Today during a check on our fav bookshop, I counted our books on his shelves and noted that a good number of them have moved since last recon. This is lovely news.
Decided on a (hopefully better) strategy for 2014. Will it work? Well that remains to be seen.
In the interim hubbs has started another book site online, namely exactly for that kind of book P'kaboo won't place, but which entertains us (only we don't want our kids to read it). An over-18 bookshop, called Honeymead Books. Ebooks only; that is until enough ebook copies sell to warrant a paper run.
This sounds counterintuitive at first, as our paper books sell consistently better than our ebooks, but it might just work a lot better, who knows. We have 3 juicy titles in there by now, from 3 different juicy authors.
But as for me, I'm a bit punch-drunk (no, that's not the Christmas punch we're going to have on the 25th). I can't look printers in the oi any longer. Clearing up I found two more copies of books well-written, carefully edited, beautifully designed, laid out and printed - and then bound in such a bloody mess that they are not sellable. The binders can stuff up a book and lose a publisher money!
One is bound upside-down and back-to-front, to be turned on its head and then opened from the back and read like a Japanese picture novel; and the other - unspeakable, the pages are in complete chaos, as though the insides were dropped, hastily gathered up and stuck any which way into the binding by the jolly binders.
That's a bookbinder I'll never use again!
So I've done this for now
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2013 was an awful, horrible year in which nothing at all was achieved (and I nearly died).
2014 will start with new karma. I'm throwing out all old proof copies except the most essential ones; they're all going to the second-hand bookshop. Unbound printed proofs in great A3 sheets are designated for paper mache. The kids are happy about this. I've moved "P'kaboo Corner" to where I can see it. Done my stocktake... low on all stock, that ought to be good news. Perhaps putting books on "sales tables" is a hasty idea and should be put on ice first. (Don't fess yerselves, I'm not that desperate! Sales table! Fie!)
So right now I'm relaxing and, if anything, writing, and focusing on Christmas and what must happen before the new year precipitates.
There used to be a best-selling book in Zimbabwe: "Next year will be better." Wonder if there are any copies of that one.
In this blog I log the process of my self-publishing and setting up a publishing company(P'kaboo Books). It is a "blog in progress". Have fun reading. If you gain something from it for your own journey, fantastic.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
My wonderful editor
One of the most precious people I've found in the process of self-publishing is my editor: Leslie Noble.
They say, nomen est omen. The man is indeed noble.
Not only is he an excellent editor - knows his way through the labyrinth of the English language like an intrepid archaeologist with incentives - knows byways and passages I had no idea about.
For my own piratical purposes even better, he is a yachtsman with hands-on experience of flying a sailing yacht, surfing a freak wave, and all the moods and idiosyncrasies of the ocean.
Most importantly, he's a Noble knight on a white charger where it comes to rescuing a distressed damsel from going to Cuckoo Home (it's somewhere in the Transylvanian Alps, I'm sure). The file that was driving me round the bend yesterday? Around midnight it won against me and I gave up on it (LibreOffice Writer, Winword 2007 - neither could help me) and launched it in a missive to my noble editor, with a plea for help.
This morning as I open my emails, the file is back - all fixed! I could take it exactly as is and upload it to Amazon, no further tweaks required! How's that forya?
Les, thank you. Your help is absolutely indispensable and worth gold. And diamonds!
I don't know if anyone sees these posts but if you do, pls be aware that Les is also our most prolific author - having written Tabika (1 and 2), Baa Baa Black Belt, Regina, Forest Circle Quest, and the "Immy" series of 5 delightful toddler-shaped multimedia toy-boxes parading as books. The stories are so cute that as adults we smile and chuckle as we read them. Definitely worthy of our little ones, much more so than a lot of the toddler literature that is currently out there.
Here are his books:
http://www.pkaboo.net/tabika.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/tabika2.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/baa.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/regina.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/fcquest.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/immy.html
He is also a composer (Immy features a Peter-and-the-Wolf style themed musical background of his own composition) and his classical-style CDs are on our web shop too:
http://www.pkaboo.net/quests.html
(The photography featuring on the covers of these CDs is also his own.)
They say, nomen est omen. The man is indeed noble.
