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Apple, Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, Hachette Livre, and Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck (which owns Macmillan in Germany), have agreed to settle with the European Commission to shake allegations of eBook price fixing.
Under the terms of the settlement, “Each of the Four Publishers and Apple will terminate the agency agreements for the sale of e-books in the EEA concluded between each of the Four Publishers and Apple,” said the EU in its Official Journal. Here is an excerpt from the statement:
the Four Publishers will offer each retailer other than Apple the opportunity to terminate any agency agreements concluded for the sale of e-books that (i) restrict, limit or impede the retailer’s ability to set, alter or reduce the retail price, or to offer price discounts or promotions, or (ii) contain aprice MFN clause as defined in the Four Publishers’ commitments.
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First, a heartfelt thanks to everyone who signed up for the tour! I really appreciate all the support. I still have a few slots so you can still sign up to read an ebook for the tour and the book is up on Goodreads :)
Now, back to the ebook eXperiment!
Before I talk about formats and pricing, I thought I would share some 411 about where I am in the process - because I promised to be totally frank and honest:
What I have spent so far: My budget is about $1,000
As a financial disclaimer - I have no money to do this. I am actually taking on a job that is crap pay and hard work but will get me what I need to put this book out right. So don't think I'm rich and throwing a bunch of cash in.
$9 for stock photo
$400 for editing with professional editor
170$ for an 3 day ad (I will talk about this next week)
Time - priceless (someone asked me to log how many hrs Im spending - right now about 5 hours a day to get everything set up. I don't expect to spend as much time once the book is out.)
Here are some of the things I've done so far:
- Added my book to Goodreads
- Added my book to my web site
- Updating my website
- Answered every email and comment of support I've gotten (I out this just so I would think I've accom
Right then, the sale of ebooks is on the rise and is fast outstripping the sale of print books. That’s no secret at all. According to the most recent data, the sale of ebooks has tripled over the last year or so. However, when it comes to the returns, the digital publishing domain still accounts [...]
Shelli, thanks so much for being so frank and honest about the work you're putting into this experiment. I love reading these posts and I'm interested to see the results!
Don't opt out of the format on Smashwords. Opt out of the distribution. You still want to make those formats available for purchase.
Also? Smashwords does not feed to Amazon. Ever. Your only course of action is to put it up directly unless you go through a third party (such as BookBrewer).
Copyediting might cost you a bit more than the money you have alloted, and you'll probably want to speak with a copyeditor sooner rather than later, as a lot of them are booked up (there are a LOT of people self-publishing right now). My editor is fab but she is also booked up until March. :)
Hi Shelli. You may already know this, but Scrivener software will compile your book in mobi and epub. You can then open the file in Kindle or Nook, and see exactly what it looks like before you upload it. You don't have to deal with html for Kindle, or trust that Amazon will format your doc or pdf file correctly. Take a look at it.
My question about going with three different e-book distributors (Smashworld, Amazon and B&N) is whether you'll need to purchase your ISBN independent of them. Sorry if you covered this already...
Leigh Moore is taking on editing clients. You can find her at http://leightmoore.blogspot.com/
wow JIll and Ben - thank you - Ill make sure I do that.
Laurel - I believe smashwords (if I upgrade my account or so) will issue me one. So i think I can use that but Im still looking into that. Ill make sure I get back to you. :)
Also - anyone correct me if Im wrong - But you dont need an ISBN if you are just doing amazon or B&N - but others (like itunes) requires one.
Great tips here and from the commenters too!
I chose 2.99 for the impulse buy. I will probably go to 3.99 for my second book, but I wanted to get my name out there first. I'll likely use the .99 point in the future with "older" books to help promote new books and to give the older books a sales boost. That's my plan anyway. :)
Oh, yeah, I recommend Leigh too. www.leighmoore.blogspot.com
She just edited my second book and did a fab job.
Wow! Thanks for laying this all out for us! Good luck!
Wow - these posts are so informative! I'm navigating some of this same territory myself. Haven't decided yet whether I'm going to take the plunge, but it's a mind-exploding amount to learn in a short period of time, no?
Question about formatting. Does that mean you are formatting for B&N & Amazon and Smashwords is doing the others, or do you have to format for Smashwords and then they make it available in all the other formats?
Confusing!
There's so much to learn!!! I wish I could help, but everyone else seems to know more. I definitely do the 'stop and consider' when a book is $4.99 or more. I have bought a lot of books at the $2.99 price point. Either price should work.
I agree awesome info!
I didn't realize the royalty would change if the price is different. Interesting.
I've used Smashwords before to download an e-book to my computer. not sure you can on Amazon & B&N. Some of us have no e-reader. I don't plan to get one. They're expensive and most of the books I buy are to give away on my blog either with an author interview or random giveaway. The rest I read at the library. You might want to think about this in terms of marketing.
Thanks for all the helpful info.
You don't need an ISBN, but Smashwords will give you one if you do the Premium catalog. Amazon has their own special #. I wouldn't buy your book for $3.99 and I like you. Rude, but honest. Good luck!
Wow. FASCINATING info, Shelli! You have done a LOT of work!
Loving this Xperiment!!!
Thanks Shelli for all your hard work on research. We all appreciate the time you took and sharing this information with us.
I might be going this route soon and your posts are so helpful.
Good luck with your venture. If you still need a host let me know I have some time available in December if that is when your are launching. November as well.
What impresses me here, Shelli, is that you're being honest about EVERYTHING, including the cost you're incurring. I don't think a lot of writers understand this part. It's not cheap if you do it right. And doing it right means having a professional editor.
The amount you're paying out also sounds realistic. A friend of mine paid $250 total to self publish her book (this amount is only for the ebook side of things), and that included the editor. Yeah, I was wondering how she managed to do it so cheaply, too. I know she's also published with Carina Press, so maybe this has something to do with it (somehow). When she told me how much she paid to self pub a different book that didn't require an editor (it had been close to being sold with one NYC publisher), it was only $50 less than when she hired a professional editor. I'm thinking it's a friend who only charged a very nominal fee.
I'm looking forward to hearing more about what you're doing.
I agree with you about the pricing. Your logic sounds like the Goldilocks syndrome: Not too hot, not too cold. Just right.
SWhelli,
I have a friend who published an ebook recently and wrote about formatting on his blog. You can check it out from his web page:
www.larrykahn.com
Your research looks accurate based on my experience as an indie author. I think you've chosen the right price and the right distributors for the right reasons. You don't have to pay anything to Smashwords, though, unless it has something to do with them giving you an ISBN. I wouldn't know about that since I bought my own. In your case, since you only plan to do this one book and your finances are limited, you might consider purchasing 20 ISBNs from Bowker. You'll need at least four. One for Smashwords, one for Amazon, one for Barnes and Noble, and one for POD if you intend to release the book that way. You can get 20 for $250. If you get just one it costs $125. I sprung for 100, but that's a chunk of change at $575. It's true that Amazon has it's own numbering system, but it's still more professional to give a book an ISBN. Whoever owns the ISBN is considered the publisher, so if you want to be the publisher (rather than Amazon) you need an ISBN.
Formatting isn't that tough. If you follow the Smashwords Style Guide (a free download) you won't have any trouble. Be sure to use the nuclear option to get rid of all the wonky formatting Word tosses in a document. I have illustrated notes on how to convert your Smashwords Word doc to Mobi (Kindle) and ePub (B&N). I plan to make this available for free on Smashwords in the next few days. I'll email you a copy when I get a chance.
As far as copyediting goes, even if you hire someone, things are likely to sneak through. It's a good idea to have several people read it to check for typos. I also downloaded WordTalk to my computer and had it read my Word documents back to me. You find a lot of missing and transposed words this way. Stuff our eyes seem to skip over.
This series continues to be a valuable read, including all of the comments which is one reason I love this blogosphere. The flow of information is so multi-directional, which benefits everybody! Thanks again for doing this!