Why My Books are Inexpensive
I'm not a wealthy woman. I'm not even close. Never have been. Even when my husband was making good money, we were penny-pinchers because we knew that saving every penny we could would get us out there that much sooner. Back then, I sold used books online to fund my book-buying addiction, but now, I live too far from the post office to make that a reasonable way to earn extra cash. I keep the reins on my current book budget tight. I have to.
And I expect that the majority of readers out there are feeling the pinch, too.
Every once in a while, I'll see an impromptu survey on FB asking how much people are willing to spend on an ebook. The results are usually around $3.99 with the occasional dip into high priced ebooks if it's an author or a series the reader really loves.
My books are all $2.99. Why? Since I'm self-published, I can set whatever price I want to. I could set them at what I think they're worth. I could set them at what it costs me to put them out. But who wants to pay that exorbitant amount? LOL
I set them all at $2.99 because I don't want to feel like a hypocrite. If I can't afford to buy a book higher than $2.99, how could I possibly expect readers to pay more for my books?
Sure, if I sold them for more, I might be able to afford to buy higher priced books... But it doesn't work that way. Since $2.99 also seems to be what the market will bear, setting the price higher will actually net me less money in the long run. (Ask traditional publishing how that whole $9.99+ ebook strategy is working out for them. Last I heard, they were crying that sales were down across the board.)
I read something the other day where a writer was basically damning Amazon for creating the push for cheap books. And for sales sucking. And indie authors are the culprits, too, because we're willing to make beans and driving the prices down... Yeah, yeah. Again, the market pretty much tells businesses what they are willing to pay. And my market is telling me they want inexpensive reading material.
Of course, some of the same people who are demanding cheaper books are also damning cheaper books as being of lower quality, but that's a rant for another day.
My point is, I set the price for all my books where I think people will be able to afford to buy them. If you bought every one of my ebooks right now, you'd pay $20.93 for SEVEN books. As opposed to the traditional publishing low-low price of $9.99 x 7 = $69.93. You could buy all my books and take your spouse out to dinner for that amount. Or pay part of the electric bill. Or get your kids some new shoes. (At Payless, but still.)
Jus' sayin'.
And, yes, the above only applies to ebooks. I have to charge more for print because it costs more to produce them. (Funny how that works, ain't it?) And I have to be above a certain amount or I would end up owing Createspace money instead of making a little. (Especially on their 'extended distribution'... but don't get me started on that.)
So, there it is in a fruit cup. I still hope to make money selling low-priced novels. Volume is the key there. Sell loads of books and then I won't have to worry if I'm making beans on each one. I still won't be rich, but I'd like for this self-publishing venture to someday fund itself. That'd be awesome.
What's the average amount you pay for books? What's the most you'll pay for a book? Why?
And I expect that the majority of readers out there are feeling the pinch, too.
Every once in a while, I'll see an impromptu survey on FB asking how much people are willing to spend on an ebook. The results are usually around $3.99 with the occasional dip into high priced ebooks if it's an author or a series the reader really loves.
My books are all $2.99. Why? Since I'm self-published, I can set whatever price I want to. I could set them at what I think they're worth. I could set them at what it costs me to put them out. But who wants to pay that exorbitant amount? LOL
I set them all at $2.99 because I don't want to feel like a hypocrite. If I can't afford to buy a book higher than $2.99, how could I possibly expect readers to pay more for my books?
Sure, if I sold them for more, I might be able to afford to buy higher priced books... But it doesn't work that way. Since $2.99 also seems to be what the market will bear, setting the price higher will actually net me less money in the long run. (Ask traditional publishing how that whole $9.99+ ebook strategy is working out for them. Last I heard, they were crying that sales were down across the board.)
I read something the other day where a writer was basically damning Amazon for creating the push for cheap books. And for sales sucking. And indie authors are the culprits, too, because we're willing to make beans and driving the prices down... Yeah, yeah. Again, the market pretty much tells businesses what they are willing to pay. And my market is telling me they want inexpensive reading material.
Of course, some of the same people who are demanding cheaper books are also damning cheaper books as being of lower quality, but that's a rant for another day.
My point is, I set the price for all my books where I think people will be able to afford to buy them. If you bought every one of my ebooks right now, you'd pay $20.93 for SEVEN books. As opposed to the traditional publishing low-low price of $9.99 x 7 = $69.93. You could buy all my books and take your spouse out to dinner for that amount. Or pay part of the electric bill. Or get your kids some new shoes. (At Payless, but still.)
Jus' sayin'.
And, yes, the above only applies to ebooks. I have to charge more for print because it costs more to produce them. (Funny how that works, ain't it?) And I have to be above a certain amount or I would end up owing Createspace money instead of making a little. (Especially on their 'extended distribution'... but don't get me started on that.)
So, there it is in a fruit cup. I still hope to make money selling low-priced novels. Volume is the key there. Sell loads of books and then I won't have to worry if I'm making beans on each one. I still won't be rich, but I'd like for this self-publishing venture to someday fund itself. That'd be awesome.
What's the average amount you pay for books? What's the most you'll pay for a book? Why?
Published on September 14, 2016 05:52
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