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#166 | |
Wizard
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The price of paper, gas (leading to transport) and rent will increase, but it becomes cheaper and more efficient to store and transport digital information. Do you see the publishers deciding to decrease the price of ebooks because the price of external HDD decreases? They are more likely to increase the price since it would be cheaper for the buyer to backup the ebooks. |
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#167 | |
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Total of 'price' of book from the point of view of the publisher, ignoring retail markup and all the distribution costs that retailers incur? Total per book printed, regardless of whether that book is actually sold? Total excluding returns, which are hidden somewhere else? |
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#168 | ||
Maria Schneider
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As for the other points...it's all going to be up to the individual houses. There's a wave of change going on, but it too will subside into...something. And yes, Tor is a good house. Not quite so nimble now they're run by MacMillan if I recall correctly, but both TOR and Baen--they have a special magic. |
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#169 | ||
New York Editor
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The issue is the number of folks who seem to feel that getting a discount is some sort of inherent right they are entitled to. Not so, alas. Quote:
In the US, it's legal so far (and you may assume the publishers had their legal staffs burning the midnight oil to confirm it was legal before proceeding.) What they've done is to alter the relationship between the publisher and the retailer. In the new model, the retailer isn't a traditional retailer, reselling goods it buys from a producer. It's an agent selling for a producer, at a price the producer sets, and getting a specified cut for its services. This has interesting implications I haven't seen discussed here, like taxes: in an agent relationship, the producer is responsible for applicable taxes, not the agent. So Amazon, which has a plethora of local tax codes to deal with in web sales that determine whether an item is taxable where the buyer lives and how much tax is charged, charges and remits the applicable sales taxes on items it resells as a retailer, but apparently isn't responsible for those taxes on items sold under Agency Pricing. I have no idea how this is being handled by Amazon and the publishers. ______ Dennis |
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#170 | |
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Reserve against returns should apply only to print editions, since it's meaningless for ebooks. (I say should because I can imagine publishers silly enough to try to apply it to ebooks, too...) The suggested retail price is a rather different matter, as it does include things like retailer markup and distribution costs in the case of physical books. The costs the publisher incurs to make the book will govern the wholesale price charged to the retailer, and will be set at a level that covers the publisher's costs and makes a sufficient amount of profit. ______ Dennis |
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#171 | ||||
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Macmillan doesn't exactly run Tor. They are the US umbrella for Holtzbrink's North American operations. I don't know the exact details of the relationship, but Tom seems to largely run his own shop without too much interference. As long as he produces satisfactory results, I don't think his superiors are inclined to piss in the soup. The impression I get is that they are aware of just how savvy Tom is, and watching what he does to see what might be applied elsewhere in their organization. (If I were them, it's what I'd do. Tom is one of the sharpest guys in publishing, and if he can't sell books, it's not clear anyone can.) Tom is also a minority investor in Baen. Jim Baen used to work for Tom, when Tom was publisher and Jim was Editor at Ace Books. They stayed friends and in touch, and when Jim set up his own shop as Baen Books, Tom was a backer. (I said Tom was sharp... ![]() I would not be at all surprised by more outfits like Baen, possibly spun off by larger corporate parents, precisely to be smaller, nimbler, lower cost operations, better suited to compete in the new environment. The limiting factor will be the supply of Jim Beans to provide the vision and run them. ______ Dennis |
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#172 |
Maria Schneider
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Well the parent company DID stop TOR from putting out ebooks on BAEN's site. There was a nice little agreement early on to sell ebooks through Baen (this was before Kindle) and somehow...someone up in corp. didn't like the idea of ebooks and the program was canceled. Now, of course, the ebook direction is changing, but Baen has been out there with ebooks from early on (and Tor was briefly a part of it.)
