Susanna W.
About me
Susanna W. | |
English and Related Literature | |
English and Related Literature | |
Undergraduate | |
Vanbrugh | |
1985 | |
United Kingdom |
My employment
Publishing Director | |
Penguin Random House | |
United Kingdom | |
Journalism and publishing | |
Large business (250+ employees) | |
1986 | |
£6,500 |
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A day in the life of a Publishing Director in the United Kingdom
Started at the bottom and worked my way up to the position of publishing director
My career history
I stayed in the same company until I became an editor. I was made redundant with a management change, worked freelance, moved into a commissioning editor post in a much smaller company, worked to become a company director. We sold the company and I moved across to set up a books imprint for ITV. I was headhunted to set up a new list for Transworld and then gradually began to commission in other areas.
What has helped my career to progress
Taking risks
My advice about working in my industry
Talk to people. If possible try different roles in different departments to discover what suits you best - big company or small and where your real interests lie. Don't assume editorial is where you want to be. If it is, then remember that a commissioning editor is a very different beast from a production editor/copy-editor. Both important, just very different. And the hardest jump up the ladder is the first one, from editorial secretary to assistant editor.
What I do
Essentially I am a senior editor within a large publishing house. Hierarchies within Penguin are comparatively flat and in my case the title 'Director' denotes seniority and a degree of autonomy but I don't command a large team reporting directly to me. Instead I commission and then oversee publication of (mostly) non-fiction titles, working with an assistant editor and collaborating with other departments. It is my job to bring new authors to the table, to negotiate the deal with author/agent, ensure the book is what we expected to be when it is delivered, and then that as a team we publish it to the best of the company's ability.
Skills I use and how I developed them
It is a common plea amongst young editors that they should be taught to edit. There are courses to learn copy-editing skills, proof-reading, negotiating, contracts etc. But the truth is that a commissioning editor learns best from watching, collaborating and doing the job. We all get better with experience but the most important skills are enthusiasm, genuine passion and dedication to doing the best job possible for a book and its author.
What I like most
Working with a diverse range of fascinating people. And the moment when sales show that my belief in the quality of a book is shared by thousands of others.
Next steps...
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