THE Group for Authors! discussion
Publishing and Promoting
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What to set your Creativespace paperback book price to???

Search the threads on Createspace--I know they deal with this topic extensively. There's a formula, but in order to have a $2.00 profit it will be closer to 2x the production cost.
(Actually if you're using Createspace, they have a Pricing calculator and a minimum list price. My copies cost me $6.25 but my minimum list price is $10.48 so that they get a profit and I get a profit.)
Of course this is all for the PRINT copies. Ebooks you can pretty much price however you want.

Judy wrote: "You won't get any profit if your book sells to any extended distribution sites, as they get a cut as well, and you only receive yours if your price is above that.
Search the threads on Createspace..."


What we see is an occasional rush of print orders indicating a book club selection, then a drop-off in orders.
Hope that suggestion helps,

I think the costs may be higher since its Print on Demand.



Alexandra wrote: "Can someone let me know, if I increase the price via the dashboard will it put the book back into review/draft like it does on Kindle?"


Alexandra wrote: "Yay. Thanks, that really bugs me about Kindle. I understand resetting it if you reupload the actual document but basic tings such as pricing or checking worldwide rights or whatever is a bit of a p..."


I love Amazon. I just sold two of my books the other day. Other sellers are asking why more for my book than I am. One seller is selling for thirty dollars not including shipping.


Ronald wrote: "Brandon, does $14 translate to $13.99?"


I make most of my money through ebook sales, though, so I try not to worry about it too much.

* CS Store: 20%
* Amazon.com: 40%
* Expanded Distribution: 60%
The discount determines your gross margin on the sale, and your print costs are subtracted from that margin. Here's what happens to a $20 book with a $5 print cost sold through ED:
* The reader buys the book for $20 at B&N.
* Your gross margin on that sale is $8 [$20 - 60%]
* Amazon subtracts your print cost from your margin [$8 - $5], leaving you with a $3 royalty.
Here's the same book sold through Amazon.com:
* The reader buys the book for $20 at Amazon.com.
* Your gross margin is $12 [$20 - 40%].
* Amazon subtracts the print cost [$12 - $5] and you earn a $7 royalty.
If you use ED, you need to price for ED.
My solution has been to use CS for Amazon.com sales only and LSI for distribution to other vendors. I can price my books much lower and still make a good profit everywhere because I set a 20% discount at LSI.
At LSI, I can price my book at half the price I would have to set for CS/ED and still make the same money:
LSI: $10 - 20% = $8 - $5 printing = $3 profit
CS/ED: $20 - 60% = $8 - $5 printing = $3 profit
Granted, the print costs at the two vendors are not identical, but they are very close.
In case you are wondering, I do not set different list prices at LSI and CS. I actually price for Amazon.com (at a 40% discount) and I just earn more on the LSI sales.





Mass-market paperbacks sell for $7.99 or thereabouts because offset printing has a very different cost structure from POD. You print a million copies offset, you can expect to pay much less for each one than if you printed 100 (or 10). Print the same million copies POD, and it costs a million times the cost of one. So mass-market paperbacks are not the right comparison to use.
We price the e-book versions at about 1/3 of the print editions. That's where it makes sense to charge less because one is not an established author. The reader still gets the benefit of the editing and critiquing, but s/he does not have to pay for typesetting on paper.



similarly, i sent a paperback to ireland as cheap as I could, the postage was 14 dollars. the Book cost 8.99 and costs me half that. It would probably have been cheaper to have the person order it and reimburse it for what it costs.

It is a lot to ask someone to pay out.
My next book will be ebook only...."
I hear you. I'm fortunate enough to be married to a graphic designer with a lot of book layout experience. If I had to pay to get print-ready PDFs, I'm not sure I'd bother with print. Paperback sales are a small percentage of my total sales and it would take a long time just to break even on the production cost.
On the other hand, I like to offering readers as many options as I can deliver practically. I don't do KDP Select because I want to offer my books through other book stores than Amazon and for more devices than Kindle. I publish print books through both LSI and CreateSpace because that lets me offer the best price to my readers without draining all of the profit out of the sales for me.
We all have our priorities and goals. In spite of the confusion of options out there, I think it's great that we have so many choices. It's a matter of figuring out what the best choices are for you, which is easier said than done!


