Shakespeare Publishing House announced that manuscript submissions increased by 40% in 2025 compared with the previous year, representing one of the company’s largest annual gains on record. Growth began early in the year and continued steadily through each reporting period.
Internal figures indicate the increase included aspiring authors, educators, memoir writers, industry specialists, and established professionals looking beyond conventional publishing models.
The increase mirrors broader developments within the publishing sector as more authors pursue hybrid and independent publishing opportunities. Many contributors have cited slow publisher response times, limited submission access, and uncertainty surrounding editorial evaluation.
A senior manager at Shakespeare Publishing House said: “Several authors submitting manuscripts this year expressed a preference for structured, human-led editorial processes rather than automated editing tools, noting concerns about tone preservation and communication clarity.”
Although fiction generated the highest number of submissions, the company also experienced significant increases across memoirs, autobiographies, children’s books, business titles, motivational works, poetry, short fiction, and lifestyle publications.
Some submissions also came from writers who initially chose self-publishing before deciding they wanted professional support with formatting, production, and distribution.
To support the increase in activity, Shakespeare Publishing House expanded teams responsible for manuscript assessment, editing, interior design, author communications, and distribution services.
Company representatives said the staffing increases were introduced to preserve response times while maintaining editorial quality throughout production.
The company believes the latest figures demonstrate that many authors continue to value publishing independence while recognizing the benefits of professional editorial and publishing support.
According to Shakespeare Publishing House, this balance between creative freedom and publishing guidance emerged repeatedly among this year’s authors.
Based on current performance, the publisher expects submission growth to continue into 2026 and plans additional investment in editorial operations, workflow improvements, and submission tracking technology.
The company said the results reflect continuing shifts across today’s publishing landscape as authors explore new ways to publish their work.
