The Complete Guide to Self-Publishing a Book

Table of Contents

The Complete Guide To Self-Publishing A Book

There’s a moment most writers know well. The manuscript is done, finally, exhaustingly, triumphantly done, and then comes the bigger question: now what? For decades, the answer meant sending query letters, collecting rejection slips, and waiting on an industry that moved at its own pace. That world still exists. But it’s no longer the only path.

Self-publishing has matured into a legitimate, profitable, and creatively fulfilling route for authors of all kinds. From debut novelists to seasoned nonfiction writers, people are choosing to publish their own books on their own terms. And the results can be remarkable, full creative control, higher royalty rates, and a direct relationship with readers.

But “self-publishing” doesn’t mean going it alone and figuring everything out from scratch. There’s a whole ecosystem of tools, platforms, and professional book publishing services designed to support you at every stage. This guide walks you through the entire process, clearly, honestly, and practically.

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What Self-Publishing Actually Means (And What It Doesn’t)

Let’s clear something up first. Self-publishing doesn’t mean slapping a Word document on the internet and hoping for the best. Modern self-publishing, when done well, involves professional editing, thoughtful cover design, proper formatting, strategic distribution, and real marketing. The difference between a book that sells and one that gets lost is almost always in those details.

There are three broad models in today’s publishing landscape:

• Traditional publishing: A publisher acquires your book, handles production costs, and pays you an advance against royalties. You give up significant control and most of the earnings.

• Self-publishing: You handle everything yourself, or hire professionals to help. You keep the rights and the majority of royalties.

• Hybrid/assisted publishing: You work with a company that provides professional self publishing services, handling production and distribution while you retain ownership.

Most authors who choose the independent route land somewhere between pure DIY and full-service support. Knowing where you want to be on that spectrum is the first real decision you’ll make.

How To Publish A Book Step By Step

The process isn’t mysterious, but it does have a logical order. Skipping steps, or rushing them, is how books end up looking amateurish even when the writing is strong. Here’s how to do it right.

Step 1: Finish and Polish the Manuscript

This one sounds obvious, but it’s worth saying: a finished draft is not a ready manuscript. Before anything else, your book needs at least one round of developmental editing (big-picture structure and story), followed by line editing, and then copyediting for grammar and consistency. Proofreading comes last, after the layout is set.

Many authors skip editing to save money. This is almost always a mistake. Readers notice. Reviews notice. And a poorly edited book can quietly kill your credibility before your career has a chance to build.

Step 2: Design a Cover That Does Its Job

Covers sell books. That’s not a metaphor; it’s literally how readers make split-second decisions, especially online. Your cover needs to work at thumbnail size, communicate genre instantly, and look professional next to traditionally published titles in the same category.

Hire a designer who specializes in book covers. Show them comps (comparable titles) in your genre. A strong cover is one of the highest-ROI investments you’ll make in the entire publishing process.

Step 3: Format for Print and Digital

Print formatting and ebook formatting are two different things, and they both matter. For print, you’re dealing with margins, gutters, fonts, chapter headings, and page numbers. For ebooks, the file needs to reflow properly across devices and screen sizes.

Tools like Vellum, Atticus, and Adobe InDesign are popular among experienced formatters. If this feels overwhelming, it’s one area where professional book publishing services earn their fee; a badly formatted book is immediately noticeable to readers.

Step 4: Get Your ISBN and Choose Your Distribution

An ISBN (International Standard Book Number) is your book’s unique identifier in the global publishing system. In the US, you can purchase ISBNs through Bowker. Some platforms like Amazon KDP offer free ISBNs, but these come with restrictions, the most notable being that Amazon is listed as the publisher, not you.

For wider distribution, consider platforms like IngramSpark, which gets your book into physical bookstores and libraries, alongside digital retailers. Amazon KDP, Apple Books, Kobo, and Barnes & Noble Press each have their own requirements and royalty structures. Understanding these before you upload saves headaches later.

Self-Publishing Timeline at a Glance

Stage What Happens Est. Timeline
Write & Edit Draft, revise, professional edit 3-12 months
Cover Design Hire a designer or use templates 1-4 weeks
Formatting Interior layout for print/ebook 1-2 weeks
ISBN & Setup Register, choose distribution 1-3 days
Upload & Publish Platform setup, metadata, pricing 3-7 days
Marketing Launch plan, ARC readers, ads Ongoing

Step 5: Upload, Metadata, and Pricing

When you upload your book, you’re not just submitting files; you’re writing the metadata that determines how discoverable your book is. Your title, subtitle, author name, categories, keywords, and description all influence how platforms surface your book to potential readers.

Pricing strategy varies by genre, format, and your goals. Ebook pricing tends to be lower (often $2.99–$9.99 to qualify for higher royalty tiers on KDP), while print books are priced based on production costs and market comparables. Don’t just pick a number; research what similar books in your category are charging.