Not only is he an excellent editor - knows his way through the labyrinth of the English language like an intrepid archaeologist with incentives - knows byways and passages I had no idea about.
For my own piratical purposes even better, he is a yachtsman with hands-on experience of flying a sailing yacht, surfing a freak wave, and all the moods and idiosyncrasies of the ocean.
Most importantly, he's a Noble knight on a white charger where it comes to rescuing a distressed damsel from going to Cuckoo Home (it's somewhere in the Transylvanian Alps, I'm sure). The file that was driving me round the bend yesterday? Around midnight it won against me and I gave up on it (LibreOffice Writer, Winword 2007 - neither could help me) and launched it in a missive to my noble editor, with a plea for help.
This morning as I open my emails, the file is back - all fixed! I could take it exactly as is and upload it to Amazon, no further tweaks required! How's that forya?
Les, thank you. Your help is absolutely indispensable and worth gold. And diamonds!
I don't know if anyone sees these posts but if you do, pls be aware that Les is also our most prolific author - having written Tabika (1 and 2), Baa Baa Black Belt, Regina, Forest Circle Quest, and the "Immy" series of 5 delightful toddler-shaped multimedia toy-boxes parading as books. The stories are so cute that as adults we smile and chuckle as we read them. Definitely worthy of our little ones, much more so than a lot of the toddler literature that is currently out there.
Here are his books:
http://www.pkaboo.net/tabika.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/tabika2.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/baa.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/regina.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/fcquest.html
http://www.pkaboo.net/immy.html
He is also a composer (Immy features a Peter-and-the-Wolf style themed musical background of his own composition) and his classical-style CDs are on our web shop too:
http://www.pkaboo.net/quests.html
(The photography featuring on the covers of these CDs is also his own.)
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Aaaarghh Createspace!!
Though it's not really CreateSpace at fault.
It's Word for Windows, and sectioning. I'm trying to upload a perfectly good manuscript - mind we already had a P'kaboo print run for it, and I know the book has formatting issues - but not the ones I didn't expect at CreateSpace.
The real formatting issues of the book:
The margins are a teensy bit too small for comfort. That is, the outer margins. There's enough gutter. (Not saying that it's gutter literature!) And: The binders here in SA don't seem to get perfect binding right. The glue is stiff - it should never be with such a thin book. Which leads to breaking of the spine when it should be flexing instead. Highly annoying. But those are printer-binder issues; not file issues.
And: It is not A5. Making the printing a bit of a nightmare as the text has to be reduced onto the page, to fit the smaller format. For me that's an issue. It's the last small-run digi format book I'll ever create in a non-standard format.
But Amazon doesn't work in the A standard formats; its format that comes closest is in 6' x 9' imperial inches. (I'm wondering now, are they the inches of a Roman silk trader, or of Julius C, or of the American president... - OH, they are 2.7 cm? Standardized to a metric measure in other words? LOL.) Never mind the furlong-per-fortnight issue. I had expected, and got, margin issues with my A5 file with the too-small outer margins, and I fixed those. I expected serious issues with the cover format (as that is in the non-standard size); surprisingly I got none. They resized the cover. We'll see how well that worked when I see the digital proof. But here's an issue I did not expect - didn't pick up myself, on the doc file: Pagination!
Ok. Get a matchbox, empty all the matches out and then try to stick your brain into that. That's how I feel about a pagination issue. Apparently in parts, the pagination is completely missing! Why??? Because the book has been sectionalized. Was that necessary??
If Word were GIMP, I'd "flatten the image" so that the whole book becomes 1 single "section", and repaginate. I don't know if Libreoffice (Linux) has such an option, but my guess is, not. Does Word even have that option? And once I do, I'll have to repaginate the table of contents, manually, again.............. *SIGH*
This is not my favourite part of publishing, of helping other authors onto a platform. Definitely NOT. If I were a rich company, I'd employ someone with a certification in Windows to do all the formatting for me and I'd pay them not to get creative about it! So, nose to the grindstone, I'd rather be editing Solar Wind 6 - Romania, but wtf, that table of contents is calling.... urggh...
(please pardon the very teenage spoilers, this is practically a teenage temper tantrum, I'm learning a lot from my kids...)
