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#106 | |
Wizard
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![]() And if you aren't getting money for it then it is an "expense" as you're cannibalising your own possible sales... every book you give away is a definite sale not made... |
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#107 |
Wizard
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Well the sweet spot is probably under $5 including tax. Like Starbucks, get change from a five.
Who would have thought that people would line up to get a cup of mediocre tea or coffee for $4.50 served in a paper cup. Helen |
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#108 | |
Cynical Old Curmudgeon
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#109 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Pointing at the top .5% of any field is disingenuous. The issue for authors isn't, "could I be the next Konrath/Hocking/Locke;" it's "ten years from now, would I have made more money sorting this out on my own, or signing some of my rights away for business & editorial assistance?" There's not going to be any one right answer--but the Agency publishers are showing themselves less concerned with the welfare of their authors than supporting their choice of business model, regardless of whether that's better for authors or the public. Quote:
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#110 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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I'm not talking about kitschy home decorations. People whose career of choice is creative work have always had a struggle to get paid for it. Quote:
None of us got to love reading by paying full-price for new books. Almost none of us discovered our favorite authors by paying full-price for one of their books, new. The idea that every reader is, or should be, a full-price buyer, is a new and ridiculous one. It's like assuming everyone would buy a new car if you banned carpooling and giving rides to friends. I don't know how it plays out for everyone. I know that: 1) My book budget (ebook budget; I don't read print) is larger this year than it has been in my entire life, and 2) I don't buy fiction that costs more than $6, or has DRM. Authors who bring their price down to $5 have a chance at getting my dollars; authors who sell at $14, don't. I don't care how many layers of overhead there are between the author and the sale; I don't buy books to support publishing houses--I buy to support *authors*, and if publishing houses would like a bit of that money, they need to fit into my buying limitations. (Which, agreed, are far from universal. Shrug. I am not invested in convincing anyone that the Agency model is doomed--I have access to enough excellent reading material to last the rest of my life, whether the Agency publishers triple their output or fold tomorrow. If, however, the Agency publishers would like my *children's* ebook dollars in a few years, they'd better figure out how to convince me they're worth looking at.) |
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#111 |
Literacy = Understanding
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I used to buy 4-6 and sometimes more books every month that were published by the Agency 6 -- until agency pricing. In the past 6 months I have bought exactly 0 of their books. I am now buying indie books via Smashwords at significantly lower price points.
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#112 |
Wizard
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Elfwreck - You buy books to support authors??? I buy books to read them...
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#113 | |
Chasing Butterflies
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I had no idea that all the Freebies in the Deals forum represent books that I would have otherwise paid full price for if only the author hadn't given the book away. ![]() I got my Mom a freebie two months ago and she just reported back that she loves that new author. Now I'm looking at her next book in the series, wondering if I want to pre-order it for Mom's Christmas present. I don't understand how ANYONE can argue in good faith that a freebie is a lost sale. Seriously? EVERY free book in your Calibre library is a book you would otherwise have bought at full price if only the author hadn't been sucker enough to offer a freebie for a week? Really?? ![]() Last edited by anamardoll; 08-25-2011 at 09:40 AM. |
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#114 | |
Chasing Butterflies
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I'm pretty sure that not ALL authors hoping to support themselves by writing full time live in constant fear. This doesn't pass the exaggeration sniff test. ![]() Heck, *I'm* hoping that very thing, but I'm not fearful about it. It's a nice hopey dream to send me to sleep at night. ![]() Anyway. Authors who "hope" to support themselves by writing full-time aren't going to get anywhere fast. Authors who want to support themselves full time aggressively follow at least two major rules: 1. Publish a large body of work so that an addition of ONE fan means TEN sales. 2. Expand your fan base with good editing, slick covers, responsiveness to complaints/contacts, and with as many freebies-deals-promotions as you can bear in the early expansion days. If someone wants to be a successful indie author and they're pricing their books at $10 a pop, well, they should "live in fear", because that's not going to fly. Last edited by anamardoll; 08-25-2011 at 09:41 AM. |
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#115 | ||
Loves Ellipsis...