The big guys/boss must stir the pot now and again if for no other reason that to give chaos a chance. Have a good evening! |
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#173 | ||
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Subsequently, Holtzbrink got a new CEO who was opposed to DRM, and the deal was supposedly on again. A note from Tor Senior Editor Patrick Nielsen-Hayden indicated it was in the hands of lawyers for both sides for the proper dotting of Is and crossing of Ts, but that was a while back. (Patrick also stated that Macmillan was in the process of digitizing Tor's back catalog, and ebook editions would be forthcoming at some point.) My guess is that Holtzbrink is trying to craft a coherent digital strategy across all their lines. I had a conversation with Pablo Defendini, the former Producer at Tor.com, where he freely admitted that what he was doing had visibility beyond Tor, and was being watched by other parts of Holtzbrink. (In fact, Pablo didn't work for Tor when running Tor.com, though he started out there as a Junior Book Designer. At Tor.com, his boss was a Macmillan VP in charge of digital initiatives.) I suspect Holtzbrink has decided that they are a global publisher, and if ebooks are to be sold, they'll do it, rather than have a unit contract with a tiny independent to do it for them. Quote:
______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 12-03-2010 at 10:18 PM. |
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#174 | |||
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#176 | ||||
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The problem here is precisely that the price the consumer is charged is determined in part by the costs of the producer, and there's an enormous amount of confusion about what the producer's costs are and wishful thinking about what the price charged to the consumer could be. Quote:
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The costs I mentioned above are all of those involved in acquiring a manuscript and preparing it for production, incurred before publication takes place. They apply to paper and ebook editions. I exclude reserve against returns at that point. If I'm only publishing an electronic edition, they are meaningless. If I'm publishing paper and electronic, they should only be applicable to paper. Quote:
If I publish an ebook, and sell directly to you, there's no wholesale price. Wholesale is what gets charged to a reseller. If I sell through someone else who takes a cut for providing the service, I'd call my price to them the wholesale price. Their price to you is the retail price. I'd call that true regardless of whether the reseller is a retailer in the usual sense, or an agent under the Agency Model. What would you call the price Amazon pays the publishers under the Agency Model, since it's not the price they charge you? And while we don't have distributors in the sense of selling physical goods, who distribute products to retailers too small to deal directly with manufacturers, we do have resellers who sell directly to customers, and differences in the price they pay to the publisher and the one they charge you. ______ Dennis |
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#177 | ||
Wizard
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So please quote an article that talked about "acquisition with attendant advance, contract, line edit, copy edit, proofread, cover design and art, markup and typeset and the like" costs being distributed on all the forms of the book. I dare you. Have you actually been in meetings to approve something? Think about it: the hours it takes to make a proposal, getting it to meet the expectations of the person directly above only to have a person one step higher have the completely opposite idea. Those hours for all the people involved, plus the overhead costs, plus all the stuff that clutters the network because everything will get mailed, and every person will have a copy of the same document on their computer, and in their email, with everything backed-up for safety; those, if I'm not mistaken, imply costs. |
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#178 |
Maria Schneider
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Actually ever since agency pricing, I get taxed collected BY AMAZON for any publisher who has a base in my state (Texas). So with agency pricing, Amazon is responsible for collecting the tax. I know this because I get taxed on certain publisher's books and not others. And yes, out of spite, once I learn those publishers...if it comes down to two books...one by one publisher and the other by the other...
In the end, the Fed is going to go after Amazon and get some sort of tax. Those pols are salivating, whining and generally fit-to-be-tied that they haven't yet gotten their slimy paws on more of our money via the success of Amazon. |
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#179 | ||
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You are defining cost in such a way that excludes: - Warehousing and distribution - Retail cost and markup - Cost of returns And then saying that the costs attributable to the physical nature of books are only a small proportion. Of course they are, because you have excluded most of the components that go into those costs. Quote:
The producers are directly setting the retail price for Agency eBooks and paying the retailers a commission for their services. Amazon does not pay a price to the publisher, they remit the money they have collected on their behalf. |
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#180 | |||||
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For instance, we order occasional books from Amazon UK - hardcover editions of British publications of Terry Pratchett, J. K. Rowling, and Tom Holt (who doesn't seem to have a US publisher these days.) We can place the order with Amazon UK and have them ship to us. We cannot order them from Amazon US. They don't have the rights to sell the British editions. Hachette caused a fuss a couple of years back by pulling ebook titles they published from one of the ebook retailers (Books On Board, I think), because they didn't think the retailer had the technology in place to properly enforce georestriction on their titles. They were concerned about legal action by other publishers who held the rights to those titles in their areas. If it sounds stupid, well, it arguably is. But the problem is not going away any time soon. If a publisher licenses worldwide ebook rights in the first place, it's one thing. If they don't, it's another. And the vast majority of back catalog has contracts negotiated back before the whole issue arose, and won't have worldwide ebooks rights as part of the package. It's a symptom of much larger problem, which is that the Internet is making things like national boundaries increasingly irrelevant in many cases. Quote:
The print editions do not absorb costs like that, with the ebook tagging along for free. The accounting doesn't work that way. And what happens if the ebook is the only edition? Those costs don't magically go away just because it's an ebook. The ebook will then bear the entire burden, instead of an allocated share of it. Quote:
Meanwhile, you seem to be saying you simply don't believe me, because my posts don't agree with what you want to be true. Like I said earlier, it doesn't matter if you believe me or not. As mentioned, I've been an observer of publishing for decades, and most of the folks I know and hang out with are in publishing. I've learned a bit about the subject, and try to share what I know here. Everything I say is true to the best of my knowledge. I sympathize with folks who want their ebooks cheaper. I'd like to get things cheaper too. But for reasons I've been trying to explain in this thread and elsewhere, I don't think it's possible for publishers to produce and sell ebooks as cheaply as many folks would like. Authors want to get paid actual money for the rights to issue a book. People in publishing that acquire, line edit, copy edit, proofread, and prepare books for publication as print volumes or ebooks expect to get paid for what they do. And publishers pay rent on office space, have electric, phone, and other bills, and an assortment of other costs that are part of corporate overhead, plus a need to make a certain level of profit to remain a going concern and open for business the next day. Book prices, paper and ebook, will reflect those factors. If I'm correct in my notions, you simply won't get ebooks from major trade publishers at the price point you might like, because they can't produce ebooks at that price point and stay in business. I think I am correct. Time will tell. Quote:
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My feeling is that they are a relatively small component of the total cost, and dropping them won't reduce the publisher's costs enough to allow a reduction in the book's price. (And trying to figure out what those costs actually are and allocate them to a particular book will be an exercise comparable to rabbis splitting hairs over points in Talmud. I've been in occasional meetings where allocation of costs is discussed, and everyone has the same opinion: "It shouldn't hit my budget!" ![]() ______ Dennis |
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