twitter.) ;-)
I appreciated your advice to not go crazy marketing and following people but to start small and build from there. That is fantastic advice and, I think, just what I needed to hear. Congrats on your book deal!
Thanks, Kevin. Good luck in your own publishing journey.
Great insights here, Jeff. Thanks for pulling it all together in a do-able format.
My pleasure, Mary. Thanks for the comment — means a lot coming from you. Your expertise in this field both inspires and intimidates me. :)
Incredible advice and excellent resource here. Thanks, Jeff.
Thanks, Don!
I can’t follow the order exactly, I self published then started a blog and am not trying to grow a bit
I really like the deliberate, easy to understand steps that can help.
Thanks for sharing the wisdom
Congrads
Thanks, Chris. Each person will have to find his/her own path. This was mine. Sounds like yours is working.
Jeff, I just love your writing and have been so inpsired by you and how you’ve grown your blog and got to this point – and I really can’t wait to read your book, I am so happy for you and what you have achieved. You’ve been such a help to me in my own development and I have so much respect for you. Such congratulations on the book – I know it’s going to be brilliant & am so pleased for you.
Thanks, James!
Do you think the shortness of a manifesto is important? I could see length being a selling point for an Ebook, but I guess an Ebook manifesto is a different animal.
Yes, it needs to be short (while still complete). If people can’t read it in one sitting, then they won’t help you spread it.
As usual, amazing content of great value! Thank you so much!
Thanks, Jacque! It really is my pleasure.
Great Article Jeff, I’m working on creating a stronger brand at the moment as you mentioned in your free eBook Every Writer’s dream, I think it makes a big difference to recognition and credibility. Delighted you’ve joined the lifehack community.
thanks, Ciara. totally my pleasure. good luck on the brand building! my friend John Morgan’s new book Brand Against the Machine is an invaluable resource for that.
Thanks Jeff I will check it out
Great stuff, keep it up.
thanks!
Thank you, Jeff.
Thanks so much for this article. I’ve been umming and ahing over whether to start a blog to establish myself or a website. Why is a blog so much better?
Thanks for this article – very inspiring. I’ve literally just bought a fab domain name – but then also came up with a great blog name (different name). Am such an online dunce. Why do you think a blog is the best way to establish oneself as an expert? I’m planning to write a book eventually…have loads of content ready to roll
oops sorry – I thought my post had deleted.
I am trying to start a blog and I’ve been doing a lot of research. I keep hearing good things about Dreamhost and I saw this discount code for $5 off using “CHEAPBLOG73″ but I haven’t tried it yet. Has anyone else had any luck with this?