About a thousand years ago, I put up a poll on e-books. It’s there to your right. Then I forgot about it. I just looked at it again and it’s a flawed poll (I didn’t put all the pricing choices on there because . . . I forget why), plus given the span of time, people have probably changed their opinions, but what I’ve noticed is that the most popular choice for a fair price now–$2.99 to $3.99–has changed from the most popular choice previously: $6.99 to $7.99. That’s not good, said the published writer.
I’m wondering if that’s in part because of the Amazon/Hachette mess (don’t get me started) which may be lowering the perception of what an e-book is worth, or if it’s a result of the low-priced self-published books flooding the market (some of which are excellent, not judging here), or if it’s just a general tightening of pocketbooks. Whatever, it’s bad news for publishers because it’s going to make it more difficult to sell a book at a price where it turns a profit, and than in turn is bad for writers. I’ve talked before about how printing/digital costs don’t determine how much a book costs, but that doesn’t really matter when you’re trying to establish a good price point because perception is reality: if people believe something is too much to pay, it really is too much for them to pay.
I will admit to deciding not to buy an e-book because it was just too damn expensive, although I’d have made the same call if it had been a print book. On the other hand, I tend to buy every Terry Pratchett book when it comes out regardless of price, and I’d pay a lot to replace my Margery Allinghams and Michael Gilberts and Emma Lathens digitally. So “fair price” to me depends on what book I’m buying, and I’m sure that’s true of a lot of people, but if the majority of people who read this blog (people who are regular readers of fiction, I’m assuming) truly believe that paying more than $3.99 for an e-book is unfair, then that’s where they’ll decide to decline on most books. And if that’s true, things are looking grim for publishing. Fortunately for me, I’m great at ignoring polls (especially this flawed amateur one) and statistics and reality in general, and I think both print and digital publishing will adapt and come through this just fine. But still . . .
What’s your take on this? (That is, on e-book pricing and the future of publishing, not on my grasp of reality.)
Published on September 05, 2014 12:56
But me being a reader that went from paper back to digital I think some where in the middle works book even a dovetail that cost over 7.99 is priced to high.
I have paid the 7.99 before but not the hard bond price most go digtail because the cost is lower and they can buy more. A small book 5.99 is good even 6.99 is good but if you jump to high on your cost people will not buy as much are water for the price to go down.
So for me it would be somewhere in the middle and everybody is happy.