They don't care about their customers and they clearly don't
care about authors either.
They actually
CARE about authors.
Hachette (and several of the authors, in syrupy open letters) has maintained that Amazon doesn't
care about authors or the damage this contract negotiation does to the authors» livelihoods, that it only cares about its bottom line.
Apparently more people are noticing that Amazon doesn't
care about authors or readers or anything other than making as much money as possible:
But no one
cares about an author's book as much as the author does.
«AMC truly does
care about authors first and foremost.
If Hachette
cares about its authors, pony up like Amazon is doing.
Amazon is talking about ebook sales going to authors while print book sales would go to Hatchette and if Hatchette had agreed to this - showing
they cared about their authors - Amazon would go back to large restocking / reorders on print books, discounting print books instead of selling them at the absurd high prices set by Hatchette which they've been complaining about, and re-enabling pre-order buttons.
They can't say
they care about authors but refuse to pay them (or to let Amazon pay them).
But then, if Hachette
cares about its authors, it would have begun negotiations back in January.
Hachette doesn't
care about its authors.
James Cook... believe me that Hachette
cares about their authors.
All I can say is that I have been impressed with Smashwords from day one... and they continue to amaze me with how much
they care about their authors!
Who
cares about the author of CIPA exposing that the ALA is misleading one third of American communities into leaving their communities exposed to the effects of unlimited pornography on public library computers, right?
Certainly, I have no illusions that Amazon
cares about authors to the detriment of its bottom line.
We truly
care about our authors and their readers.
Hachette doesn't
care about those authors you are angsting over.
The only thing that confuses me is, if they clearly care more about paper than
they care about authors or readers, why are we supposed to care about what happens to them?
How the «
caring about the author» was something that always stood out the most when Kevin was initially looking at Draft2Digital as an author himself
Amazon may not
care about authors and publishers, but it certainly cares about its bottom line.
These people
care about the authors they work with.
The pairing of authors and reviewers shows how much
they care about their authors getting the best service possible.
Assuming what people thinks makes any difference — I've seen estimates that this thing may have cost Amazon something like 5 - 10 % of book sales among certain demographics who don't like what Amazon is doing, which is not nothing, if not exactly crippling — if Hachette is standing on the «
we care about authors» moral high ground, Amazon is pretty much duty bound to point out why they are the ones who should be viewed as the Author's Friend.
I do
care about my authors getting paid.
Love this blog and I appreciate how much
you care about authors, Joe.
If Amazon feels like it needs to demonstrate that
it cares about the authors, it's because of a bunch of venues calling Amazon out for not thinking about the authors.
and the new Authors United all claiming that Amazon is harming authors with these negotiations, what would the reaction be if Amazon DID N'T make counter-claims and demonstrate why
they care about authors?
She is absolutely phenomenal at organizing and overseeing your blog tour, and you can tell that she truly
cares about the authors on her tours.
Shari is fantastic and
cares about her authors as much as we do at Gatekeeper.
BookVenture is a self - publishing company that fully
cares about its authors.
If not, it's pretty clear they don't
care about authors.
This all means we're not going to
care about their authors survey.
Not exact matches
«Willpower gives you the energy and endurance to deal with challenges, the ability to persevere in the face of setbacks, and the strength to tolerate conflict or stress that might otherwise make us run away from goals or projects we
care about,» says Kelly McGonigal, a Stanford psychologist and
author of The Willpower Instinct (Avery, 2011).
As
author Adam Grant recounts, «It was clear that Dave made a concerted effort to recruit people who
cared about others, who loved to learn and have fun.
I tell you the above not to self promote, but as an example of how much the
authors of this book
care about you.
Web content guru Gerry McGovern,
author of «Killer Content» — one of the best books on writing copy for the web — says that one of the biggest mistakes companies make in regards to their website content is thinking that customers
care one little bit
about the company.
In my experience, the phrase usually pops up when an
author wants to write
about a topic just because he finds it interesting, but feels like readers won't
care about the topic unless he can convince them it's somehow important.
I think the
author points out some interesting things that open - minded people might consider when they think
about their own beliefs and why they should
care about what other people do in their own homes.
I feel like this
author is confusing «spirituality not religious», with «I don't
care about either».
Kregel sent me a copy of What the Old Testament
Authors Really
Cared About: A Survey of Jesus» Bible, edited by Jason DeRouchie.
First, with regard to the question
about the poor, the
author is suggesting that these candidates make a big deal of their Christian beliefs, yet seem not to
care at all
about «the poor.»
Kregel sent me a review copy of What the New Testament
Authors Really
Cared About.
The impression you will get from the book is that the
authors are simply teaching what Jesus, Paul, and John really thought and
cared about, when in reality, what you will be getting is a strong Calvinistic interpretation of the New Testament.
New Jersey
About Blog Arden's Day is a type I diabetes
care giver blog written by
author Scott Benner.
As you can see in the example, we inform
about the
author of the photos and the recipe, and includes a link to your website.We can take
care of preparing the format of the recipe with the material you submit.
The
author assumes so earnestly that someone will
care about his experiences as a Yankees batboy that you find yourself wanting to be that person.
The book's
author, Naama Bloom, founded HelloFlo, a company that's all
about women's health and feminine
care, so she knows what girls are asking, everything from how to insert a tampon to soldiering on despite PMS.
-- Carole Kramer Arsenault, RN, IBCLC, and
author of The Baby Nurse Bible: Secrets Only a Baby Nurse Can Tell You
about Having and
Caring for Your Baby
She is also the
author of Mommy Calls, Dr. Tanya Answers Parents» Top 101 Questions
About Babies and Toddlers, Editor - in - Chief of the American Academy of Pediatrics» best - selling parenting book,
Caring for Your Baby and Young Child: Birth to Age 5 and The Wonder Years.
Author Bio Nancy Parker is a regular contributor to www.enannysource.com and she loves to write
about wide range of subjects like health, parenting, child
care, babysitting, nanny background check tips etc..