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Launch the career.
PublisherMate™ is the publishing workspace for authors who are serious about finishing.
No credit card required. Cancel anytime. Your words stay yours.
From blank page to published author.
Idea
Capture your spark
Outline
Structure your story
Draft
Write every day
Edit
Polish to perfection
Launch
Plan your release
Publish
Share your work
Idea
Capture your spark
Outline
Structure your story
Draft
Write every day
Edit
Polish to perfection
Launch
Plan your release
Publish
Share your work
Sound familiar?
Scattered notes across 5 apps
Your ideas live in Notion, Google Docs, Notes, Dropbox, and your phone. Nothing is connected.
Lost plot threads and character details
Your character had blue eyes in chapter three and brown eyes in chapter twelve. No one caught it.
Missed launch deadlines
Launch day came and went without a plan. No ARC readers, no email list, no momentum.
Disconnected tools that don't talk
Your editor, planner, cover tool, and analytics are all separate. Switching costs you hours.
There's a better way.
Success Stories
Authors who stopped stalling
Marcus Chen
The Self-Publisher
Debut thriller launched in 90 days, solo
Read the story →One workspace. Your entire publishing career.
Every tool a serious author needs — beautifully connected.
Manuscript Editor
Write without friction. Finish what you start.
A distraction-free editor built for long-form writing — focus mode, autosave, word count, and chapter navigation all in one place. Your manuscript, exactly as you imagined it.
See it in action →The Letter
The letter arrived on a Tuesday, which Elsa Vogt would later consider significant — Tuesdays had always been the day her husband had died, the day the telegram came, the day the world cracked at its seams and let in the cold. This letter bore no official seal, no army insignia, only a wax blot the color of dried blood pressed with a device she did not recognize: a compass rose with one arm broken. She stood in the doorway of her cramped Leopoldstadt apartment for a full minute before she stepped inside.
Inside, she set the letter on the table beside a cold cup of coffee and a draft transcript of the Schenker Archive's inventory — work she had taken home against regulations, because there was never enough daylight and the gas lamps at the archive left her eyes burning. She had been a senior archivist at the Imperial and Royal Archive before the war. Now she was a junior cataloguer on a conditional appointment, allowed in the building on the sufferance of Dr. Brenner, who had made clear that her reinstatement was provisional and contingent on her continued discretion. She sat. She opened the letter.
The handwriting was educated — broad, confident strokes, the German of someone schooled before the war, before the empire fell and the new governments began rewriting even the alphabet. There were only three lines: You catalogued the Hartmann collection in the spring of 1913. One item is missing. Come to the Café Central at six o'clock on Thursday if you wish to understand what that means for your continued employment. It was unsigned.
Elsa read it twice, then a third time. She folded it carefully along its original creases and tucked it beneath the false bottom of the writing box her mother had left her — the one place in the apartment she was certain had never been searched. Her coffee had gone cold an hour ago. She drank it anyway, standing at the window, watching a man in a grey overcoat pause at the corner below and then, after a moment too long, walk on.
Story Bible
Never lose a character detail again.
Keep every character, location, plot thread, and piece of research in one structured workspace. Elena Vasquez stays consistent from Chapter 1 to Chapter 40.
See it in action →Elena Vasquez
ProtagonistLead character · Historical Fiction
Core Motivation
To restore her reputation as an archivist and uncover why her husband's wartime death was covered up by the imperial administration.
Traits
Arc
From provisional employee terrified of losing her job → to someone who risks everything to expose the truth.
Writing Analytics
See your progress. Build the habit.
Track daily word counts, maintain your streak, and watch your novel grow week by week. Real-time dashboards that turn writing into a practice you can measure.
See it in action →Writing Analytics
47,832
Total Words
7 days
Current Streak
6,830
This Week
Daily Words — Last 7 Days
Novel Goal Progress
60%Built for every kind of author.
Novelists
Memoir Authors
Self-Publishers
Small Presses
Ghostwriters
Thought Leaders
We're on your side.
Own Your Content
Your words, your rights, always.
Export Anytime
No lock-in, ever.
Pen Name Friendly
Write under any name.
Built for Long-Form
Not repurposed blog software.
Secure Cloud Storage
Encrypted, backed up, yours.
Your book deserves a real workspace.
Join authors who stopped juggling tools and started finishing books.
Start Writing Free →Starter plan from $29/month. No commitment.