It's Word for Windows, and sectioning. I'm trying to upload a perfectly good manuscript - mind we already had a P'kaboo print run for it, and I know the book has formatting issues - but not the ones I didn't expect at CreateSpace.
The real formatting issues of the book:
The margins are a teensy bit too small for comfort. That is, the outer margins. There's enough gutter. (Not saying that it's gutter literature!) And: The binders here in SA don't seem to get perfect binding right. The glue is stiff - it should never be with such a thin book. Which leads to breaking of the spine when it should be flexing instead. Highly annoying. But those are printer-binder issues; not file issues.
And: It is not A5. Making the printing a bit of a nightmare as the text has to be reduced onto the page, to fit the smaller format. For me that's an issue. It's the last small-run digi format book I'll ever create in a non-standard format.
But Amazon doesn't work in the A standard formats; its format that comes closest is in 6' x 9' imperial inches. (I'm wondering now, are they the inches of a Roman silk trader, or of Julius C, or of the American president... - OH, they are 2.7 cm? Standardized to a metric measure in other words? LOL.) Never mind the furlong-per-fortnight issue. I had expected, and got, margin issues with my A5 file with the too-small outer margins, and I fixed those. I expected serious issues with the cover format (as that is in the non-standard size); surprisingly I got none. They resized the cover. We'll see how well that worked when I see the digital proof. But here's an issue I did not expect - didn't pick up myself, on the doc file: Pagination!
Ok. Get a matchbox, empty all the matches out and then try to stick your brain into that. That's how I feel about a pagination issue. Apparently in parts, the pagination is completely missing! Why??? Because the book has been sectionalized. Was that necessary??
If Word were GIMP, I'd "flatten the image" so that the whole book becomes 1 single "section", and repaginate. I don't know if Libreoffice (Linux) has such an option, but my guess is, not. Does Word even have that option? And once I do, I'll have to repaginate the table of contents, manually, again.............. *SIGH*
This is not my favourite part of publishing, of helping other authors onto a platform. Definitely NOT. If I were a rich company, I'd employ someone with a certification in Windows to do all the formatting for me and I'd pay them not to get creative about it! So, nose to the grindstone, I'd rather be editing Solar Wind 6 - Romania, but wtf, that table of contents is calling.... urggh...
(please pardon the very teenage spoilers, this is practically a teenage temper tantrum, I'm learning a lot from my kids...)
Sunday, August 4, 2013
hopefully back
my kop raas...
slave to good coffee |
I've been through literally months of set-backs. Because this is a bit of a journal-style blog (from the 'orses mouth one hopes) I'll just list a few here, not as a pity party but to clarify to myself where on Earth I could have lost such a lot of time!
- My health went awol. What we thought was a stomach ulcer was treated with PPi's which (most probably) finished off my gall bladder en route to damaging my liver. End result: a costly and concussive stay in hospital, the dwaal of which I'm still working to get out of. Slowly my energy levels return; I still freeze though, day and night. Yup. Now to find a way back to being young.
- Once out of hospital I worked my backside off to catch up all missed lessons... still nevertheless 2/3 of my studio "jumped ship", each student for their own reasons. Such diverse reasons as matric, workload, and neck injury.
- right, those were the two worst. Now for the good news.
Increased sales
For some surprising reason, books have started moving. Not hugely; but they do. These are paper book sales, mostly direct sales, and the "volume" sales are to music shops. Our two little music runners, "Violin Tunes" and Alan Solomon's "Not Another Scale Book", seem to be quite popular.
We also managed to sell a few Solar Winds (various sequels). The nudge is quite clear: This is not an experiment any longer, it's a business and we'd better get thinking in lines of proper marketing.
Sales are the lifeblood of the business. Without sales I might as well close shop. So, increased sales are excellent news.
Projects
P'kaboo has been in "project overload and results under-performance" for nearly a year (or more precisely, since its inception).
- Need to relaunch "Freedom Fighter" along with the next sequel, "Raider", which needs to be printed.
- In fact we're out of print copies of Freedom Fighter; first mini-run is sold out. This sounds grand but these are microscopic runs; nevertheless we're honing down our figures to become more market-specific. There's no point in printing thousands of books if sales are a trickle.
