7 Feb 2023, 20:29

@lizardillo short answer: hybrid publishers are often exploitative. While there are some legit hybrid publishers, most are vanity publishers. Hybrid publishing is considered independent publishing. They are not a traditional publisher and don't function like one, as they charge the author an up-front fee to publish the book. As far as you're concerned, this would be a self-publishing job.

Hybrid publishing is expensive and, most of the time, not worth the cost. Often, the author will have to cover the illustration costs, whether from the hybrid's stable of illustrators or one they find and hire themselves.

ALLi's Watchdog Desk is a very helpful resource. They rate various self-publishing services from Excellent all the way down to Watchdog Advisory. You can find this free resource here.

I looked up Olympia Publishers and they have a Watchdog Advisory rating, which means: "Services that fail to align with ALLi's Code of Standards, are the subject of consistent complaints and, in some cases, have been subject to legal action."

Your red flag vibes are spot on. Personally, I would stay away from them and would not recommend them to anyone I work with. ALLi's self-publishing services ratings might be something to share with the author.