THE Group for Authors! discussion
Publishing and Promoting
>
Can a book go underwater due to return fees?
date
newest »


PS its Ingram Spark, which is the baby sister of Lightning Source.

(And she said it with more tact than I was coming up with as I contemplated a response.)


IF it is ordered, most stores will only order a few copies to test the market, give it 6-8 weeks and then return if they're not sold. Return fees can mount, as you incur the full wholesale price plus an additional "return charge" of $2/book. I honestly can't see a store ordering hundreds of copies of an unknown author's book. The only time they order large quantities is when there is a specific event, like a signing.


I live in rural New Zealand with no local bookstores and far too many sheep (none of whom read). Physical location is irrelevant, there is plenty you can do online to market your book and target your audience. E-book sales account for over 95% of my sales and that is where I invest my time and energy. I'm not sure why you are focusing all your energy on getting your book into stores, where you will only make a slim margin anyway?

I have several very successful author friends who only do eBooks, and have great online presence, and do very well. There is even a service called Authorgraph that allows an author to digitally sign eBooks for their fans. Even books that are heavy with pictures, graphs, etc, can be reasonably represented in an eBook - if you get the formatting right.

Like!

However, its part of my bucket list to have a physical book written by myself accessible for people to obtain even after I pass on, margin be damned so long as I don't go underwater.
I'm not in it for the money, but I do want the book to pay its own freight. E-books are ephemeral to many, and so I want to honor those peoples' wishes.
Suppose a bookstore chain purchased a large quantity of my books from Ingram but because of a management turf battle they directly send the entire shipment back to be destroy.
I could go into series debt without even selling a single book!
How badly do I need to worry about something like this? Is there anything I can do to reduce my potential exposure?