Sentences with phrase «cheaper than their print versions»

Your eBook versions should be cheaper than your print version, for example, Amazon require that your eBook be at least 20 % cheaper than your print book.
Publishers don't believe that digital books should be cheaper than the print versions.
Basically, in the windowing model (again, if I'm understanding this correctly), the e-book versions, priced significantly cheaper than their print versions, would not be available until weeks, maybe even months, after the print versions have hit the shelves.
Additionally, approximately 50 % said they'd do the same even if the e-book is only $ 2 - 3 cheaper than the print version.
Amazon won and everyone who buys a digital book expects the price to be a) cheaper than the print version and b) inexpensive in general.
That's right, paying a few dollars more on ebooks is totally killing readers slowly or making them poorer or dumber??? The whole point of ebooks is that it is already cheaper than print version.
Subscriptions are cheaper than the print versions, but if I am going to pay for a magazine or newspaper, I'd rather read the print edition.
Additionally, approximately 50 % said they'd do the same even if the ebook is only $ 2 - 3 cheaper than the print version.
I'm in the UK but I always buy my 2000AD and Judge Dredd Megazine digitally: it's cheaper than the print version, comes out only two days later, and you get to download it as.

Not exact matches

I like printing a few hardcover versions through Lulu (because it's easier and cheaper to set up than Lightning Source) and taking some media kit shots of me in a bookstore (doesn't have to be an official «book signing» — you can even put a few on the bestseller shelf and take pictures of them there).
I'm not willing to pay higher than the cheapest version of a print book available.
Consumers can usually purchase individual e-books at a price that is cheaper than the paper print version.
After Amazon's rift with publishers, the retailer handed over pricing and now digital versions are only slightly cheaper (or the same price) than print in a lot of cases.
If the digital edition is significantly cheaper than the print edition, you'll start seeing sales moving from print to digital — the eternal fear of the content companies that the digital version of something will cannibalize sales from the physical version.
Even if we believe that 10 % figure, the e-book should still cost less than the cheapest printed version (and most e-books do), no matter what kind of creative math publishers try to use.
Given that the Web and mobile versions are so much easier to use than the print version, the even - better part is that they are also cheaper.
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