imageAuthonomy is a community site for authors, editors and anyone else interested in the publishing business.  If you’re an author you could use authonomy to get feedback on your manuscript and increase your visibility.

The rules are pretty simple.  You need to post a 10,000-word (minimum) portion of your work for review by other authonomy members.  As other members read, review and rank your work, it gains visibility on the site.

I was very impressed by what I saw after a HarperCollins representative in the U.K. emailed me.

Not just for HarperCollins talent scouts

Publishers should love this model because it gives them an opportunity to keep an eye on a large pool of potential up-and-coming authors.  HarperCollins obviously has the inside track on this, but any publisher (editor or agent) is free to create their own authonomy profile and join in the fun.

The biggest challenge a service like this will face is in creating a large enough reader/reviewer pool to give it the momentum it needs to succeed.  It’s sort of like the escape velocity concept in physics; you need a large enough base of participant interest to really take off, and then success seems to snowball.  I’m hoping it works though and that it will become a model that can be extended into other segments (hint, hint…computer/technology books).

One final beef: All the content must be read in a browser on a computer screen.  Yuck.  I know it introduces a whole new level of complexity but it would be wonderful if authonomy would offer other formats and platforms (e.g., PDF, Mobi (for use on Kindles), etc.)

1 COMMENT

  1. Baen’s “barfly” community does something like this on the Baen Bar. Since the Bar is technically not “public” (you need to create an account and log in) this means that you keep your prospects for publication (many publishers will be reluctant to take something that has been posted to a public website in any form).

    I’m not sure whether Authonomy would affect prospects for publication in such a way, as I haven’t checked into it. But it’s something to keep in mind.

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