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It’s a good time to be a ghost.

November 18, 2024

Ghostwriters have never been more in demand — or better compensated

What do you get when you poll 269 professional secret keepers about their craft?

The answer to that question was revealed by the first-ever survey of professional ghostwriters, undertaken by Gotham Ghostwriters, the nation’s premier ghostwriting agency, and the American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA), the professional association for independent nonfiction writers.

The survey emerged as an action item from the Gathering of the Ghosts, a one-day convention held earlier this year in Manhattan, where the nation’s working ghosts emerged from their shadows to convene for the first timeAwards were bestowedspeeches were delivered, and secrets were spilled — including an answer to that most sensitive of questions: “How much do you make?”

Findings

Here’s what the data revealed: 1 in 3 ghostwriters make more than $100,000 in annual ghostwriting income. “That so many ghosts command a 6-figure salary testifies to the growing demand for an increasingly premium service,” said Dan Gerstein, Gotham’s founder and chief executive.

The survey’s other key findings bear out this trend — ghostwriting is a premium service:

  • 25 percent of ghostwriters charged at least $100,000 for their last nonfiction manuscript
  • 8 percent of ghostwriters charged more than $150,000 for their last nonfiction manuscript
  • 50 percent of ghostwriters charged $10,000 – $20,000 for their last nonfiction proposal
  • 11 percent of ghostwriters charged more than $20,000 for their last nonfiction proposal

To be sure, these ranges reflect the cost of high-quality writing. These are not the low-ball rates dangled on platforms such as Upwork and Fiverr by folks who market themselves as ghostwriters but, in truth, lack credentials and experience.

By contrast, for executives and entrepreneurs, celebrities and companies, politicians and pundits who need help unlocking the right words, professional work costs money.

Indeed, ghostwriting fees reflect how credentialed a writer is, including how many New York Times bestsellers – the gold standard for book success – to their name.  The nexus between bestselling credits and writing fees was measured by the survey: 

  • 30 percent of ghostwriters have written at least 1 NYT bestseller
  • 51 percent of ghostwriters who have at least 1 NYT bestseller credit reported earning over $100,000 in annual income
  • 2 percent of ghostwriters have written 10 or more NYT bestsellers charge, and charge upwards of $150,000 for a nonfiction manuscript, with 1 percent indicating that they charge over $300,000

“The survey results pull back the proverbial curtain on the true worth of professional writers in general, ghostwriters in particular,” said Emily Paulsen, president of the American Society of Journalists and Authors. “Writers who have the chops to write a best-selling book-length manuscript should feel confident in their worth to authors.”

Running a Ghostwriting Practice  

One of the main takeaways from Gathering of the Ghosts was that it’s a great time to be a ghostwriter. Thanks to the democratization of the publishing sector, it’s never been easier for aspiring authors to bring a book into the world. For ghosts, this means that demand for our services is surging, opportunities to make a healthy living are rapidly expanding, and the old stigmas around our work are fast disappearing. 

Yet we also learned, as much as our field is coming out of the shadows, writers universally desire more transparency around the nuts and bolts of ghostwriting, including insights on rates and compensation structures, identifying other forms of performance-based compensation and complementary services to offer, and how and where to market yourself.

Answers to these questions, as well as the big kahuna – should I increase my fees? –  can be viewed here.

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