Submit your book
Share your manuscript or published book details so the story can be reviewed through an adaptation lens.
The process is structured to help you understand your story's screen potential, then build the right materials for the next professional step.
Share your manuscript or published book details so the story can be reviewed through an adaptation lens.
Get a screen-focused assessment of synopsis, genre, structure, viability, and development direction.
Move into teaser, treatment, or screenplay assets that communicate the story with more industry clarity.
Use stronger materials to begin more serious conversations about your book's screen potential.
Not every strong book is immediately ready for adaptation. Some stories are naturally cinematic, while others may need stronger structure, clearer market positioning, or additional development materials before they can be presented seriously.
Answer a few strategic questions to get a realistic view of your book's adaptation readiness.
Each stage gives the author a clearer view of the project, the work being done, the material received, and the logical next move.
Your manuscript or published book, genre, format, project status, and adaptation goals.
Establish the starting point for an adaptation-focused review and identify the right path forward.
A clearer sense of where your project fits in the development sequence.
Move into evaluation or begin with an introductory service if you need more orientation.
The story material and any helpful context about audience, genre, and intended direction.
Review premise, characters, structure, genre strength, and adaptation viability through a screen-development lens.
A professional screen-focused assessment that clarifies strengths, considerations, and development direction.
Decide whether the project is ready for teaser, treatment, or screenplay development.
Review findings, book materials, and approval on the intended development direction.
Shape the project into stronger materials such as a teaser, treatment, or screenplay package.
More screen-oriented assets that communicate concept, structure, tone, and story potential with greater clarity.
Use the materials to refine the project or move toward a more advanced development package.
Your goals for presentation, feedback, or future conversations about screen potential.
Help position the story in a clearer screen-oriented framework without promising representation or production outcomes.
A stronger presentation foundation for more serious adaptation conversations.
Continue refining materials, book a consultation, or progress into the next service level when ready.
Different authors enter at different stages, but the path usually progresses from evaluation to development materials.
An entry point for authors who want a clearer starting path.
Professional adaptation-focused analysis.
Review plus a stronger visual presentation asset.
A screen-focused treatment that maps the story for adaptation.
A full screenplay adaptation based on developed materials.
Timelines vary by project scope and material readiness, but these ranges give authors a practical planning baseline.
Adaptation is easier to pursue when the process is clear. A professional review helps authors make better decisions, stronger materials create stronger positioning, and clarity helps authors move forward with confidence.
Books often adapt more naturally when the story can be understood quickly, visualized clearly, and framed for a defined audience.
A clear premise helps decision-makers understand the story without needing a long explanation.
Memorable images, action, atmosphere, and turning points help the story translate from narration to screen.
Screen stories usually need visible pressure, conflict, goals, and consequences that audiences can track.
Adaptation interest often begins with characters who can carry dramatic scenes and emotional investment.
Thriller, romance, horror, mystery, faith-based, YA, and other clear categories can help a project find its audience.
A practical production scale can make the story easier to evaluate, especially at earlier development stages.
A strong book still needs positioning before it can be understood as a screen project. Adaptation materials help translate the story into a screen-friendly format, while audience traction and marketing can strengthen the project's credibility.
If your story has potential, the next step is understanding how to evaluate, develop, and present it with more clarity.