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#76 | |
Maria Schneider
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Karma: 26439330
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Near Austin, Texas
Device: 3g Kindle Keyboard
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I appreciate your insight on used books too--you're right about the out of print part of it and I think that is often forgotten. It allowed access to books for a longer period. That aspect is no longer really necessary because of POD printing and ebooks. |
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#77 | |
Fanatic
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Karma: 1470724
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Quebec CA
Device: android 4 (samsung tablet and asus tablet)
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I still find that ebook prices do not reflect the production, storage, transportation cost savings. |
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#78 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 70314280
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Atlanta, GA
Device: iPad Pro, iPad mini, Kobo Aura, Amazon paperwhite, Sony PRS-T2
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#79 | |
Maria Schneider
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Karma: 26439330
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Near Austin, Texas
Device: 3g Kindle Keyboard
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Quote:
Ebook royalties are now very complicated and vary greatly from publisher to publisher. I haven't checked in with the authors I know lately, but in general the authors were making more from an ebook (not because of pricing, but because the publishers never expected to sell many so they "generously" were giving a larger cut) . That larger cut has been whittled down quite a bit in the last few years for new contracts. I don't know where it stands right now, but the fight is ongoing. Re: How much it costs to put a book out. That cost is usually underestimated because the bulk of it tends to be the wages of the editor (acquiring and main editor) the proofreader and the copy-editor, along with overhead costs of running a publishing company. There's also usually a marketing team that, if nothing else, chimes in on whether to acquire the book so there is some salary cost there. Even if the editing is outsourced (which it usually is these days to some extent--either the copy editing, proofing or both if both are done) that runs 1200 dollars or so. The artwork is in that same neighborhood, depending on whether it's original art (usually fantasy) or stock photos. But even with stock photos, some publishers hire a separate font expert to design the fonts and placement. I worked with an artist who did work for big publishers (he did the cover for Under Withc Aura) but he didn't do the fonts for companies. He was also the photographer for cover art in cases when the publisher wanted a particular cover done. He'd do the art, the layout design and then turn it over to the font expert. For a photo shoot, he'd get more than just 1000 dollars because he was paid for the photos as well as the artwork involved in putting them together into a cover (For example, with Under Witch Aura, he did the photo of the background clouds. We bought the photo of the girl. I can't remember if he did the white feather photo himself, but I think he did that photo as well as the dream catcher photo). He did all the blending/fading in and so on. The fonts were not professionally done as we were matching the ones from book one. He did some highlighting/shadowing, but we went with that since I didn't want to change book one at the time. Publishers don't spend much on ads or placement except for the largest names, but they are doing some advertising. I know one author whose publisher has taken out two bookbub ads--so there's a couple thousand there. I don't think the cost to produce the average book is 50k, but it's probably 5 to 10. Better selling authors get 1. more of a cut in royalties 2. better marketing budgets 3. better artwork so they are more expensive to produce, but the publishers expect to get that back. They get larger print runs of the print books too so there's actually cost savings there so long as the print copies sell. There are several publishers now that produce only ebooks (or have an arm that does so) to save on the printing costs. They will then do print and audio if the book makes enough/sells enough. This is likely to become more common. It was the model I was using for quite a while, although I'm thinking of breaking the rules. I already have found I must have print versions and I'm considering doing audio. The printing and storing of paperbacks/hardbacks is expensive and getting more so because shipping costs have gone up. In this last round of agreements between the publishers and Amazon, Amazon upped the cost of storing the books before shipment as well as "placement" costs on the site. All that long and boring said, I agree with you. The ebooks should at least be the same price as the paperback, not more. It does cost me extra to print (and I only do POD) but the bulk of time and effort is done by that time. |
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#80 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 70314280
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Atlanta, GA
Device: iPad Pro, iPad mini, Kobo Aura, Amazon paperwhite, Sony PRS-T2
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http://whatever.scalzi.com/2015/08/1...re-title-2015/ Audio books lead by a pretty big margin audiobook - 41K ebook - 24K Hardcover - 22.5K and interesting delta from his redshirt sales from 2 years prior. http://whatever.scalzi.com/2013/01/1...re-title-2013/ audiobooks - 17K ebook - 35.6K Hardcover - 26.6 K (note for those who enjoy trying to put words in my mouth, I'm not saying that Scalzi is publishing as ebook first, I'm simply using his figures to show how much audiobooks have grown and how ebook and audiobook sales compare to paper sales since he uses real figures rather than vague guesses). |
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#81 |
Maria Schneider
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Karma: 26439330
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Near Austin, Texas
Device: 3g Kindle Keyboard
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Audio is one of the few areas that is growing right now. Ebooks have leveled off (from a growth perspective. They are still selling well, but not growing much). Audible was making audio books more accessible and is now an Amazon company. Amazon puts audio on sale quite often. My only gripe is that if I publish audio with them, Amazon controls the pricing and because there is no competition, the share they payout is a much lower percentage than it is with ebooks (Apple is largely responsible for Amazon allowing authors to get 70 percent of a sale price with books--Amazon had to match that rate to stay competitive).