- With the relaunch of "Freedom Fighter" I should launch a paper version of "Mercury Silver"; the book needs to be promoted to libraries, schools etc. It's really a very quirky collection, I loved putting it together.
- Violin Tunes 2 is so far a pipe dream, until I've made friends with the music program. I'm using a different program this time, as Cakewalk can't handle slurs, fingering and all sorts of other nice stuff. Cakewalk is really a recording program and the notation function is an afterthought.
- "Not Another Scale Book" needs to be put together in its non-handwritten version (without illustrations, oh well). I've got the tools for it now; was missing the program (my Acrobat was erased with my hard drive back in my Windows days). PDF Shuffler or PDF Chain will do it though.
- I want to start another short-story or perhaps, poetry project. I loved Mercury Silver, it really had that energy to it.
- Need to make a catalogue of all our books, for Bargain Books (and other places). And perhaps, get some more flyers out, now that we have multiple more titles.
- Thinking of putting my own short-stories into a paper format too.
Get my head clear
The most important thing is for the owner of P'kaboo to get her head clear of the hospital fog. I've started retaking my life; I'm reconnecting with Pretoria's music circles (in line with P'kaboo's whole mission of getting young stuff out there, a young conductor contacted me and I helped him find more players for his orchestra, which has grown into a high-quality chamber orchestra and will hopefully grow more as he puts on more shows).
I've also retaken editing the SW series. There are one or two stories I've been writing in the interim, one because it simply happened, and one because my daughter challenged me that I can't write about vampires (which I can but I find them boring). Predictably, the "simply happened" science fiction story has a very clear direction, thrust, and that immense creative energy that predicts a story that writes itself. And the vampire story is contrived and painful, and fails to go anywhere. It's a non-starter. Maybe I really can't write about vampires. There's another little story lurking in the woods, a really spooky one, which promises to be quite short; I can see its ending. But it moves much better than the vampire story.
Energy matters
This is something I observed. Certain jobs take it out of a person where others feed you, energize you. Music in any shape energizes me, I can live on that energy. So does writing; and funnily, web programming. Writing is a pretty selfish kind of energy though, I'm still not quite sure why we do it. (Because otherwise the voices in our heads don't shut up?) What amazed me was the energy that spun off from Mercury Silver. Now to find a way of making that niche into a thing I can give enough time because it doesn't only feed my spirit but my family...
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
"Keep the ball rolling"
I just reread the beginning of this blog.
From the outset, I had a "Thomas the Tank Engine" attitude. And here we are, plodding on still. It's very hard to stop or derail a plodder. This wasn't meant to plod, it was meant to fly; but that's easier done with a load of cash backing you. But at least we are still here, still plodding.
The friend who helped me with the start-up cash for the first run, instructed me to "just keep the ball rolling". Best piece of business advice! And of course, the various "rules of making money" as per Ken Blanchard. Number 3 is perhaps the most important, and so simple:
"Income - expenses = profit".
So simple.
From the outset, I had a "Thomas the Tank Engine" attitude. And here we are, plodding on still. It's very hard to stop or derail a plodder. This wasn't meant to plod, it was meant to fly; but that's easier done with a load of cash backing you. But at least we are still here, still plodding.
The friend who helped me with the start-up cash for the first run, instructed me to "just keep the ball rolling". Best piece of business advice! And of course, the various "rules of making money" as per Ken Blanchard. Number 3 is perhaps the most important, and so simple:
"Income - expenses = profit".
So simple.
Monday, March 11, 2013
Writers Be. Where? About the Hydra (reblogged from the red ant)
The Random House Hydra imprint for science fiction ebooks has a few unusual things in its standard contract:
- No Advance (highly unusual for one of the “Big 6″ but fairly common amongst indie publishers
- “Profit sharing” instead of royalties: 50/50 split of profit instead of 10 – 12% of selling price or 25% of net price (*I’ll explain a bit further down – the idea of this post is to give you a bit of background into the figures and leave you to come to your own conclusions)
- Copy right terms are as for a traditional contract
- including Subsidiary rights
Random House has started an ebook publishing company, with the Science Fiction imprint called “Hydra”. (Not to be confused with “Hydra House”, a smaller publishing company.)
