tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3878752953637981313.post7304081782069517132..comments2023-10-15T03:16:44.927-06:00Comments on Suspense Novelist: E-Book Price PointsPeg Brantleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04906858123466177508noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3878752953637981313.post-24034642780354521562010-10-12T14:24:21.611-06:002010-10-12T14:24:21.611-06:00Tim, good to know! Now I feel like I want to go ba...Tim, good to know! Now I feel like I want to go back to Amazon and suggest they mispriced the book and I owe them sixty cents.Peg Brantleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04906858123466177508noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3878752953637981313.post-1623682455859182562010-10-12T14:07:58.995-06:002010-10-12T14:07:58.995-06:00Hi, Peg --
From a writer's perspective, there...Hi, Peg --<br /><br />From a writer's perspective, there's a HUGE difference between $2.39 and $2.99. At $2.39 (on Amazon, anyway) you get a 30% royalty. At $2.99, you get 70%. <br /><br />I just pulled my Simeon Grist books off Kobo because they discounted the series to $2.35 or something, and Amazon will react automatically and reprice to match or beat Kobo. So that costs me more than a dollar a sale, and when you're making, say, 1200 sales a month, that adds up.<br /><br />Thanks for mentioning my blog and QUEEN in the same post - and on the blog today I talk about e-books and how they're going to free publishing of the "stodge" factor.Timothy Hallinanhttp://www.timothyhallinan.com/blognoreply@blogger.com