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Category Archives: epublishing

New publishing models lead to bitchiness

24 Monday May 2010

Posted by A. J. Braithwaite in epublishing, Indie writing, Writers

≈ Leave a comment

An interesting article on the Publishers Weekly site today, entitled ‘Agents Weigh the Growth Of Alternate Publishing Options‘. Not the catchiest of titles for an article, perhaps, but the content makes up for it. It discusses the recent deal made by J. A. Konrath (a figurehead, of sorts, for the indie author movement – his blog is required reading) with AmazonEncore for his new book, Shaken.

Usually AmazonEncore picks up on overlooked already-published materials (ones with high ratings by users of the Amazon site) and re-presents them. The difference in this case is that Amazon will be publishing an entirely new piece of work, but at a low price: $2.99. According to the article, 70% of this will go to the author.

The reason I thought the article worth mentioning was the response to the news from the traditional publishing industry. The comment by Ira Silverberg of literary agents Sterling Lord was spectacularly bitchy (I thought):

Certain authors will feel they’re doing well in schemes like this. They flip off the publishers who rejected them, claim new technology will support their career, and they get attention they never had before. Let’s see if we remember who those authors are in a few years.

Let’s see if anyone remembers what literary agents were in a few years.

Another epublishing model

13 Thursday May 2010

Posted by A. J. Braithwaite in epublishing

≈ 3 Comments

Aventine for iPad

I had an email yesterday from the director of acquisitions at Rubicon Media, Inc. His company is developing an iPad and iPhone app called Aventine which is an ereader backed by a bookstore offering “new and original material by unpublished authors”. People like me, in other words.

Rubicon Media’s model is an interesting one. They pay their authors according to how many sales each author’s combined works make. So if I sell up to 500 copies of my ebook(s) through Aventine, I would earn 20% of the proceeds. If over 1,000, it would be 30% and so on, up to a maximum of 50% once my works hit 16,000 downloads.

Interesting pricing, considering that Smashwords deliverers 85% of the income for sales from its site back to its authors (regardless of how many books have been sold). Smashwords is also a distributor to other ebook sites, including Apple’s iBookstore: the figure received by authors for sales there is around 70%.

The only advantage I could see in the blurb I received from Rubicon Media is that there is some degree of quality control: “Aventine will automatically reject works that are incomplete or riddled with grammatical errors.”  Smashwords’ quality control is mainly focused on the formatting of books (although there are some restrictions in their terms of service regarding “hateful, discriminatory or racist views” and “advocation of illegal activities”). The Aventine app will not hold adult-oriented content, which is also quite different from Smashwords’ position. If you look at the top 50 Smashwords books, about 75% of them are aimed at over-18s.

I got the email because of my “success on Smashwords” with The Roman and the Runaway. So it seems that Rubicon Media are contacting Smashwords authors with the aim of populating their new application. It’s certainly an interesting approach and business model. My current feeling about it is that they aren’t offering enough of a financial incentive (says she, whose book is available for free anyway!). I’m also not convinced by the level of quality control that they’re offering. I suspect that the quality threshold for inclusion is going to be fairly low, certainly to begin with, as they try to get enough ebooks to make the application worth using. It also is limited in that it only sells to iPad and iPhone users. Not everyone has one, you know…

I’m reserving judgement at the moment – but would be interested to hear about other people’s experiences with this company.

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