<p><strong>Topics covered:</strong></p><p>A field report from week one of Crossroads Publishing Group—what’s coming in the door, what’s surprising, what’s confirming.</p><p>What a hybrid press actually is. A working definition: a publisher where the author shares the financial risk via a fee (broadly $5K to $45K, depending on the engagement), in exchange for real editorial work, professional production, distribution under the press’s imprint, and a higher royalty share than traditional contracts.</p><p>Why the vanity-press confusion exists, and why it’s no longer accurate to the category as it stands in 2026.</p><p>The IBPA Hybrid Publisher Pledge—the trade-association standard the legitimate hybrid presses meet (and the vanity operations don’t).</p><p>Three case studies of serious hybrid presses: S<em>he Writes Press</em> (founded by Brooke Warner, 2012; 500+ titles; Industry Innovator Award from the Book Industry Study Group in 2017; Warner is chair of the IBPA) <em>Greenleaf Book Group</em> (Austin; operating since 2003; 1,500+ titles; multiple New York Times bestsellers) <em>Lucid Books</em> (Texas Christian hybrid; 5,000 authors in 20 years of operation)</p><p>Three structural reasons the hybrid category is growing while the Big Five contracts: </p><p>* The agent and Big Five pipeline is capped (≈1,000 active US agents, 3-5 new clients each per year) </p><p>* Platform requirements at traditional imprints have become unworkable for serious working writers </p><p>* The math of a hybrid contract is often better for the author: The traditional advance reality in 2026: $5K-$25K for non-celebrity nonfiction, declining year over year, with the author doing the marketing anyway, on a 10-15% royalty, with the publisher owning the ISBN.</p><p>Why this matters for <em>The Difficulty</em>‘s actual listeners — coaches, therapists, consultants, pastors, mission-driven leaders, retired executives in second and third acts, working professionals in midlife transition.</p><p><strong>Five questions to ask any hybrid press before you give them a dollar:</strong></p><p>One — Are they IBPA pledged? If not, why not? Two — What is the author royalty split, in a specific number, with accounting schedule? Three — What editorial work is actually included in the price — developmental, line, copy, proofreading; at what stage; how many rounds? Four — Where does your book actually go after publication? Real distribution (Ingram, Amazon, Bookshop.org, library channels like Baker & Taylor and OverDrive) or just a SKU on a website? Five — What is the editorial selection rate? A serious hybrid press turns books down.</p><p><strong>About Crossroads Publishing Group:</strong></p><p>Crossroads is a hybrid press for practitioner authors—coaches, therapists, consultants, mission-driven leaders, and working professionals with a serious book and a body of insight. Three main category lanes on the site. 80% net royalties to the author. IBPA-pledged criteria built into the model.</p><p>Inquiry door: <strong>crossroadspublishing.group</strong></p><p><strong>Call to action:</strong></p><p>If you’re a practitioner author with a serious book and the hybrid path sounds like it could be yours, visit crossroadspublishing.group to start the conversation. Feedback on the show is welcome — what episodes are speaking to you, what you’d like to hear more or less of.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to The Descent at <a href="https://chadprevost.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4">chadprevost.substack.com/subscribe</a>