One of the problems with audio books is they are VERY expensive to produce. For me to produce one book, it would cost me around 1000 to 2500 and could take up to 3 months--of my time and also that of the person/studio doing the recording. And then if I upload to Amazon, they control the pricing. They can put it on sale, which could hamper me from being able to earn that money back in a timely fashion. BUT. Right now, customers are willing to pay money for audio, whist for ebooks, there is a growing number that wait for free (or discounted or free for the first in series, etc). The industry is always changing. I'm glad to see audio taking off, but I've been unable to capitalize on it, and it may not make sense given the money required upfront. |
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#82 |
Member
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Karma: 2030842
Join Date: Feb 2016
Device: none
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I tend to only by paper books in hard back and if they hold some sort of significance for me or make a good collection, for example the Harry Potter series and Lord of the Rings. Otherwise I would just end up with too many books and nowhere to keep them!
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#83 |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Apr 2016
Device: Kindle Oasis, PW 2
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The only paper books I buy are art books. Everything else is ebook only. I don't have the space for tons of paper books anymore. I've got three huge bookcases full of them.
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#84 |
Guru
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Karma: 1622328
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: USA
Device: Kindle Oasis, OnePlus Nord
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To answer the OP's inquisition: I buy whatever feels right at the time.
I'm at BN last Sunday and I notice a Terry Pratchett book on sale for $6.98. Pull up the Kindle app on my phone to check the price there and it is $14.99 for the Kindle edition. Guess which one I got? ![]() I'm reading a fantasy series right now that is physically impressive in printed form. So massive I can just hear my RSI pleading for mercy before even picking the books up. Price is identical $9.99 for the Kindle edition OR the mass market. Went with the Kindle version: which I will read on my light and comfortable idol 3 that I can easily (handily?) wield without any major strain. I guess I'm a pragmatist. All of the formats available to us nowadays (audio, e, printed) appear to have benefits and cons as far as I can tell and why should I limit myself to only one or two of them? |
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#85 |
Zealot
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Karma: 170
Join Date: Jul 2010
Device: Voyage
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I mostly buy paper books for nonfiction, and ebooks for fiction. I flip back and forth in the book on nonfiction, and that would get super annoying on my kindle.
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#86 | |
Guru
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Karma: 7511929
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: New York, NY
Device: Amazon Kindle Paperwhite 2
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1. Free library borrow, paper or digital (at least 1/3 of my book reading) 2. Whichever is cheaper, the used hardcover/paperback or the kindle version. (split about evenly for me) The paper version can also be resold, but this can be a hassle unless the price is high enough. However, ebooks have many advantages over paper books, especially for technical manuals 1. Ability to search ebooks...and an entire digital library in seconds 2. Highlight, insert notes....both much better in ebooks. 3. Cloud storage of ebooks vs bookshelves for paper books. If you live in a city and therefore move around a lot, moving paper books is the biggest pain about moving. 4. ebooks are more convenient....try switching back and forth between the paper versions of War & Peace and Game of Thrones on your bus commute. 5. Looking up unfamiliar words is much easier with ebooks 6. Much quicker to acquire an ebook...no waiting or driving. On balance, consumers should be willing to purchase ebooks for a higher price than paper books in many cases. Last edited by markbot; 07-16-2016 at 11:41 AM. |
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#87 | |
No Comment
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Karma: 23878043
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Australia
Device: Kobo: Not just an eReader, it's an adventure!
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And you haven't mentioned the cost of the ereader. Until you've read a lot of ebooks on an ereader, the amortised cost of the ereader means that you are already paying a lot more for ebooks. For example, my current ereader, which is now over two years old, is still costing me over $2 per ebook read. And then there is the general lack of quality in ebooks, either the bad formatting, the not fixing scan errors on any publishing of an ebook that was not originally released as an ebook (hello backlist), and, of course, the risk involved in DRM, where there is a very real possibility that you may loose access to the ebook you 'bought' if the company goes out of business (and as we've discovered, this is true even if the 'transfer' your ebooks to another vendor). Last edited by murg; 07-16-2016 at 08:46 PM. |
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#88 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 34000001
Join Date: Mar 2008
Device: KPW1, KA1
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1 book: €129 2 books: €64.50 3 books: €43 As you read more, the price per book drops less and less. Quote:
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#89 |
Wizard
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Karma: 19162882
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Te Riu-a-Māui
Device: Kobo Glo
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paper books have extra costs too -- bookshelves, reading lamps, freight costs to ship the books, bookshelves and reading lamps when you move house.
If my ereader broke today it would have cost me about $0.40 per ebook read, if it lasts another couple of years it should get down to $0.25 per ebook read. I think my shelving, lighting and freight costs for paper books would come to more than that. |
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#90 | |
Just a Yellow Smiley.
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Karma: 83862859
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: Texas
Device: K4, K5, fire, kobo, galaxy
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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