the business arguments going around
16 Jan 2007 02:05 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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However, I just couldn't let that sit. I get that the royalties are quicker to earn out if you make more money off the hardback, but I'm also thinking of my own wallet, and how much money I have, and how far it goes. So I ran a few numbers, based on Alma's explanation of her own contracts (which, I might add, are probably still far better than the usual peons, seeing how she's got a long publishing history and more clout than she'll admit, because she's like that). So I went looking for the break-even points between the three options.
A hardback book, at $25, will earn the author:
$12,500 for the 1st 5K sold, at 10% royalties
$15,625 for the 2nd 5K sold, at 12.5% royalties
at 10K sold: author earns $28,125; avg $2.81 per
total spent by readers: $250,000.
A trade paperback, at $16, will earn the author:
$9,375 for 1st 5K sold, at 7.5% royalties
$9,375 for 2nd 5K sold, at 7.5% royalties
$9,375 for 3rd 5K sold, at 7.5% royalties
at 15K sold: author earns $28,125; $1.20 per
total spent by readers: $240,000.
A mass market, at $7, will earn the author:
$2,800 for the 1st 5K sold, at 8% royalties
$2,800 for the 2nd 5K sold, at 8% royalties
...and so on up to:
$2,800 for the 10th 5K sold, at 8% royalties
at 50,215 sold, author earns $28,120; $0.56 per
total spent by readers: $351,505.
Feel free to draw your own conclusions. I know what I'm thinking.