First-Time Author Mistakes: Lessons Learned
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Every first-time author makes mistakes. This episode breaks down the most common ones and shows how to turn early missteps into long-term strength.
Every author remembers their first book, not just for the excitement, but for the mistakes that came with it. In this episode of the Cosmo Publishing Podcast, host Gürhan, co-founder of Cosmo Publishing and Cosmodio Books, shares the most common first-time author mistakes he sees every day behind the scenes, and why these mistakes are not failures, but essential learning points.
This episode is designed to normalize the early challenges of publishing and remove the shame that often surrounds them. Instead of presenting mistakes as something to avoid at all costs, the conversation reframes them as part of the publishing education every author goes through.
We begin by exploring why first-time author mistakes are not only normal, but necessary. Writing and publishing require different skill sets, and no author starts with mastery of both. Early missteps are how authors learn how the system truly works.
The episode then dives into one of the biggest early mistakes, rushing to publish before the book is truly ready. You'll learn why finishing a draft is not the same as finishing a book, how impatience leads to avoidable problems, and why slowing down early often saves months or even years later.
We also cover the widespread habit of underestimating editing, design, and presentation. This section explains how readers experience books holistically, why quality signals trust instantly, and how skipping professional standards quietly undermines even strong content.
Another critical topic is confusing publishing with marketing. Many first-time authors expect visibility to happen automatically after release. This episode clarifies why marketing is a separate, long-term process, and why launch day is only the beginning of a book's life.
Unrealistic expectations around sales and visibility are addressed with honesty and empathy. You'll learn why quiet launches are normal, how comparison distorts reality, and why early numbers are data, not verdicts.
The episode also explores the exhaustion that comes from trying to do everything alone. From editing to marketing, this section explains why collaboration matters, how support accelerates learning, and why sustainable careers are rarely built in isolation.
Long-term strategy and backlist thinking are another major focus. You'll hear why the first book is rarely the most important book, how catalogs build momentum over time, and why thinking beyond a single launch changes everything.
The episode closes by tying all these lessons together into a sustainable author mindset. Instead of chasing perfection or validation, authors are encouraged to view publishing as a long-term practice built on consistency, adaptability, and self-trust.
This episode is for first-time authors who want clarity instead of pressure, growth instead of judgment, and a publishing path they can sustain.
00.24 .... Why First-Time Author Mistakes Are Normal and Valuable
06.24 .... Rushing to Publish Before the Book Is Truly Ready
12.07 .... Underestimating Editing, Design, and Presentation
18.36 .... Confusing Publishing with Marketing
24.47 .... Unrealistic Expectations About Sales and Visibility
30.22 .... Trying to Do Everything Alone
35.21 .... Ignoring Long-Term Strategy and Backlist Thinking
40.46 .... Turning Mistakes into a Sustainable Author Mindset