Their basic contract has a few points against which the SFWA (Science Fiction Writers Association, America I suspect) warns authors. Links below:
http://whatever.scalzi.com/2013/03/06/note-to-sff-writers-random-houses-hydra-imprint-has-appallingly-bad-contract-terms/
http://accrispin.blogspot.com/2013/03/sfwa-de-lists-hydra-random-house.html (btw I find it rather funny how the blog name, “Writers Beware”, is actually trademarked. Does this mean I can’t use these two words as a heading or inside a published text? Not quite clear on this one. Titles of books, e,g, cannot be copyrighted – though I’m sure they’ve made an exception to that rule for Harry Potter.)
The latter posted the reply Random House sent to their posts. I copy:
Dear John, Victoria, Jaym and SFWA Members,
We
read with interest your posts today about the new Random House digital
imprints and our business model. While we respect your position, you’ll
not be surprised to learn that we strongly disagree with it, and wish
you had contacted us before you published your posts. We would
appreciate you giving us an opportunity to share why we believe Hydra is
an excellent publishing opportunity for the science fiction community
by posting ours below to them.Hydra offers a different– but potentially lucrative–publishing model for authors: a profit share. In the more traditional advance- plus-royalty model, the publisher takes all the financial risk up front, and recoups the advance before the author earns any cash royalties. With a profit-share model, there is no advance. Instead, the author and publisher share equally in the profits from each and every sale. In effect, we partner with the author for each book.
As with every business partnership, there are specific costs associated with bringing a book successfully to market, and we state them very straightforwardly and transparently in our author agreements. These costs could be much higher–and certainly be more stressful and labor-intensive to undertake–for an author with a self-publishing model. Profits are generated once those costs are subtracted from the sales revenue. Hydra and the author split those profits equally from the very first sale.
When we acquire a title in the Hydra program, it is an all-encompassing collaboration. Our authors provide the storytelling, and we at Hydra support their creativity with best-in-class services throughout the publishing process: from dedicated editorial, cover design, copy editing and production, to publicity, digital marketing and social media tools, trade sales, academic and library sales, piracy protection, negotiating and selling of subsidiary rights, as well as access to Random House coop and merchandising programs. Together, we deliver the best science fiction, fantasy and horror books to the widest possible readership, thus giving authors maximum earning potential.
As a last point to the SFWA leadership, my colleagues and I would welcome the opportunity to meet with you at your earliest convenience to discuss the advantages of the Hydra business model, describe the program overall, and respond to any of your expressed concerns. Please let me know a good time for us to set up this meeting.
Many thanks and all the best,
Allison Dobson
Allison R. Dobson
V.P., Digital Publishing Director
Random House Publishing Group
Ah. That throws a bit of light.
Background & my own comment:
According to some of the comments on those two blogs, the SFWA lists “good publishers” to make it easier for authors to decide where to submit. They took Hydra off their lists, and one of the criteria to be on those lists is the advance payment.
Let’s disambiguate some terms first:
- An advance payment is an advance on royalties. This means if I publish you, Mr X, and I decide that I’ll give you the first 100 sales’ worth of royalties upfront, I don’t have to pay you royalties until I’ve sold the 101th copy, from which point I owe you royalties again, for every sale I make. It is quite simply that: An advance on royalties.
- Royalties are a certain percentage of the book cost (usually based on the publisher’s recommended selling price); standard (as per our literary agent in UK) is 10% for paper books; 25% for ebooks.
- Copyright stretches from the day the work is produced, to 70 years after the author’s death and is likely to be prolonged to 100 years in 18 years from now. Why? Because Walt Disney
died 52 years back… so when his copyright on Mickey Mouse and all
those other characters threatened to run out 2 years back, the Disney
company (bought out by now, by people who understand money better than
comic characters) managed to push through a court case that achieved
that copyright now lasts until 70 years after the death of author.
- What does that mean to you, Mr X? You wrote the book (say the book is called “Sitting Duck” and is about this fictitious alien Chief), and you, by creating the work, own the copyright.
- Now you go and sell it to a publisher. The whole right, or parts of it, or possibly a non-exclusive version, all depending on the contract, these days. But the Traditional Contract usually calls for you selling all of it to the publisher.
- This means that if someone wants to base a film on it, or make a toy franchise, they have to talk to your publisher, not to you. (Depending on what is in the contract, you might see nothing of that income.)
- It also means that your children, and grandchildren, and great-grandchildren, see nothing of those rights which stay in the hands of the publisher until 70 years after you are Dead, Mr X, and after that, does it revert to your family? No… by law it becomes creative common property which belongs to (and can be mined, adapted, rewritten, quoted or used by) everyone.
- (Still in the mood to sign your rights away?)
- At which point does copyright revert to you? Well, that depends.
- If you didn’t sign it away in the first place. Self-publishers keep their copyright forever.
- Or if you signed a non-exclusive contract; in which you granted a (typically small, indie) publisher license to publish you but are still free to submit (none of the traditional houses would offer you this deal).
- Or if your contract has a reversal clause, that if the book stops selling and goes out of print, after a certain time (I believe 2 years is standard) you can claim or buy back your copyright from the publisher.
How is paper publishing different from e-publishing?
First, let’s investigate in which ways they are the same.
Start-up cost: Every book has a certain start-up cost. Typically, this entails professional editing (which can be very expensive), professional cover art (again, it depends, but at best it is never cheap) and layout of the manuscript. The latter can be expensive (in the case of picture books, instruction manuals etc) or it can cost only a bit of savvy and standardization of one’s print (in the case of words-only novels etc).
These start-up costs are the same for paper and ebooks. Ebooks additionally have to be formatted for the various e-readers, which costs time and therefore man-power. A small indie will usually do that themselves; a large house will more likely employ staff to do it. Staff cost salary. Doing it yourself costs business time. Either way there is a cost.
This start-up cost is usually a once-off (unless future editions of the book are printed with a new cover, different layout etc.). It is not cheap; in fact it can be hugely expensive, depending. But it is only once.
Running overheads:
For the rest of the cost, there are significant differences.
- Firstly, printing cost. The publisher buys paper books from the printers (who produce them at a certain price).
- Ebooks have none such. Once they are created, the file is simply copied; over, and over, and over, single-click no-overheads.
- Marketing. I can’t say too much about this as I haven’t had enough publishing dollars to put behind pushing books in a big way; but paper books get marketed differently from ebooks. Paper book marketing is heavy in cost; ebook marketing costs time and savvy, or, if you have money, the services of an online marketing company.
- I would suspect that for the “Big 6″, most of their running cost goes into marketing and promotion.
The proportions are about like this for a paper book for digital printing (in South Africa):
Sales Price 100%
Share of bookshop 45% (- 65%, but digitally printed books hardly ever manage that deal)
Author royalty 10%
Printing cost 30 – 50% depending
Startup (editing, graphic) up to 80%
Are you blinking? It adds up to, in the best case, 165% cost to 100% return! This is why it is critical to spread the editing and graphic cost, which is a one-off expense, over as many copies as one can sell. If you can get a large amount of orders, it might be worth printing litho, which brings down the printing cost by a multiple of about 3. But be aware you may end up sitting on a large heap of “Sitting Ducks”. And an alien chief.
Compare this to the cost of an ebook:
Editing & graphics (yes, your book needs it!) – 80%
Author Royalty – whatever was agreed
Sales price – a LOT lower (usually 20% to 50% of the paper book)
So you have to spread your startup cost over even more sales, but there is no running cost.
The big problem with both these models is that in neither is marketing accounted for.
Now you know this background, what is so offensive about the Hydra Ebook contract?
- Is it the “no advance” clause (like a struggling small-scale Indie minimizing startup cost)?
- Is it the 50/50 profit share which means that the author literally shares the profit – and if there is nil, half of nil is again nil? Once again, some Indies do offer authors profit-sharing.
- Is it the services of editing and design? The author has no choice in those: If he wants “Sitting Duck” to be published under the imprint of “Hydra”, editing and design it is! (Your book needs these, believe me! “It’s already been edited by my mom / child / best friend” doesn’t count; they live in the same frame of reference as you do and might even use the same “dialectical” terms that nobody outside the family really understands – and you as a whole family have forgotten. You do need a real editor. Furthermore, the stance that a 3-year-old with a crayon can produce fitting cover art is maybe the most amateurish statement I’ve ever read anywhere – luckily I forgot where I read it. Your cover sells your book. Want to leave that in the hands of a kid – or a professional?)
