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#106 | ||
New York Editor
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______ Dennis |
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#107 | |
New York Editor
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As it happens, I do buy hardcover fiction. So do a lot of other folks, which is why the New York Times has a Fiction as well as a Non-fiction hardcover best seller list. But my original suggestion was the ebooks would cannibalize mass market PB editions. This simply meant that an increasing number of folks would buy the ebook instead of the PB, to the point where it was no longer economic to produce the MMPB edition, as no one would buy it. You're one of the folks that buys the ebook instead. The fact that you will flatly refuse to buy a print edition, and will do without if the book isn't available as an ebook is irrelevant to the question. From where I sit, ebooks have cannibalized the MMPB editions in your case, as you no longer buy paperbacks. ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 11-30-2010 at 05:49 PM. |
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#108 | |||||||
New York Editor
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The acquirers are trying to survive. Publishing has been consolidating for decades, and acquisition of book publishers by multi-media conglomerates seeing synergies in having all forms of content under one umbrella is only the latest phase. Quote:
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And yes, I expect consolidation among ePublishers, too. Quote:
The fundamental underlying question in this discussion is "What should the price of an ebook be?", with the general opinion being "low" - certainly lower than the price of a hardcover, and preferably lower than the price of a mass market paperback. My question is different: "What does the price of an ebook have to be, to let a publisher do it and make money on it?" The answer to that question will vary depending upon the publisher and the book, but for reasons I've tried to discuss, I suspect it might be higher than a lot of folks will like. _____ Dennis |
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#109 | |
New York Editor
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There's an extensive discussion elsewhere on self-publishing. I have a simple take on it. If you just want to write and have your book(s) out there for people to read, and your satisfaction is in having the finished product with full control over the process, self-publishing is an appropriate route to follow. If you want to make any real money writing, it isn't. Most folks self-publishing are making beer money if that. The few likely to do better have already developed an audience that will buy their work through being traditionally published and achieving success. ______ Dennis |
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#110 | |
New York Editor
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Right now, a book may see a hardcover edition first, then, after a year, a mass market PB. The delay is to keep the cheaper PB edition from competing with the HC. If reading the book now, and/or having the durable larger format is sufficiently important to you, you buy the hardcover. If price is more important, and you're willing to wait, you buy the PB. Ebooks add a possibility to the mix: instead of buying the PB, you buy eBook edition. The question is what price you pay. You will not see eBook editions offered simultaneously with the hardcover at MMPB prices, for reasons that ought to be obvious. If a publisher releases an eBook edition at the same time as the hardcover, you can assume it will carry a higher price than an MMPB edition. You are paying a premium for early access, because you do want to read the book now, and since you probably buying the eBook instead of the hardcover, the publisher will want to charge a price that will yield a comparable amount of revenue and profit. If the eBook is issued to coincide with the MMPB edition, a price comparable to the MMPB is likely. One thing I think may occur is that existing eBook editions released simultaneously with the hardcover will be repriced when the paperback is issued. There are a fair number of complaints when that isn't the case, and some publishers have a wishful thinking idea of how much they'll be able to charge for eBooks competing with MMPBs. Ultimately, I think they'll be forced to rethink their notions. One thing I do not think will happen is eBooks issued by any major trade publisher at prices significantly less than the corresponding MMPB. I don't believe they can do that, as they simply can't price below cost and expect to stay in business. ______ Dennis |
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#111 | ||
New York Editor
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One interesting experiment along those lines is Carina Press, an eBook only imprint of Harlequin, the romance behemoth. Carina is "shared risk". To keep costs low, they don't offer advances, but give a higher than usual royalty. Most of the work of editing and production is done by freelance contractors, reducing overhead. And the carrot is that successful Carina releases might be picked up by Harlequin for print editions. A friend who has been an executive editor at a trade house and is currently a freelance writer was doing editing for them for a while. She recently resigned, after discovering she didn't miss editing as much as she thought she did. Actually, she does miss it, but what she really misses is the process of working to make a good manuscript better. She wasn't seeing good manuscripts at Carina. Because they didn't pay advances, what came over the transom was stuff established writers couldn't place elsewhere, and all the stuff from newer writers that populates any publisher's slush pile. She did see two titles that got snapped up for print editions, but not by Harlequin. (IIRC, one went to Pocket Books, and the other to Berkeley.) Quote:
The enormous success of Steven King largely created the Horror genre, and publishers realized there was a market for that sort of fiction and rushed to create imprints focused on it. It was classic boom and bust, with some of those imprints no longer around, and many horror writers no longer selling. If you aren't Steven King, Dean R. Koontz, Clive Barker or the like, good luck in finding an audience. Stephanie Meyer's enormous success with Twilight has done something similar for Vampire fiction. Publishers see that success, and hope to tap into it. They decide it's what readers want to buy because readers are buying it and it's hitting the best seller lists. Is it any surprise other publishers should try to get a piece of the action? I'm not tired of it because it's not something I read in the first place, and don't care how much is published. The question is when the audience for it will tire of it. _____ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 11-30-2010 at 05:23 PM. |
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#112 | |||
New York Editor
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That was a major issue for the publishers, and the Agency Model is in large part an attempt by publishers to reestablish control over pricing. I'd call the jury still out on whether it is working. Amazon trumpets the higher sales of books that carry their default $9.99 price tag, but that's not conclusive. What we don't know is whether enough people are buying eBooks from Amazon at the Agency Model pricing to meet the publisher's revenue and profit targets. If they are, the Agency Model won't go way. The publishers are betting that people want the books badly enough to pay the higher price. Many will. The question is how many. ______ Dennis |
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#113 |
Wizard
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I'm sorry but I don't believe that Amazon conditioned the market. I believe they set a price that their market research showed the market would accept. The consumer reaction just reinforces it.
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#114 | |
Wizard
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I agree with you that it doesn't matter. It's going to steal sales from all paper editions and if priced correctly generate more sales. I was personally spending my same book budget on ebooks as paper editions so I was buying more then I was reading (and didn't care). The publishers were making a higher profit off of me and would have continued to. Instead they pissed me off and I stopped purchasing completely. Not everyone is going to react that way but the general trend will be to purchase less. What matters is trying to understand your customer, listen to them and give them what they want so they'll continue to purchase. Trying to play puppet master with your customers doesn't work. |
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#115 |
eReader
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I think the problem is that many people want two things for ebooks:
They want the same release date as hardcover. They want the same pricing as paperback. I think the majority of publishers are more than willing to provide these things: Just not simultaneously, and that's the problem. |
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#116 | |
New York Editor
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But meanwhile, Amazon set the example. Because they set the price at $9.99, other ebook retailers are between the rock and the hard place. Since Amazon carries pretty much everything, why should a buyer go elsewhere, when they can get it cheaper at Amazon? Of course, they need a Kindle or Kindle app to purchase and read them, and they are locked in to Amazon as the vendor by Amazon's DRM. That's the point of Amazon's exercise: become the default ebook vendor, with everybody buying ebooks from them. If Amazon had chosen, say, $11.99 as the default price, that's what people would think of as the default price and expect to see. The issue it presents for publishers is the expectation that ebooks issued at the same time as the hardcover should carry that price. The Agency Model was a direct response to the issue. _______ Dennis |
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#117 | |
New York Editor
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If you want the ebook at the hardcover release date, expect to pay a premium. If you want the ebook at the PB price, expect to wait for it, just like you would wait for the PB, and for the same reasons. ______ Dennis |
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#118 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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It seems to me that the publishers and sellers think that they are engaged in establishing captive markets for their respective EBRs and ebooks. But maybe what they are doing is teaching a significant number of their customers to learn how to acquire ebooks from someone else, at which point it will be difficult to lure them back. It makes me wonder if Amazon might not, at some point in the next couple of years, do what Apple did, and drop DRM from some of their ebooks. Their pricing is generally the lowest anyway, and they have the best ebook purchase & delivery system. It just might suck up a lot of their competition's customers... |
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#119 | |
New York Editor
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______ Dennis |
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#120 | |
Is that a sandwich?
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For me personally I never have. I could usually find them cheaper locally or borrow from library. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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