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Step 6: Build Your Author Platform

The best time to start building an audience is before your book is out. An author website, an email list, and at least one active social media presence give you somewhere to direct potential readers and a way to stay in touch with them long after launch day.

Your website doesn’t need to be elaborate. A professional homepage, an about page, a page for your book with buy links, and a way to sign up for your newsletter is enough to start. What matters most is that it exists, looks professional, and reflects your voice as an author.

Step 7: Plan and Execute Your Launch

A book launch isn’t a single day; it’s a campaign. In the weeks before your release date, you want to build anticipation. Reach out to book bloggers and early reviewers. Set up an ARC (Advanced Reader Copy) program to generate reviews before you go live. Prepare your social content in advance so launch week doesn’t become a chaos spiral.

Amazon reviews are particularly important in the early days. The more reviews your book accumulates, especially early, the more the algorithm pays attention. Encourage honest reviews from your ARC readers, your newsletter, and your network.

Where Professional Self Publishing Services Come In

Here’s a realistic truth: doing all of this well requires a wide range of skills. Writing, editing, design, formatting, platform management, metadata optimization, marketing strategy, most authors are excellent at one or two of these things and less experienced at the rest.

That’s exactly where self publishing services fill a genuine need. Rather than spending months figuring out the technical side of KDP setup or wrestling with Canva for your cover, you can work with professionals who do this daily.

The key is knowing what to look for. A legitimate, quality-focused agency will be transparent about pricing, clearly explain what’s included, show you examples of real books they’ve helped publish, and respect your ownership of the rights. If an agency is vague about royalties or wants to lock you into restrictive contracts, that’s worth examining carefully before signing anything.

When you’re ready to publish your own book with professional support behind you, the process becomes significantly less overwhelming, and the results tend to show it.

After Publication: The Long Game

Publishing your book is not the finish line. It’s the starting gun. The authors who build sustainable income and readership treat their book like a business, investing in ongoing marketing, publishing follow-up titles, and continually expanding their reach.

Running Amazon ads, building your backlist, connecting with your genre community, doing author interviews and podcast appearances, all of these compound over time. The first book is rarely the biggest earner. Most successful indie authors will tell you their income grew significantly once they had multiple titles in the market.

Stay curious. The self-publishing landscape evolves constantly. Algorithms change. New platforms emerge. Reader habits shift. The authors who thrive are the ones who pay attention and adapt, not the ones who publish once and wait.

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Conclusion

Self-publishing is real publishing. When done with intention, professionalism, and a clear strategy, it produces books that stand shoulder to shoulder with anything coming out of a traditional house. The tools are available. The platforms are powerful. The readers are out there.

Whether you choose to handle the journey yourself or work with experienced book publishing services to guide you through it, the path forward has never been more accessible. The only thing standing between your manuscript and your readers is the decision to move.

At Keach Publishing Agency, we’re here to help authors at every stage, from manuscript to marketplace. If you’re ready to publish your own book and want a team that takes your work seriously, let’s talk.

Frequently Asked Questions

The cost to self-publish varies widely depending on the level of professional support you use. At minimum, a bare-bones self-published book might cost $500–$1,500 if you hire only the essentials (editing and cover design). A fully professional production, including developmental editing, layout, cover design, and a marketing launch, can range from $3,000 to $10,000 or more. The good news is that self-publishing has no gatekeeping cost; you can spend as much or as little as your budget allows, and scale up over time.
For many authors, absolutely, especially those who want creative control, faster time-to-market, and higher royalty rates. Traditional publishers typically pay 8–15% in royalties. Self-published authors can earn 35–70% per sale depending on the platform and format. The trade-off is that you’re responsible for the upfront investment and marketing. Authors who treat their book as a serious project and invest appropriately tend to see the best results.
The timeline depends heavily on how much editing the manuscript needs and how quickly you can assemble your production team. A realistic minimum, assuming the manuscript is already in good shape, is around 2–3 months to go from polished draft to published book. A more thorough process, with developmental editing, multiple revision passes, professional cover design, and a planned launch campaign, typically takes 6–12 months. Rushing any stage usually shows in the final product.
There’s no single best platform; it depends on your goals. Amazon KDP gives you the largest reach and access to Kindle Unlimited, which can be significant for certain genres like romance and fantasy. IngramSpark offers broader distribution into bookstores and libraries. Many authors use both, publishing widely (across multiple platforms) rather than locking into exclusivity. If you’re publishing primarily for ebook sales, Draft2Digital is worth considering as an aggregator that distributes to multiple retailers simultaneously.
Technically, you don’t always need to purchase your own ISBN. Platforms like Amazon KDP will assign a free ASIN for ebooks and offer a free ISBN for print books. However, if you use a platform-provided ISBN, that platform is typically listed as your publisher. For authors who want full publishing independence and the ability to distribute through multiple channels under their own imprint, purchasing your own ISBNs through Bowker (in the US) is the recommended route. It’s a small cost for a meaningful level of professional control.