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#61 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I think that the word you are looking for is didn't remember him, rather than didn't hear of him. I'm sure the top romance authors gets mentioned in thread here as well. It doesn't mean I pay much attention to them. There are a couple of indies that have been recommended on this board that I have tried, liked and bought their books. He just isn't one of them. Well, perhaps you wouldn't expect an indie to compare well with one in a million (though a million probably isn't correct. How many authors publish books with traditional publishers in a year. It's got to be far less than 100,000.) But I would have expected the top indie to be in the top 100 of Kindle sales. That's leaving aside all the paper book, audiobook, etc sales, just the ebook sales. If indies aren't in the top 100 in the Kindle store, that says something to me. The comparison to the top traditional publisher seller was simply to show how big of a difference there still is between traditional publishers and indies. Sometimes the hype doesn't quite match the reality. |
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#62 |
Bookaholic
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It is nice that there are options and they can only likely help both trad and self pubbed authors in the long run.
I think we'll see more hybrid deals like Bella Andre who kept here e-rights and got a seven figure deal for English language print only on the first eight books in her popular Romance series (with more lucrative print only deals after that was a success) which were already making her big money self pubbed as ebooks, or Howey who got a print only deal from S&S for Wool. It'll likely only happen for the cream of the crop of self pubs, but I think we'll see it happen more. |
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#63 | |
Wizard
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41. A Shade of Vampire by Bella Forrest 62. Stepbrother Dearest by Penelope Ward 73. The Atlantis Gene: A Thriller by A.G. Riddle 86. The Ex Games by J. S. Cooper 96. Sweet Addiction by J. Daniels 97. The Ex Games 2 by J. S. Cooper With the exception of The Atlantis Gene, the paperback editions list Createspace as the publisher - that's how I know they're indies (I heard A.G. Riddle interviewed on Rocking Self Publishing, which is how I know he's an indie) There were other books on the list that are probably indies, but I couldn't be bothered to take the time to check. Another two didn't have a publisher listed for the Kindle edition (65. Sleep Tight by Rachel Abbott, and 68. The Billionaire's Obsession by J.S. Scott), so are probably self-published. They didn't list Createspace as the publisher for the print versions, though. |
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#64 | |
Wizard
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The purpose usually served in dividing Science Fiction or any other Genre (or even the whole market) between Indie and Traditionally published books is to claim that one is better than the other. I don't subscribe to this view. I just want to read a good book. Unfortunately at the moment the distinction is hard to avoid, as the titles with ridiculously high prices scream at me "I'm traditionally published. I'm three times the price, but three times better quality. Buy me. I'm worth it!" Well, ah, no, you're not. In so far as I can discern that traditional publishers have any long term strategy, this is it. Don't compete with Indie's. After all, does Rolls Royce compete with Ford? Differentiate their books on quality and charge a higher price. IMHO this is doomed to failure, since it is based on a myth. The myth that because a book is traditionally published it must be of better quality than a comparable Indie published book. If this is the best they can do the long term outlook for traditional publishers seems bleak indeed. They need a realistic vision for the future and they need it yesterday. Time is running out. |
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#65 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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The indie sf fan base _is_ a subset of the overall sf fan base and is by definition smaller. The idea that indies are the wave of the future and the tradition publishers, who obviously provide no value and simply suck money from the hard working authors, are going the way of the dinosaur does seem to be the narrative being pushed by the indie fan base. I question the accuracy of that narrative. |
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#66 | |
Guru
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Besides, the agent doesn't have a better position in the negotiations. If there is no alternative, what angle does he have to negotiate a better contract? These bad contracts are real, with agents involved. I am talking about first book contracts mainly here. If your first book was a hit (and you are allowed to renegotiate) then of course you have a stronger position to get better terms. Oh, standard contracts differ by country too. For example, from what I hear, contracts in germany are much better than in the usa (and agents are still not that common here). Not great, but better and the most atrocious terms aren't in them. |
