The Brutal Truth About Self-Publishing (And What To Do Next)

Let’s not sugarcoat it.

Most self-published books will never be discovered.

Not because they’re bad.

Not because the author isn’t talented.

But because nobody is looking.


The uncomfortable statistics

  • Over 2 million books are published every year.
  • Amazon lists millions more from previous years.
  • The majority sell fewer than 100 copies.
  • Many sell fewer than 10.

That’s not a quality issue.

That’s a visibility issue.


The hard truth (that stings)

Your problem is not quality.

Your problem is this:

You build finished products before you have attention.

In 2005, that worked.

In 2026

It doesn’t!

The internet is now a casino.

Algorithms don’t reward “finished”.
They reward engagement loops.


You’re building backwards

Old model:

Create book → Publish → Market → Hope

Modern model:

Build attention → Build habit → Build demand → Then product

If no one knows you exist, your book is invisible — even if it’s brilliant.


The only model that realistically works now for small creators

There is ONE path that has a fighting chance:

Free → addictive → repeatable → niche → monetise later

Not:

“Make product and sell.”

But:

“Build habit first.”


What that actually means

Instead of:

  • Writing a 44-page book
  • Designing a perfect cover
  • Uploading to Amazon
  • Waiting…

You build:

  • A daily micro-format
  • A repeatable hook
  • A niche audience
  • A reason to come back tomorrow

You make something so simple and frequent that it becomes a ritual.

Books become the by-product.


Why this feels wrong

Because you’re an author.

Authors want to finish things.

Creators want to complete masterpieces.

But in 2026:

Distribution beats perfection.


Survival odds?

If you publish and hope?

Very low.

If you build attention first?

Still hard.

But at least now you’re playing the right game.


The mental shift

Stop asking:

“How do I sell this book?”

Start asking:

“How do I make someone come back tomorrow?”

That’s the difference between invisible and inevitable.


And here’s the kicker:

Your work didn’t fail.

You just played by outdated rules.

2 thoughts on “The Brutal Truth About Self-Publishing (And What To Do Next)”

    1. Thanks for taking the time to comment. I appreciate your opinion. I mean, I’m a case in point 44 books later and stuff all sales. Everything is against you: Amazon and promoting your books on social media. People aren’t interested in book reviews, they want entertainment.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *