Friday, December 30, 2011

Debutante Ball staring "Watched"

Welcome to the Debutante Ball, 
A Feast of Debut Authors Blog Tour.




The party Ends today with me. So cool!

We're all giving away our books and some awesome swag. So, enter each day on each blog below on or before December 31st to win.



Announcing Watched, a contemporary suspense Novel by Cindy M. Hogan.
Released June 6, 2011.
What readers are saying about Watched:

"Fantastic read, full of suspense and excitement."
-Bullard GMTA

"One of those books you don't want to put down."
-S. Hill

"Well written and suspenseful."
-A. Brown

"Usually I'm prone to murder mysteries by James Patterson, and this kept me just as enthralled as his books."
-S. McClure

"This is my new favorite book."
-A. Ahlstrom 

Just for this contest and to thank everyone who has made Watched a success and spread the word even more, Watched is only .99 cents for all e-readers.  
Yahoo! Go get yours today
Nook
Kindle
all other e-formats also available. Get it at your favorite spot.

All you have to do to enter is comment and tell others about the fun Each time you comment, Tweet, Facebook or blog about the ball during the rest of December, you get an entry. Just leave a comment with the link to what you did. Easy!


Have fun and go find out about all these authors. 
                  One a day. 
                              Enter their contests and win.


Have fun and enjoy the books and swag!

12 Elizabeth Mueller elizabethmueller.blogspot.com

17 Pendragon Innmen PendragonWrites.com 

19 Alex J. Cavanaugh alexjcavanaugh.blogspot.com


21 Fiauna Lund formyfour.blogspot.com

22 Anastasia V. Pergakis http://labotomyofawriter.com/


27 Patti Larsen pattilarsen.blogspot.com

28 Red Tash RedTash.com

29 Annetta Ribken wordwebbing.com


Leave me some love and comment!

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Indie Publishing Secrets Revealed. Effective Book Descriptions

Go enter a huge book giveaway here.

What should the description of your book include on Barnes and Noble, Amazon, and all the other sites your book is sold?

1. It should start with a few catchy review quotes that are short and sweet like: "I couldn't put it down.", "well-written", "fantastic read". Definitely give credit to those who reviewed it with a dash and their last name along with "reviewer". If you get the phrases off Amazon or already got permission to post the reviews, go for it. If not, then ask permission before posting the names. Check out Watched's description here.

2. Then, tease your reader. Get them excited to jump into your book. 3-4 sentences only. here.

3. Put the back blurb in if it's a good one (and short) and it better be. here.

4. End with 3-4 other quotes that speak to other great things about your book that weren't covered in the quotes you put in the beginning. here.

5. Add a call to action- buy this, without saying buy this. For example: Only .99 cents.


  • Once you have it just how you want it, ask a lot of people to read it over and give their two cents. 
  • Listen to what they have to say and then ask why they say it.Tune into the feelings your description evokes. That is so important. You want people to really want to buy it. Use your critique groups, your online groups, even Facebook and Twitter to try it out.
Good Luck and have fun writing your description. Make it perfect. 
Just remember, you need this at least one month before you release or launch your book.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Free Books for You!



Come join the fun! 
I hope you win all kinds of books today!
You can pick any book you want with a 
$10 Barnes and Noble gift card. 
I'd pick Divergent by Veronica Roth if you don't own it yet. It's my favorite book of 2011, besides my own, of course.(Watched. ebook only .99 cents right now! wow!)
Easy Entry- Do them all in under 1 minute.

1. Follow this blog -mandatory
2. Like my Watched Facebook page here +2 extra
3. Like my Watched Amazon page here  +2 extra
4. Follow my 7 things I love blog  extra +1
5. Join iWriteNetwork +1 extra- an awesome site for authors or would-be-authors
**Leave me a comment here with what entries you did and your email so I can notify you if you win.
This giveaway ends on the 31st, so hurry.

Good luck! Now go enter all the other giveaways



Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Indie Publishing Secrets Revealed - To Consider

Today I'm blogging at iWriteNetwork.


Click here to read my indie secret for today.

Click here to join iWriteNetworkninga nuts and bolts site to support writers of all abilities.
Come on over and join a safe place to interact with other authors and learn all there is to know about writing, marketing and publishing. It's free and you'll learn a ton.

Every other week we interview an amazing author on Saturdays at 9 am MST. We post notes on the interviews on the site and you can ask questions during the interview. If you are unable to be there live, you can always listen to the BlogTalkRadio interview at any time.

Stay tuned for an awesome all day workshop coming in January. It will rock.


See ya at all the iWriteNetwork sites. Let's learn together.


Oh, and the merriest of Christmases to you all.  

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Indie Publishing Secret- One Hour of Daily to Dos

I'm making a list, checking it twice....



It is so important that you keep up with all the little things. (That don't involve your manuscript)And remember, the little things are really the big things. I don't spend more than You can do it all in less than one hour a day. If you procrastinate, it will overwhelm you.

1. Yahoo/gmail other mail services.
      Make subfolders for all your mail and always move emails to the right
      folder. Check once in the morning and once at night.Don't wait to
      reply. Do it now. 10-15  minutes total.

2. Google reader (google.com/reader) A great tool for checking out all the blogs you
     follow in one spot. Scroll through and pick 5-10 to comment on daily 5 minutes

3. Facebook profile (Friends) 
     Post at least once a day and scroll through the news clicking "like" and commenting for 5 minutes max
     twice  a day. This is where you do more personal posts.

4. Facebook page (s) (Likes)
    Post something interesting about your book or what you're working on. It is writing or author related. 5
    minutes max

5. Forums/groups (Yahoo, Facebook, Linked-in)  you belong to. 
    Change your settings to receive digest versions of posts. Scroll through and comment on as much as you
    can in 10 minutes. Be disciplined.

6. Twitter 
     Send out a tweet at least twice a day and scroll through the recent tweets and comment, retweet and reply
     to as many as you can in 5 minutes

7. Goodreads-
     Sign up for digests and look at it in your mail. Comment and update book statuses for 5 minutes.

8. Shelfari- Not mandatory, but nice to update your books and follow a few people here and there.

9. Amazon page (Author central) Check all your author info, sales info and page once a day. Make sure it is current and looks good. Update any appearances, signings, etc you have coming up. 5 minutes

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Meet Awesome Debut Authors and Win



Welcome to the Debutante Ball, 
A Feast of Debut Authors Blog Tour.




The party starts today and goes all month long.

And we're all giving away our books and some awesome swag. So, enter each day on each blog below on or before December 31st to win.



Announcing Watched, a contemporary, romantic suspense by Cindy M. Hogan.
Released June 6, 2011.
What readers are saying about Watched:

"Fantastic read, full of suspense and excitement."
-Bullard GMTA

"One of those books you don't want to put down."
-S. Hill

"Well written and suspenseful."
-A. Brown

"Usually I'm prone to murder mysteries by James Patterson, and this kept me just as enthralled as his books."
-S. McClure

"This is my new favorite book."
-A. Ahlstrom 
(And I don't know any of these people. I get at least one email a day thanking me for Watched. So freaking cool!)

Just for this contest and to thank everyone who has made Watched a success and spread the word even more, Watched is only .99 cents for all e-readers.  
Yahoo! Go get yours here today

All you have to do to enter is comment and tell others about the fun Each time you comment, Tweet, Facebook or blog about the ball during the rest of December, you get an entry. Just leave a comment with the link to what you did. Easy!


Have fun and go find out about all these authors. 
                  One a day. 
                              Enter their contests and win.


Today you can find out all about Elizabeth's book and win, tomorrow, Regan's and so forth. 


Have fun and enjoy the books and swag!

12 Elizabeth Mueller elizabethmueller.blogspot.com

17 Pendragon Innmen PendragonWrites.com 

19 Alex J. Cavanaugh alexjcavanaugh.blogspot.com


21 Fiauna Lund formyfour.blogspot.com

22 Anastasia V. Pergakis http://labotomyofawriter.com/


27 Patti Larsen pattilarsen.blogspot.com

28 Red Tash RedTash.com

29 Annetta Ribken wordwebbing.com


See ya tomorrow with a Indie Secret.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Searching for a Title

It is truly a miracle that I finished my Nano goal of writing a 50,000 word book in one month. I actually finished on the last day. Yay!!

Now, I need to name the book and edit it.

I'd love your help in naming it. Vote for your favorite.

1.Self-publishing: the nitty gritty

2.Self-publishing: the real nuts and bolts

3.Indie-publishing how to

4.Indie-publishing: the nitty gritty

5.Indie-publishing: the real nuts and bolts

6. The Definitive Guide to Self-publishing

7. Your suggestion here

Thanks for your help!

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Oh, No!


Wondering where I've been? 

This has been one crazy week.

First, I got this horrible cold on Sunday.

On Mon. I was behind on my Nano goal and had a good 10,000 words to finish by Wednesday...

I'm subbing for three months for my good friend, Jen, at a junior high in Davis County.(She had the cutest little girl on Thanksgiving Day). So, I had to sub every day from 8-3, then, I had to be at a different Costco each day from 3:30-7:30.

On Mondays, I spend the evening with my family. This Monday was no exception. I was still sick.

I wrote every chance I got on Tues and finished my 50,000 words on my indie publishing book on Wednesday afternoon. Nano completed! Whew! Boy, did that feel great! My critique group came from 8-10 p.m. Still sick.

On Thursday, hurricane winds showed up at my house about 2 am. The winds were so loud, no one slept. They hung out until about 2 pm. No kidding. Winds up to 100 miles an hour crashed against everything in their path.

Our 40 year old pine tree bit the dust, landing on my little fruit trees, flattening them. Something hit our chimney and broke it off, our fence fell right before our eyes, one section at a time, our pool house collapsed, shingles went flying, along with our trampoline that crumpled up in a small ball and we have no idea where our wooden bench went-not a leaf remained in our yard.

Even though trampolines were flying through the air, the School District did not close the schools and so, my car being pelted by all kinds of debris, I drove to the junior high. It only took me 30 minutes(it usually takes me 10). I saw three semis on their sides on my way and my car swayed precariously the whole way there.
We were in class for 1 hour and the power went out. We played games in the dark (the window did cast a bit of light).

At noon, they finally let may teachers leave since most of the parents had already picked up their kids.

The power was also out at my house. Once the temperature hit 50 degrees in our house, we headed for my mom's to spend the night.

Luckily, the school district closed the schools on Friday. I spent the day at Ogden and Bountiful Costcos.

Today, Sat., I spent the day at the SL Costco and my cold is still hanging on....

But, I'm back...hooray! Tuesday I'll have some fun indie news for you.

Happy Winter!

Monday, November 28, 2011

We have a winner!





The winner of the Thankful Hop has been notified via e-mail. Congrats. See ya tomorrow for some indie news.


I hope you all had a fabulous Thanksgiving.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Indie Publishing Secrets Revealed - News!

Before I reveal the secret, I'm going to remind you to enter the thankful giveaway here. Over 300 amazing prizes up for grabs.Easy entry.


Now, drumroll please,
the secret is...
I am not working on my 3rd novel in the Watched Series for Nano, I am working on something totally different that I am also completely passionate about-
.

A nuts and bolts book about indie publishing.

This will not be your ordinary, run of the mill, how-to book. This will get down to the nitty-gritty.
Every last tidbit I can possibly share with you to make it as easy as possible
to launch your book successfully will be included.

Nothing will be held back.

I'm about 2/3 of the way through. I'll be done before the end of the month and I will win Nano. Then, I will finish the edits on "Protected', the 2nd book in the Watched Series and keep chugging along with #3.

Come back next week to help me pick the name of the book. I hope to tell you I'm done with the 1st draft.

Happy Nanoing!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Giving Back


Welcome to the Gratitude Giveaway Hop where we thank all our followers with the simplest entry EVER.

Just follow this blog and leave a comment where you can be contacted if you win. That's it! Good Luck.

What can you win on this site? A 
$10 Amazon Gift card.

Now go enter all the other blogs' giveaways.


Happy Thanksgiving!

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Big Indie Publishing News

Go check out these amazing indie authors' giveaway first, and then read this post.



  OK! This is 


The other day, while signing books in a Costco, I was talking to a manager about getting ebook scanners into stores. He told me that they are actually looking into a machine that prints dvds and bluerays while you wait. He says they lose so much money on theft of dvds and especially bluerays that it is a plausible option for them.

Well, it's also in the works for BOOKS. No kidding. Read this article. It is amazing.
POD in stores ?

It's a reality already. So cool! I love this idea. It costs a bit more, but is reasonable, don't you think. Sure the emphasis is on backlist right now, but just think what it could do for indie-authors.

Yeah! I thought you'd like that!

MY SECRET? Next week....I promise.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Halloween fun in the spirit of "Watched"

Sorry to make you wait for the secret for another week, but in the spirit of Watched and becoming someone other than you are...perhaps someone you've always wanted to be...here are some Halloween Pics of me, my family and my friends. Go enter a bunch of giveaways here.(These are the easiest ever)

Halloween 2006




 The witch and the ghoul?



Experiments anyone?
Is there a doctor in the house?

I want to suck your blood...AhAhAh

Peace brothers
Ye good for nothing pirates
Be careful of an old man's smells
Discover yourself

Friday, November 4, 2011

Dave Farland's in the House!

If this looks familiar...sorry, Dave's launch was pushed back to today. He'll answer all your questions

Audiobooks
I've been looking into turning my book into an audiobook because so many people have approached me at signings and asked when it will be in audiobook form. (I also listen to my fair share of audio-books) They assure me that they will galdly buy it because they just don't have time to read anymore. 

Have you looked into getting an audiobook made? Wow! Those services are expensive and you're not even guaranteed a great reader.  They can run you around 20 grand. Yep! Take that deep breath.

So, when Dave asked for volunteers to host him this month I was so excited to have him address this very issue.

Here's what he had to say..oh, and if you leave him a question today, he will answer you, so be sure to click the box that will send you his response when you ask a question in the comment form.

Breaking into Audio Books by Dave Farland

As an indie author, how do you break into audiobooks?    
David Farland/Wolvertin
Ah, that’s an easy one!  Most indie authors are afraid of what it might cost to hire a celebrity actor to read a book.  Really, folks, there are other ways.  A few years ago, I had some readers ask if I would ever be willing to podcast my own novel.  I’d never thought of it.  I’m not an actor.  But I did a little informal survey over the next few weeks, and found that 55% of the people who asked about audiobooks said that they would prefer to hear the author read it in his or her own voice.
Of course they would!  I’d love to hear Tolkien read Lord of the Rings to me.  I’d much rather hear it from him than from the finest actor.  In fact, I’d love to listen to both, one after another. 
The point here is that you can do it yourself.  You can either get your own recording equipment or find someone to do it for you.  If you have a local college nearby, find someone who is already working in sound for films.  You can probably hire them to use their own equipment and even mix it for you, taking out your “um’s” and “ah’s.”
Don’t be afraid.  Take an acting class or two if you feel that you must.  As you record, just make sure that you read it the way that you wrote it—with the names spoken the way you want, the stresses put in the sentences the way that you imagined it, and so on.  If you don’t get it right the first time, you can do multiple takes of the same line.  It’s really not that hard, or that scary.
If you really feel that it would be better with a professional actor, just look around.  I have a friend whose voice would be wonderful for broadcast work.  I knew an actor years ago, a fellow in a motorcycle gang, whose “look” would only let him play crazed villains in movies.  He was a big old monster of a fellow, with an enormous beard, and biceps the size of beer kegs.  But he was a sweet guy, and his voice was amazing.  Many times, great voice actors just don’t have the face needed to be popular stars.  So you can often get them to work for you inexpensively or even free, so that they can boost their own resumes as they go seeking other voice-over work.
Your audiobook doesn’t have to be expensive to produce.  You can edit in sound effects if you like.  With my latest book, we had a professional composer create a full soundtrack for it, which is a first for me, but you don’t need all of that.
Once you’ve made your recording, you can post it to the internet from your own website, and even sell it on places like iTunes.  You might even submit it to professional audiobook publishers like Audible.com. (Please see the various vendors for their own rules on how to submit.)

If you haven't read any of Dave's books, now's the time! His new book has arrived! Get it now. Oh, and go like his facebook page.
David Farland’s latest novel, Nightingale, tells the story of a young man who is abandoned at birth, and raised in foster care.  At the age of sixteen he is thrown out of his house, and meets an extraordinary teacher, a woman who recognizes that he is a “Nightingale,” a creature not quite human.  The novel is available in audio format, enhanced novel, e-book, and hardcover.  Check it out, along with the soundtrack, at http://www.nightingalenovel.com/
Do you have any questions for Dave? You have his undivided attention. Just leave your question in the comments and he'll answer you.
I wouldn't dare do my own audiobook, but I sure know a lot of high school drama whizzes and college production majors....how about you? Would you be the voice of your book?

Want more of Dave? Hop over to my friend, C.K. Bryant's site-she's hosting him today too.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Indie Publishing Secret #?

Okay, so I'm doing Nano this month and I'm cruising along. I'm almost to 3,000 words today and I signed books at the Salt Lake Costco from 11-6.

One especially fun thing that happened today was a cute teen coming to buy 11 books for Christmas presents for all her friends. So cool.

I'm sorry I don't have a big secret to share today. I'm letting Nano take over. Next week I'll have a big announcement to share...I think you'll all love it. Maybe you'll even forgive me for missing today.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Guest Blogger- Dave Farland on Audio Books

David Farland/Wolvertin
Dave Farland
Extra Extra!

I've been looking into turning my book into an audiobook because so many people have approached me at
 signings and asked when it will be in audiobook form. (I also listen to my fair share of audio-books) They assure me that they will gladly buy it because they just don't have time to read anymore. 

Have you looked into getting an audiobook made? Wow! Those services are expensive and you're not even guaranteed a great reader.  They can run you around 20 grand. Yep! Take that deep breath.

So, when Dave Farland asked for volunteers to host him this month I was so excited to have him address this very issue. If you don't know about Dave. Go visit his site. He's awesome.

Here's what he had to say..oh, and if you leave him a question today, he will answer you, so be sure to click the box that will send you his response when you ask a question in the comment form.

Breaking into Audio Books by Dave Farland

As an indie author, how do you break into audiobooks?
Ah, that’s an easy one!  Most indie authors are afraid of what it might cost to hire a celebrity actor to read a book.  Really, folks, there are other ways.  A few years ago, I had some readers ask if I would ever be willing to podcast my own novel.  I’d never thought of it.  I’m not an actor.  But I did a little informal survey over the next few weeks, and found that 55% of the people who asked about audiobooks said that they would prefer to hear the author read it in his or her own voice.
Of course they would!  I’d love to hear Tolkien read Lord of the Rings to me.  I’d much rather hear it from him than from the finest actor.  In fact, I’d love to listen to both, one after another. 
The point here is that you can do it yourself.  You can either get your own recording equipment or find someone to do it for you.  If you have a local college nearby, find someone who is already working in sound for films.  You can probably hire them to use their own equipment and even mix it for you, taking out your “um’s” and “ah’s.”
Don’t be afraid.  Take an acting class or two if you feel that you must.  As you record, just make sure that you read it the way that you wrote it—with the names spoken the way you want, the stresses put in the sentences the way that you imagined it, and so on.  If you don’t get it right the first time, you can do multiple takes of the same line.  It’s really not that hard, or that scary.
If you really feel that it would be better with a professional actor, just look around.  I have a friend whose voice would be wonderful for broadcast work.  I knew an actor years ago, a fellow in a motorcycle gang, whose “look” would only let him play crazed villains in movies.  He was a big old monster of a fellow, with an enormous beard, and biceps the size of beer kegs.  But he was a sweet guy, and his voice was amazing.  Many times, great voice actors just don’t have the face needed to be popular stars.  So you can often get them to work for you inexpensively or even free, so that they can boost their own resumes as they go seeking other voice-over work.
Your audiobook doesn’t have to be expensive to produce.  You can edit in sound effects if you like.  With my latest book, we had a professional composer create a full soundtrack for it, which is a first for me, but you don’t need all of that.
Once you’ve made your recording, you can post it to the internet from your own website, and even sell it on places like iTunes.  You might even submit it to professional audiobook publishers like Audible.com. (Please see the various vendors for their own rules on how to submit.)
David Farland’s latest novel, Nightingale, tells the story of a young man who is abandoned at birth, and raised in foster care.  At the age of sixteen he is thrown out of his house, and meets an extraordinary teacher, a woman who recognizes that he is a “Nightingale,” a creature not quite human.  The novel is available in audio format, enhanced novel, e-book, and hardcover.  Check it out, along with the soundtrack, at http://www.nightingalenovel.com/
Do you have any questions for Dave? You have his undivided attention. Just leave your question in the comments and he'll answer you.
I wouldn't dare do my own audiobook, but I sure know a lot of high school drama whizzes and college production majors....how about you? Would you be the voice of your book?

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Indie Publishing Secret #24 When Do I Get Paid?


Indie Publishing Secret #24- Payment


Last week we talked about how much we earn as authors, now it's time to discuss when we get paid.

Publishers pay quarterly. That means you will get a check every three months when your book sells.

If you indie-publish you will be at the mercy of the places you sell your books. For example, Createspace pays monthly after the books sells. That means that books you sell in February will show up in your bank account at the end of April and only if your total is more than $20.00.

By the way, it is important that you let them pay you electronically. Checks require higher totals sold and take a lot more time.

You will get paid for your ebook with Amazon 60 days following the end of the calendar month when the applicable sale occured. That means that if you sold a book in January, you would get paid in April for that book if your total is more than $10.00.

Barnes and Noble pays the same way Amazon does.

Smashwords pays quarterly and you receive the check 40 days after that period ends. If you sell books in Jan/Feb/and March, you will be paid at the end of April and March may not be included. Confusing, huh! Your total must be more than $10.00.

You may put your book in consignment stores. You will be paid if they sell.

My distributor pays monthly, but there is a lag time of 3 months from when the book was invoiced. That means that at the end of each month a new books go out, they send me an invoice. Three months later I get paid on that invoice. 

It's tricky.

That is why you need to have a back-up of money to tide you over. If you print 1000 and all thousand go out that first month, you still have to wait almost 4 months to get paid.

You will need more money to print more books and you can't rely on that income. Be prepared to pay for several printings before you get paid.

You could, of course, put it all out there and print more than 1000 at a time. You will save per book, but they may take time to move or never move. Not to discourage you, but first time authors usually don't move 2,000 books. With that said, my book has already moved 2500 in less than 4 months. It is possible.

You have to determine the amount of risk you are comfortable with. Also, with debut indie authors, the curve tends to go up slowly at first then explodes around the year to two year mark. That's a long time to wait to be paid.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Indie Publishing Secrets Revealed #23 - Tracking Sales

Indie Publishing Secrets Revealed #23- How to track print/ebook sales

It's easy to check with your distributor to find out how many books they've sent to stores, but how do you track how many are selling in those stores and how do you track your e-sales?

Ebook tracking

Smashwords sales-go to your dashboard to get a quick look for books sold and how many total downloads free and paid. Just subtract the sold total from the total downloads and you have how many you gave for free,too.

To get more specific information, click on sales and payment information on the right sidebar. If you scroll down you will be able to see where exactly your sales came from unless you hit a quarterly reporting period. If there is no information listed when you scroll down, just click on the quarterly earnings mapping report at the top of the page. It will give you a quarterly report and show very specifically where your sales came from.


Kindle sales

Go to your KDP author site and click on reports at the top of the page. You can generate 3 different sales reports from there: prior month, previous 6 weeks or month to month. Just click on one and the details will pop up before your eyes. 

Also, using Author Central, available free to all KDP authors, you can see your ranking and a graph of your sales. It also shows your ranking. See below for more information on Amazon Central. The ebook information on this site is updated hourly.

Print sales

Createspace tracks your sales on their site. Just log into your book and go to sales.

If you have a distributor other than Createspace, you can go to Author Central.

It is a free service that KDP offers all its authors.

Once you sign up, you not only put in a profile, you can put in signings and a blog and twitter link. Most importantly, it puts you in touch with Nielson Book Scan that shows, with up to 75% accuracy, your print book sales in 100 different regions throughout the U.S. It is quite remarkable to see the data. It graphs it as well as showing you sales by geography. It does not purport to catch all sales, but enough to show you significant things. This data is updated every Friday.

Click on this link to read more about Amazon and its effect on publishers and authors. Quite remarkable. Amazon seems unstoppable.  NY Times article

Next week I'll clue you in on how you get paid from all these sites and how often. It's not what you think....

Happy tracking sales!

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Indie Publishing Secrets revealed #22 Where's the Money?

Indie Publishing Secrets revealed   Where's the Money?

Typical scenario for a published book with a traditional publisher

Cost of you book in stores-Retail    $13.99

The bookstore pays 60%(typically) for your book. You pay your publisher and agent from that amount. $8.39

Your publisher takes 65% of that for advertising, distributing and printing. $5.45 (65%)

Your agent takes 15% for selling your book to the publisher-I'm not sure if that 15% is taken from the $8.39 or the $2.94. So, I've color coded them.

What's left for you?     $2.50 (30%) or $1.68 (20%)

You pay Uncle Sam about 1/3 of that    $1.13/1.67 (13%,20%) profit

If your experience with traditional publishing was different than this, I'd love to hear about it. Please comment.

Indie Publishing

Cost of your book in retail stores       $13.99

Bookstores pay 60% of retail for your book     that leaves $8.39
Your distributor takes 25% of that 60%           They earn $2.10.  That leaves $6.29

Subtract the cost to print your book                  $1.25(15%)-$3.50 (42%) for a 350 page book depending
                                                                        on how many you print.

What you get                                                    $3.04 (36%) to $4.79 (57%) if you do all free advertising
                                                                         Good luck with that

Uncle Sam takes about 1/3                               $2.12 (25%)-3.16 (38%)

POD (Print on Demand) Publisher I will use Createspace as the example

                                 Cost of your book         $13.99
                            
                                                                     You get $6.24 from sales at Createspace
                                                                                   $3.44 from sales on Amazon
                                                                                   $.64 from all other .coms
                                              Your book is not in stores

Ebooks

Smashwords takes about 19%. That is about $.18 per dollar your book sells for
If you let Smashwords distribute to Barnes and Noble, Diesel, Kobe and others, you end up with 60%. That means that if you sell your book for $2.99 you'll get $1.81.

Amazon.com (KDP)
If you price your book between $2 and $9.98, you will earn 65%
If you price your book less than $1.99 or over $9.99, you will earn 35%.

Happy earning