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#271 |
Groupie
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Karma: 339490
Join Date: May 2010
Device: nook, BlackBerry
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Another piece of common sense I don't agree with. Every piece of software on my computer costs me $0. It's extremely high quality and does everything I want. I used to pay through the nose for expensive Microsoft stuff that barely worked, was loaded with restrictions, and required me to pay even more money for regular upgrades I didn't want to stay supported and get security patches I shouldn't need. Go figure.
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#272 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 8059866
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Device: Kobo H2O / Aura HD / Glo / iPad3
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It's about getting paid for the value and services that you add and not about maintaining what you were previously paid. If you are adding value (like the author) you have nothing to fear. If you are taking a larger percentage then the value you're adding then you have something to fear. That's all this is about. It's about the publishers no longer being in the driver seat cutting up the pie and telling everyone else how little they deserve. Amazon and Apple didn't get in a price war with music and drive it down to the point that nobody could make music or that I can't find music to listen to. They wouldn't do this with ebooks either. It's just fear mongering. For the record I don't believe that Amazon deserves 30% for the value they're adding either. Removing the requirement form them to compete in the marketplace for that percentage is one of the worst things about the publisher price fixing. |
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#273 | |
Maria Schneider
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Karma: 26439330
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Near Austin, Texas
Device: 3g Kindle Keyboard
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For the record, other vendors allowing direct upload of books are offering authors LESS percentage and they rarely have the same number of eyeballs looking. Not complaining, but I did find it interesting. Only Apple offers 70 percent and Smashwords offers a bit more for direct sales (it can be 70 percent depending on credit card fees, affiliate payments and whatnot.) I think the battle will continue and the retailers aren't always going to even want to offer 70 percent for their service. It is as it ever was--a mad competitive dash! |
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#274 | |
eReader
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Karma: 4968470
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: Note 5; PW3; Nook HD+; ChuWi Hi12; iPad
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I agree that it's about getting paid for services and value. The problem is that there is a fundamental disagreement about both the value (and necessity) of the services publisher's provide, and the costs incurred by the publishers to provide those services. The lower a value one places on certain services, the less legitimate one is likely to consider costs arising from those services. We've already seen a significant disagreement on the value of editing, and I'm sure that's not the only such area of disagreement. Personally, I think the value of the services added by a publisher are enough to put the cost of an ebook easily into the mass-market paperback range of $6-8 at retail - and that $5-7 is a reasonable premium to pay for access to the story before it's out in mass-market paperback. |
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#275 |
Ebook Reader
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Karma: 3205128
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Texas
Device: Kindle 3, HTC Evo, HTC View
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Interesting comment on the publishers from Teleread:
http://www.teleread.com/paul-biba/my...-stories-2010/ |
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#276 | |
New York Editor
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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But consider where the open source apps come from. Most of them are created by people working on them in their spare time, and doing other things for a living. Their motivation is some combination of geek cred and scratching an itch because it's a tool they'll use too. But how do you apply that model to books? A lot of folks write on the side and have a day job, including most published authors. Some folks just like to write and have what they wrote available for others to read, and don't especially care about getting paid for it. Others folks do, and some people are actually trying to make a living writing. How do you advise people trying to make actual money writing to proceed? ______ Dennis |
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#277 | |
Maria Schneider
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Karma: 26439330
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Near Austin, Texas
Device: 3g Kindle Keyboard
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#278 | |||||
New York Editor
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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Er, no. I read what I like, and for the most part, I'm willing to pay for it. Quote:
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The perception of "publishers being in the driver seat cutting up the pie and telling everyone else how little they deserve" is an unfortunately naive view of the process. That's not really how it works. Quote:
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But it didn't remove the requirement to compete in the market, as price is not the only element on which purchase decisions are made. ______ Dennis |
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#279 | |
New York Editor
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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There are a few folks making a living in open source software because they do it as a day job. They work for places like Red Hat, which makes its money supporting commercial Linux installations, IBM, which uses a lot of open source code and pays some of their own people to help maintain and enhance it, or the Mozilla Foundation, most of whose revenue derives from search functionality incorporated into things like Firefox. The vast majority of open source developers write open source code on the side and have day jobs. ______ Dennis |
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#280 |
Ticats win 4th straight
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Raleigh, NC
Device: Paperwhite, Kindles 10 & 4 and jetBook Lite
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Not so fast, Dennis. I think that it was Napster that changed the music industry, not Apple. For that reason I think that books and music can be directly compared.
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#281 |
Wizard
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Device: Kobo H2O / Aura HD / Glo / iPad3
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The big six publishing houses are not providing an irreplaceable service. If they were they would have nothing to fear and they wouldn't have to price fix. If they shutdown tomorrow they aren't going to off all their authors. The authors would find other companies to provide the same services and get their product to the market. Some of them are doing it already. There is nothing to fear as a reader.
I also don't believe that the big six publishing houses are stripped to the bone and at the edge of collapse with the only choice of the "agency pricing" to stay in business. They were running the risk of taking less income from a much more efficient distribution system. Amazon is now big enough to tell them that their piece of the pie has to be smaller and they didn't like it. I personally think that Amazon deserves around 5-10% of the sale for the services they are providing. Running a website, downloading a 1MB file and running a credit card transaction is not that much value. They sell enough volume that they don't require a guaranteed 30% to make a substantial profit. It's not for me to decide though and it's not for the publishers to decide. They should have to compete in the market place for what the correct price is. |
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#282 |
Wizard
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Device: PRS505, 600, 350, 650, Nexus 7, Note III, iPad 4 etc
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In retail of any form, I personally wouldn't even get out of bed for 5-10% margin as a general rate even with economies of scale... if your margins aren't enough then you still won't be able to afford proper staffing, equipment, premises etc. So then you go back to small isn't beautiful approach. Businesses, of course, can never win... evil people wanting to make a living, nasty professionals wanting to design a website & sales service that can deal with all of their customers (most of the time)... everything should be run for the joy of it by happy amateurs living off the land the rest of their ample time....
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() [QUOTE=Barcey;1277722 I personally think that Amazon deserves around 5-10% of the sale for the services they are providing. Running a website, downloading a 1MB file and running a credit card transaction is not that much value.[/QUOTE] |
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#283 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 8059866
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Device: Kobo H2O / Aura HD / Glo / iPad3
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btw, I don't challenge the 30% on the self published authors because there is a lot more overhead to manage that business. |
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#284 |
Wizard
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Device: PRS505, 600, 350, 650, Nexus 7, Note III, iPad 4 etc
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If they didn't sell them and shut up shop then Patterson book sales drop to 50 then ask him if he thinks they're worth the percentage... and yes I'm exaggerating the numbers but that's the only thing that seems to work round here... and operations like Amazon don't exactly operate on 3 generation old tech in a back bedroom... I have an idea, why don't all those who are so passionate in their hatred of all business models and large retailers (such as Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Walmart, whatever...) set up their own versions of the businesses run on their idyllic terms and see how well they manage?
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#285 |
Kindlephilia
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Snowpacolypse 2010
Device: Too many to count
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I've dropped a number of authors because of the Agency 5 agreement. A few have remained because their books are available as library ebooks or the books are reasonably priced. I've actually discovered new authors by looking at non-Agency 5 publishers. Even then if the books are priced too high, purely subjective but that's my reality, I won't buy.
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