Sentences with phrase «buy trad»

Perhaps the article isn't sending the not - too - subtle message that indie authors suck, thus their reviews must be fake, or at least suspect, thus the only way to save yourself the grief is to buy trad pub books, which have paid reviews from the shills who do it for a living... er... never mind.
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Also — Buying a loaf of bread from the supermarket is like buying a trad pub book from B&N.
Readers are seemingly becoming averse to these higher - priced books and, as a result, are buying trad pubbed books less often.

Not exact matches

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My limit (except for Baen E-Arcs) seems to be $ 10 even for trad published authors that I have bought for years.
Another complaint I have is that they do have the «other readers who purchased this also bought this» feature (it is not as extensive as the Amazon one), but they only offer that feature on Trad published books.
The difference is, trad publishing houses will print books, sell them to bookstores, then buy them back and pulp them if they don't sell (something you probably can't afford to do yourself).
If I were writing lit fic or a picture book — or, as you mentioned, middle - grade — I might consider a trad publisher for their distribution (and for the fact that they do buy lit fic).
I went to an author talk by a trad pubbed author and she had to buy a copy of her own book at the bookstore because her contract doesn't allow her to buy copies of her own book at a discount from the publisher.
So for me to buy more trad published books than self because I have limited money, not because of bias, makes logical sense and has NOTHING TO DO WITH BIAS, which obviously your comments were.
You really need to stop buying into the indie versus trad author war.
When a trad - pub book weighs in at $ 9.99 and you can buy somewhere between two to four times as much reading material from Indie authors, the choice seems obvious.
Jim and Bryan's ho - ho - holiday episode of SMBS touched upon the popular podcast Serial, the big boost adults buying YA gave the industry, Macmillan's deal with Amazon, Konrath dropping out of KU, and what trad pubs learned in 2014.
but you really have to do all that marketing stuff or nobody buys your books — trad pubbed or indie.
Those that wish everyone buying $ 4 highly rated ebooks instead of $ 15 trad published ebooks would stop doing so and view all indie work as sub-standard garbage whose reviews are manufactured.
And one of the biggest negative effects we've now created as indie authors is denigrating the value of ebooks — specifically indie ebooks, as you'll find the trad pubs don't do much, if any, free promo — in the eyes of the audience that buys them.
And while indie and trad sit side by side on the amazon bookshelf now, they help each other out (increasing the likelihood of one being bought whilst the other is being browsed).
It dramatically helps trad authors to buy their books in the first week, and I want my favorite authors to keep publishing.
I look at indie publishing as a way to show the trad publishing industry just what an author has and what they can do for themselves, kind of like a «try before you buy» with little risk to them and, actually, little risk — even financially — to the authors.
2) e-books are NOT currently cheaper then trad books, or at least, not initially; you have to buy a lot of new hardcovers to cover your $ 360 Kindle 2.0 purchase.
I'm not opposed to a trad pub deal if it buys you the things you can't get doing it as I am — broad distribution, meaningful marketing, access to film deals — but I can't for the world see why anyone would do a mid-list deal knowing everything we know.
How nice it would be if there were a e-publishing service house whose mission & market was to FIND mid-listers who had proven their writing (by managing to get at least a couple of things published and bought before a trad dropped them) and make it easy for them to make the transition to indy.
I've seen a friend of mine on Twitter say he won't buy a book that's less than $ 9.99 (with the idea being that at $ 9.99 and above, it's with a trad publisher, and anything below must be indie and therefore crap).
If the trads buy up the avenues indies use to get to market, leaving the door open, but making it exorbitantly expensive to publish, they will have effectively killed off the indie movement.
Oh, and it would give the Trads even more reason to price their backlog ridiculously, since I can't be the only one who's considered it for the really old e-books they're selling for four to six bucks — so you'd be, in the long run, shrinking your share of the pot by making it so that people mostly try the really expensive books and don't even try sanely priced books, thus never getting exposed to your writing and it not leading to them buying your books outside the program.
My traditional - published experiences have been largely positive — working with Clive and the people at G.P. Putnam's was a great experience, and I've had about ten of my books bought by trad publishers in other countries, so that's exciting.
In cases where trad publishers price their ebooks reasonably and make them available in my region, I'll buy them, but this is the exception rather than the rule.
I guess the next question is, «were these readers buying traditionally published books and moved away or had they never been reading trad books and found books that met a need.»
My opinion is that if I am paying a bloated price for a trad pub book and the profits are going into the maw of the mothership of a multi-national corporation, instead of to the writer, then I will buy indie except for the very small list of writers (some of them yours) that I support because I consider them friends.
The shift in the book business has been driven by readers moving away from trad publishers» ebooks toward indie - published and Amazon - imprint - published ebooks which now account for almost 60 % of all Kindle ebooks bought in the US, and 40 % of all consumer dollars spent on ebooks.
It found that Kindle ebook sales in 2014 by the AAP's 1,200 reporting publishers made up less than 45 % of all Kindle books bought in the US and trad - published ebooks as a whole only made up 55 % of all Kindle ebooks bought in the US in 2014.
As I've noted before, traditional publishers can take part in Kindle Unlimited, although many are choosing not to do so at the moment, and they get paid differently from self - publishers in that trad firms get the normal royalty rate for a buy when one of their books is borrowed.
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