Dear Self-Publishers, Don’t Limit Your Potential

The Martian started as a self-published book.

Its author, Andy Weir, said he didn’t think the book had mainstream appeal and was surprised anyone was interested.

It began as a series on Weir’s website, and when readers complained it was hard to read the stories sitting at their computer, Weir listened to his audience and put it out as an ebook and then on Amazon’s Kindle.

It then got picked up by a small Canadian audiobook company.

Then Random House was interested, and before he knew it, Weir had a movie based on a book he started writing on his website that he went on to Self-Publish.

The Martian would later be nominated for several Oscars.

Photo by RF.

Self-publishing doesn’t just benefit authors who wish to go Independent, but it could also help authors who want to attract the attention of publishing houses.

Everyone’s publishing journey is different, and there is no telling where yours might take you.

Going the traditional route doesn’t make you a sellout, and self-publishing doesn’t mean your book is trash.

If you take the time to craft a well-written, high-quality book that people just can’t stop talking about, the sky is not even the limit of where it could take you.

Remember, The Martian did not automatically go to print by a traditional publisher. It first got picked up as an audiobook which, according to Weir, made him more money than the movie!

For a more personal example, I didn’t intend to give the platform much attention when TikTok launched. I thought it was for kids, I don’t dance, and I didn’t think I had time to learn another app.

But I took a chance and have grown my account to over 18K followers (updated: We are now at 23.6K!) went viral at 1.3million views, started a TiKTok shop, and have over 20 new email sign-ups that came directly from TikTok.

I am not telling you to start a TikTok account. I am telling you not to limit yourself.

In the words of Maya Angelou: “Pursue the things you love doing and then do them so well that people can’t take their eyes off of you.”


Check out more Indie Author Basics articles here.

Humility vs. Fear

Photo by Alexandra Gorn on Unsplash

There is a humility that is sacred and far more valuable than any tangible thing. Then there is a humility rooted in fear. This humility is not real. It is the mask we wear when we are afraid to step outside of our comfort zones. It is the fear of being “too much.” It is the fear of being perceived as arrogant and proud. There is a pride that leads to destruction. It operates under the belief that we cannot teach it. It is that nasty arrogance they always warn us to stay away from, and for a good reason. But there is another way in which to be proud. It is the pride that gives us the courage to be who we are. It is the pride that acknowledges all the struggles we’ve endured to be where we are. It is the fulfillment that gives us the intestinal fortitude to hold our heads up and believe that we are capable despite all obstacles and impossibilities. There is a nasty and egotistic pride, and then there is a pride that is self-respect. There is sincere humility that will take us places money and status never will. Then, there is a humility that keeps us stuck because it is not humility; it is fear.


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