Madican wrote:
You don't get a published book for winning NaNo. Indeed you shouldn't even try for this. NaNo is about hammering out 50,000 words without allowing your inner editor to get his grubby mitts on it, meaning it is not even close to what the final form should be, if you so choose to finish it.
Which means that anything made with what's submitted is going to be subpar. Take the 50,000 or more, tighten/finish them up, and have something to be proud of. If all you want is a vanity book, there's plenty of those services around.
Started doing NaNo in 05 and this'll be my seventh year.
Basically this. The main prize that they always emphasize is that this is just something for fun and accomplishment, as in "I finally say down and actually wrote 50,000 words" (hence why I put the proof prize in spoilers). Ultimately, whatever gets you to sit down and do this is your motivation (mine is that I want this story I've been thinking up since forever to finally be written down so I can share it), and getting a book published for free really isn't a great reason (mostly because the proof itself only costs like $10 or so, and it's not like self-publishing online is a thriving business (though e-books have made it easier for self-published authors)).
Also, just because you reach those 50,000 words, doesn't mean you want a book copy of the results (I didn't redeem my free proof last year because I barely got to edit my story and didn't feel like having a subpar book). You might be able to come up with something of the general quality of Twilight in your first go (hopefully not too terribly worse than that), but you can ultimately edit it until it's something great. So don't expect to have a national bestseller as of December 1st (Although... people buy crappy novels all the time), it's definitely going to take some work to make your stories shine when you're ramming through it as fast as you can for word count.
And last year was my first year and I'm hoping to plan this out better. I got excel spreadsheets and everything. I'm going old school with Word... mostly because I don't feel like getting to know another program.