POLICIES:

Dinosaur House’s Kid’s Book Content Philosophy:

Inspotainment Over Education

Parents and kids have COMPLETELY different agendas when it comes to content. Parents want to buy books that will “teach their kids a moral lesson.” (And there’s nothing wrong with that). Kids want to replace those boring-as-heck books as soon as possible with books that are fun to read. We do make books that teach stuff, but we are not primarily a children’s educational media company.

We care first about being a quality children’s entertainment company that happens to espouse great values and get kids thinking creatively about their future. Why is this our number #1 content goal? And why should that make you want to work with us? Because kids don’t choose to reread books that don’t make them laugh. We want to make content that affects the trajectory of kids’ lives and deepens the relationship they have with their parents. But we won’t sacrifice a kid’s number one goal (to be entertained) in order to do that.

Education has nothing on Inspiration. I feel like we poo-poo-ed education a little bit.  We love teaching things.  We want our books to teach things. But we encourage our authors to focus more on inspiration and entertainment over education. Teach a kid about investing money and they know about investing money.  Inspire a kid to invest money and they will teach themself everything they need to know to be a great investor. Make the content extremely entertaining and they will re-inspire themself over and over again.

Inspiration beats education.

Our Main Audience: seven-year-olds.

Our main audience are kids right around seven years old (ages four-ten is our true target demographic but 7-year-olds make a great avatar because kids as young as four love books for 7-year-olds and kids as old as ten still do too). Everything we create is with the goal of making the book that the KIDS of your audience or customer base will be addicted to. 

We want it to be so amazing to them that they ask to read your book constantly. So we thoroughly put ourselves in the mind of the 7-year-old, and craft the content in such a way that it uses the stuff they are into, steering clear of turning them off or boring them in an effort to please some other interest.

Potty humor

We put potty humor in our books regularly.  Because of everything we said about our focus being on what kids actually find entertaining.  We can all wish 7-year-olds didn’t think the word “booty” was funny but the reality is that it is.  And if part of delivering transformational ideas and connection moments means incepting it between poopy diaper jokes, or getting a parent to say the word “booty” we love to cause laughs about silly words or stinkiness.  That being said, try to be careful not to cross the line into what we think is crass.  We’re careful to monitor trends in the kids media landscape to help us know where the line is.

Parental Empathy

We are believers in the idea that parents should parent.  Our books are aids in a parent’s journey of parenting their young child.  So there are things we’re willing to talk about and things we’re not in an effort to have empathy for parents.

Anti-discrimination 

We will not produce content that makes fun of any marginalized groups. We will not make content that puts anyone down on the basis of race, religion, gender, or sexual orientation.

Political ideology

We encourage our customers to not use kid’s books as a platform for promoting any politically extreme views. We reserve the right to not produce, publish, or promote anything we think is too extreme.

Sex, sexuality, gender, dating, romantic relationship nuances

Sex, gender, sexual orientation, and gender identity are very divisive but important topics today.  As kids are growing up they need the loving support of their parents to navigate who they are and who they are becoming.  While we desperately want to create books that foster the love and connection of parents and their kids, Dinosaur House books run a very wide audience range and because we believe that the jury is still out on when is the appropriate age to talk about sexual orientation and gender identity, and it is such a delicate subject to be handled with care, we do not produce elementary age books that cover topics of sexual orientation, sex and gender, gender identity or expression. Because of the delicacy of the topic and our wide audience age range, and our belief that parents should not be surprised by what they read to their kids, we do not include language or imagery designed to spark the conversation even though we believe that it is a meaningful and important one. We support the sparking of that conversation by more qualified people than us, like parents, community leaders, counselors and teachers, close family, and mentors.

The audience of our kids books are predominantly 7-year-olds.  The parents of these kids are, at this stage, not likely to be trying to have conversations around sexuality and romance.  We want to be sensitive to that and not create stories that revolve around romantic relationships or could potentially trigger a conversation about sex that some parents are surely waiting to have until later than 7.  We also want to keep the storylines in the world of the 7-year-old.  With few exceptions, they don’t want to picture romance, relationships, and certainly not anything broaching sex and sexuality.  We do not believe in making romance, relationships, sex, and sexuality a focal point of kindergarten-3rd grade books.

Religion

We believe in educating kids about new cultures and what different religious people’s lives are like.  So we are happy to produce books that promote ideas of love and cooperation across all divides.  One particular rule we have regarding religion is that we won’t produce a book whose agenda directly violates the beliefs of those working on the book or promote a book to audiences who we know would be offended by its content.  The founder of Dinosaur House is himself a devout Christian and much of our audience consists of christian schools. If this situation arises we will work with you to navigate the situation toward a win-win for both your goals and Dinosaur House’s audience.

Summary

Parents want books that will help their kids learn valuable lessons. Kids want books that will entertain them. At Dinosaur House, we write predominantly for pre-K through 3rd grade. That’s who picture books are targeted at.  Before that age, kids read board books and after that, they read middle grade (a totally different genre). Our focus is the 7-year-old’s reading experience on every page.  Are we giving them what they want and not trying to feed them things they don’t want or aren’t ready for. We have to marry that with the agenda of the parent. In conclusion:

  • We want to take ideas worth inspiring kids towards.
  • Put those thoroughly in the world of a kid’s experience.
  • Make every moment reaction-worthy.

Themes we won’t cover:

  • Sex, sexuality, romance.
  • Evangelistically religious or anti-religious books that we or our core audience would consider to be offensive.
  • Fringe or Radical politics.

Permissions for public readings of Dinosaur House Kids’ Books 

Dinosaur House believes in the power of online and in person read-alouds to motivate children toward literacy and instill values.  As such we offer educators, storytellers, librarians, and members of the literacy community permission to read Dinosaur House books publicly under the following conditions:

  • Let us know that you are reading one of our books by contacting us.
  • If asked to take down a video reading on of our books, comply. We reserve the right to rescind permission at any time for any reason.
  • Let viewers know how they can purchase their own copy of the book in the video and/or description.

These rules apply as of 2020 and until further notice.

Post-Approval Change Requests

At both Stone Crest and Dinosaur House, we take pride in ensuring your manuscript is edited to the industry standard of 99% error-free. It’s important to note that no publisher, not even the world’s best, can guarantee a 100% error-free book. Even best-selling authors like J.K. Rowling don’t have error-free publications, and we follow this same industry standard.

Once your manuscript has gone through our rigorous editing process and you’ve approved the final edits, it enters the compilation phase. At this point, any additional changes requested are considered “post-approval change requests” and will be subject to additional fees, which may be up to 30% of the project cost. This is because recompiling a book after approval is a complex process, comparable to repainting a finished artwork rather than making simple text changes in a document.

While we are happy to review and assess any requested post-approval changes, please be aware that unless there is an obvious formatting mistake, that goes against what you approved, and cannot be considered the unavoidable effect caused by the variance built into print-on-demand printing, corrections after the book has launched are not something we accommodate without the fee referenced above.

If you would like to submit a list of changes, we will evaluate it and provide you with a quote for implementing them in a second edition. Our goal is to stick to this policy to avoid overextending beyond the agreed-upon project scope, while ensuring that your manuscript meets the highest professional standards




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