Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?
At Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate.
|
Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Posts: 60 Joined: Feb 2012 Thanked 0 times What I Read
|
Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?At Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate. |
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?Perhaps the only way to redress the balance would be for Amazon etc to set a higher minimum price and tighten quality control, but that's probably never going to happen. Barnacle Boy! We have to find those stolen Naggy Daddies!
|
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued? |
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?I was at a talk at the Edinburgh Book Festival last year where one of the speakers said he only gets some ridiculously low royalty from books sold via the traditional route - I think something like 6p per sale but I may not have remembered that accurately. So getting even 25p from Amazon (more from Smashwords) is better for the writer than that. However, having a Kindle has definitely had an impact on the number of books I buy (especially from charity shops), and an even bigger impact on my use of the local library, so I find that aspect a bit worrying. But perhaps both book-shops and libraries are going to have to evolve. |
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued? |
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?I soon had to amend it to the price of a cuppa in my local library drinks machine £1... :o) |
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?I'll sell my books for 99p when I can find a plumber to fix my dripping tap for that price or a car mechanic who charges under a quid for looking under the bonnet. Writers have bills to pay, too. |
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?But even priced quite low at £1-99, my ebooks pay me a better royalty than if the titles were POD via. a traditional publishing deal (which is where most backlist books end up once they go out of print, if you don't revert the rights). And they sell more copies than the more expensive POD versions used to, so for backlist cheap ebooks are still looking good. If I were publishing a new novel as an ebook, however, I might feel differently... I feel (as a reader) that an ebook should be about half the cost of a typical paperback, or maybe up to two thirds. But if the ebook costs almost the same (or is more expensive!) than I will buy a paperback instead... and if there isn't a reasonably priced paperback version of the one I want, I'll buy a different paperback so the writer will lose a sale. |
RE: Sold for less than 'price of a cup of tea' - eBooks devalued?If an average ebook is £1.99 for example, and I cost mine at £6.99 because I worked like a dog on it for years, should I be surprised when it doesn't sell? No, sadly I have to play ball and cost more realistically. That's the market - nobody is bigger than the market. As Lou says, there is no quality control with ebooks, so readers are taking much more of a gamble when they buy one, especially if the author is relatively unknown. With a cup of tea, you know what you're getting - it's a safe bet. With an unknown author, there are no guarantees. That's why free ebooks are so popular! Also, remember that cost is just one factor. Readers will also consider the amount of positive reviews a book has, how much the author has produced, whether the book has been recommended by someone they know, if it's similar to what they usually read, the cover, the title, how many vowels in an author's name, whether the wind is blowing from the south, if there are any biscuits left... |