Paperbacks are also good for giveaways, offering signed/inscribed copies through your own web site, and as a gift to friends and family.
I usually travel with a copy or two because it's nice to be able to whip one out when someone asks you what you do. When I tell them I'm a software developer and a fantasy writer, they are almost always more interested in the fantasy writer part. ;-)
LSI frequently runs specials of various kinds. They'll offer a higher quantity discount than usual or waive the setup fees if you place an order of 50 or more books. I've taken advantage of that, and the difference usually ends up paying for the shipping at least.


Thanks
James wrote: "K.A. wrote: "I buy a small stock to have on hand..."
Paperbacks are also good for giveaways, offering signed/inscribed copies through your own web site, and as a gift to friends and family.
I usu..."

Thanks
LSI is Lightning Source, Inc. (LightningSource.com) They are a POD printer and distributor similar to (and in competition with) CreateSpace.


This is extremely common. The bigger the margin you give Amazon, the more they will "give away" to the readers. One author who set her discount to 55% at Lightning Source told me her book was discounted from $14.95 to $10.77, and it had nothing to do with price matching.
Since you get paid the same amount no matter what Amazon sells the book for, you should look at this as Amazon giving you free promotion. :-)

In theory, "Yes," in practice, "Maybe."
Lightning Source (LSI) distributes to Amazon, but Amazon is inconsistent about whether or not they will keep LSI titles "in stock." Some titles do stay in stock or may drop to "only x more" status. Others will show shipping delays of up to three weeks (which pretty much kills your sales).
We solve this problem by publishing through both LSI and CreateSpace. We use CS strictly for Amazon sales (no Expanded Distribution). We use LSI for sales to all other vendors. As soon as our books go into CreateSpace, the stocking problems magically disappear.


Yes, you should use the same ISBN. But if you got an ISBN from CreateSpace, you won't be able to use it at Lightning Source. You'll need to get your own ISBN (or a block of them) from Bowker (at myidentifiers.com) and assign it to your book. You can then print your book anywhere you want using that ISBN.
Technically, LSI and CS are not publishers, they are printer/distributors. You can take your print-ready PDF files and your ISBN to any printer you want. For example, if you were fortunate enough to get an order for a couple thousand books, you could take your files to an offset printer and get the books printed at a fraction of the cost per copy when compared to POD.

I just did a fundraiser, offered the group $5/book. Sold 25 books. Most of my sales have been paperback, but that's also where I have focused. Think about selling from your own site/blog. MUCH better profit. (And ebooks are 100% profit, less a few cents for a PayPal transaction fee.)
Note: I bought my own ISBN at CS, and can print my book anywhere (but so far I like CS and the prices are the best I've seen).

That's true if you are willing to spend $99 to buy the CS "Custom Universal ISBN." If you get the free ISBN or the $10 "Custom ISBN," you can't use it outside of CS.
Buy just two Custom Universal ISBN's from CS and you've nearly paid for a block of 10 from Bowker. However, if all you will ever need is a single ISBN, CS *is* cheaper than Bowker, who charges $125 for a single ISBN.


Yes, absolutely. When you buy a block of ISBNs, all you are doing is reserving them. You assign one from your block whenever you are ready to do so, and you can assign an ISBN to whatever edition of whatever book you want. Once assigned, that ISBN can never be reused for any other edition of the same book or of another book.
When we release a new book, we typically assign an ISBN to the paperback edition and the next one in the sequence to the EPUB edition, but they don't have to be in sequence.


Book sizes are 5x8. Both are around 300 pages. The cost to print these books for amazon.com is $7.34.
I currently have them for sale at $7.99 leaving me to make only .39 per book.
I don't get a lot of paperback sales since I'm an indie author. Most of my sales are digital.
I've had four sales in the last day and I've made a whopping $1.70.
I've spend a lot of time & effort into making my covers, writing my books. etc... But, these books will be out there floating around forever.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.