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There are some excellent points here.
Re: $0.99 books: There are self-published .99 books. I don't keep track of them but I submit the most recent one I've purchased & read: Unlocked by Courtney Milan. From Amazon Quote:
Re: Being an ideal reader - it seems that a lot of the disagreements here are based on who is an ideal reader either for the publisher or the author. There was a great blog post on this subject at Dear Author: Quote:
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#116 |
Wizard
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JA Konrath did an experiment last year in which he temporarily lowered the price of his books from $2.99 to $0.99 to see if he would make up in greater volume what he lost in the lowered price. He found that he made less money pricing his book at 0.99. than he did when he priced it at $2.99.
LINK The belief that you ALWAYS make up in greater volume what you lose in price when you price a book lower is a popular myth round these parts. Reality says different. You may disagree with the way publishers price ebooks (heck, I disagree- many times). But they are actually looking at data, not cherry picked anecdotes and hopeful suppositions. My hope is that they will get better and more flexible over time at pricing. Ofcourse theyre is no way they will ever plese everyone. But they can do better. |
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#117 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I spend money occasionally because I want to support the future of literature and creative writing. I sometimes choose to read books that aren't available for free because I want more authors writing books, or because I want to show appreciation for *that* author's work. I don't need to buy any more books. Ever. Between promotional freebies, discount coupons at Smashwords, huge-and-growing fanfiction archives, online libraries & teaching sites, literature collections like the one here at MR and Gutenberg and Archive.org, and thousands of well-written fascinating news-relevant blogs, purchasing reading content is optional. I still have ~1.5 gb of gaming books I bought during the Help Haiti charity drive that I haven't looked at. With an effectively infinite (i.e. "more than my lifetime could encompass") selection of reading material, I can afford to make buying choices based on ideology, not just to get access. I don't *need* access to any particular book, any particular author. When I buy, it's partially in thanks to the literary tradition that let me grow up reading three-for-a-dollar books from yard sales. I can't pay those authors back; I *can* do something towards making writing a viable job. But I've no interest in making "writing for an Agency publisher in collusion with other publishers to keep book prices high" a viable job. |
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#118 | ||
Loves Ellipsis...
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Add that to the fact that I have tons of other entertainment options, publishers need to realize that they need a better pricing strategy. Dear Author had a great blog series about this very sensitive subject: Quote:
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#119 | |||
Interested Bystander
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a) Lowering the price, and selling many more copies, pushed the book up the sales lists, putting it in front of more eyes. That will slowly decay as sales drop at the higher price. What level of sales did he see over the 15 day period before putting the book on sale? Or for a month after? Looking at an earlier blog post, he said: Quote:
And in the post you link to: Quote:
b) Did he see an increase in sales of his other books, as people liked the first one? That is (IMO) the main benefit of offering a book a low price or free, to entice new readers. |
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#120 |
Wizard
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MrsJoseph, Elfwreck etc... I guess we just totally disagree about just about everything... why would I want to download TV series from iTunes or movies... I'm watching less and less TV at the moment and I have access to a large number of channels by satellite, same thing for movies but having so much available just shows up the poor quality and lack of thought in so much broadcast and movie material at the moment... I'm actually watching far more factual material these days...
As far as relating it to books, well I'm simply reading more again... and I'm not a millionaire either but my criteria for buying a book have always been amazingly simple, "Does that book seem like I might enjoy it?" Answer yes then buy it, answer no then don't... short of cash then don't look... if you want to bring your "ideology" into then fine but don't expect everyone else to follow especially... Don't put your interpretation on what other people say, especially when looked at through your ideological glasses... I didn't say that every book should be a purchased one, I said that a free book is a lost sale... it is... it may lead to other sales in the future or it may not but at the instant that a book is acquired for free then it isn't being purchased... simple English... sale = exchange of value (usually money) for item being sold, no exchange then no sale... |
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