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#67 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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#68 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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![]() MacMillan's hardline CEO, John Sargent, just moved up the Holtzbrinck hierarchy to Executive VP: http://the-digital-reader.com/2015/0...k-reshuffling/ Top dog Holtzbrinck likes his policies, apparently. Last edited by fjtorres; 08-13-2015 at 07:42 AM. |
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#69 | |
PHD in Horribleness
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During which time indies and self published books have mushroomed. To believe that the statement is valid, one must necessarily believe that the authors of all those indies and self published books are buying them by themselves. |
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#70 | |
Wizard
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We can glimpse part of Amazon's strategic plan for the industry from its actions. The launch of KDP concurrently with the launch of the Kindle was no accident. Amazon clearly foresaw that if/when ebooks did take off the economic barriers to publication would be slashed, resulting in a demand by authors/prospective authors for publication and distribution services. Amazon acted to satisfy this demand. I'm sure also that Amazon did not fail to consider the implications of a growing ebook market where the only source of ebooks was the Big 5. They just got it so right with KDP. Amazon clearly see a market where they have a ready supply of relatively cheap books which they can sell retail from their website at a price level set so as to maximise revenue. I don't think they see much of a role for traditional publishers in that model, nor for physical book stores. I'm not sure how the Big 5 see the industry in the longer term. They made a decision not to cater for the flood of authors wanting to self-publish, leaving this field largely to Amazon. Assuming they do not believe that the flood of Indie's is going to go away, I think this indicates that they ultimately see a lower-priced market for Indie's co-existing with a premium-priced market for their own "better quality" titles. How do you see the longer term future for the industry? How do you thing the traditional publishers see it? Last edited by darryl; 08-13-2015 at 08:36 AM. |
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#71 | |
Just a Yellow Smiley.
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As per the advances: how long did it take Scalzi's book to earn out or did it? Now as to your top hundred indies, yes there have been a few. There are also indie New York Times and USA today bestsellers. Would you like a list of 6 figure indies? I can think of several in numerous genres. Blake, Crouch, Ward, R Brown, H Ward, a couple of Joe's and the list goes on. I know one indie that is now co-authoring with a traditional author. He made the WSJ list. Another had a TV series on Fox. Now silly question, does advance money spend better than other money? I don't get the difference. Other than the timing of the paycheck. |
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#72 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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A lot of (non-big name) tradpub authors seem to be living paycheck to paycheck so advances are effectively payday loans. The big name guys are in a different league; their deals are effectively lump sum sales. The nominal royalty in the contract is irrelevant because nobody expects them to live long enough to earn out. |
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#73 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#74 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I've given my view on the future of publishing before here. I think that over time, publishing will go back to the days of having a lot of smaller to middle size publishers rather than large conglomerates as the forces that encouraged the consolidation of the publishing industry dissipate. I think we will see a lot of smaller genre oriented publishers, a la Baen Books, in the future. During it's heyday, Baen Books pioneered using social media to reach out to the fan base and introduce authors to that fan base. I suggest we will see a lot more of this level of marketing via the internet. The major reason that I don't see indie authoring as the big future is I think that most authors would rather have someone else do most of the tasks that one needs to be a successful author. Sure, those willing to do everything can take advantage of indie publishing to keep all the money themselves. But most don't have the willingness or skill to be successful at that. Just my opinion. |
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#75 | |
Just a Yellow Smiley.
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Now if those advances give traditional authors the freedom not to worry about bills, then why do 95% of the big 5 authors have day jobs? It is a rare author that gets enough of an advance to live on. I know one author who turned down a 6 figure advance. She self-published and earned the money offered in less than 4 months. That advance would have been paid in 3 increments over 3 years because it was for 3 books. Her name is Breena Aubrey. So are you telling me that someone that made 3,000,000 for someone else while making 1,000, 000 for themselves is worth more than someone who made 2,800,000 for themselves and 1,200,000 for the distributor. My math comes up to 4 million either way. |
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