- Oh, but is it that there is no profit (hence no “royalties”, but get that archaic concept out of your head) until all costs are covered? I think, that does offend. Sorely. An author needs a royalty, not “profit sharing”. Why? An author needs to know that his book, “Sitting Duck” by Mr X, is making sales and the reward – small but cherished – is coming his way. If the book sells 50 000 copies and the startup cost is recovered in the first 500 to a 1000 (remember ebooks are cheaper), fine and well for that large profit after the 1000th copy; but is it worth forfeiting the royalties on the first 1000 sales?
From a business
point of view, let’s put some figures here. If it took the publisher,
for argument’ sake, R9000 (or $1000) in editing & design and
formatting to start the book up, and the ebook sells for R36 ($4, or
“$3.99″) a copy, face it, the first 250 copies will go purely into
covering cost. But after that, the author makes (R18) $2 for
each copy of a book that’s already sold over 250 copies (and therefore
has momentum, is moving); or, R9 ($1) if the publisher sticks $2 per
copy of marketing into the books. For 10 000 copies sold, $10 000 in
profit (let’s work in dollars only, I’m getting confused here). This
compares to the $0.40 of standard royalty, which would give only $4000
on the same 10 000 copies. Shucks, $10 000 is a lot of marketing
dollars, I’m sure not that much is needed; so the author cut on that
Hydra deal would be closer to $20 000, as opposed to $4000 royalties.
(The publisher would have to be prepared to open his books though and
declare where his marketing dollar was spent. Honest is honest.)
So
does this 50/50 deal offend? Once the book is off the floor, for a
runaway seller, no; it’s a fantastic deal! But how many books make it
to 10 000 sales? (I know, I know; of course yours will, it’s the best
book ever written. *Rolling eyes* There isn’t an author who doesn’t
believe this of his/her own work; including myself, which proves that your book can’t be the best because mine already is!
- Is Hydra really “shifting the cost to the author”? Well – no. What they are doing, is minimizing their risk. Face it: You don’t lose any money on this deal. Never. Not ever. You don’t put down a cent. Hydra carries the startup cost alone; that they make you “cost-share” until there is actual profit does not negate the fact that they lay out the editing, design and formatting. If your book never sells more than 2 copies, the loss is 100% theirs. (Compare this to a self-publishing POD/Vanity publisher: You pay upfront for everything - graphics, editing, layout, and marketing, before they sell even one copy - and you still only get 10% royalties.) On the Hydra deal, you never lose money. So… does this really offend?
- “Standard” copyright clause. The company buys the rights for your ebook off you for life plus 70 years. That is, you’ll never see your copyright again. That is alright if there is a guarantee that the rights can be reverted for too few sales; if “Sitting Duck” becomes “Dead Duck”. Make sure you negotiate a reversal clause with them.
- Subsidiary rights. Whoa! We’re talking ebooks here. At this point, most sales of books are still dead-tree product. Would a paperback of the same story be considered a subsidiary of the ebook like the ebook can be considered a subsidiary of the paperback? Mind, not that I’d mind having my books published in every subsidiary shape there is by Random House!
I have decided, based on these calculations, that I don’t want to offer anyone further a 50/50 profit sharing contract. What? They sit and write the story; I do all the handstands and cartwheels and in the end, we profit-share? No. 10% royalties of recommended selling price it is, from copy 1 sold, take it or leave it. (25% for ebooks. Industry Standard.) When I become wealthy enough I might include an advance in the deal and take more of the risk (than I’m already taking with initial layout and ongoing print cost), but if I’m savvy enough to work out how to shift 10 000 copies of a clever book, I deserve whatever profit I can carve out after royalties, printing cost and the 65% that goes to the bookshops and their agents. My clever.
Would I as an author sign up with Hydra? Tough question. I’m hard-core self-publishing: I’d rather do all that work myself than sign away my copyright. But to have the Random House label on one’s book is not something to sneeze at. And there’s always the concept of them publishing the “subsidiary” paperback under their imprint… then again, I so love the P’kaboo cover art…
… signing off
kalinka
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