Sentences with phrase «if selling your books»

So, if you sell a book for $ 12.95, you will only get $ 0.65 of it.
Another thing I've just noticed: Novelrank doesn't really work well if you sell books from multiple domains.
It means that you, the author, get to do all the tasks that a publishing house would do if you sold the book them.
If you sell your book at $ 9.99, with a $ 5 print cost, your revenue will be $ 4.99.
To put this in perspective, say, if I sell the book for $ 15.00 and the book costs $ 5.00 to print, I will Donate $ 10.00 to the Huntington's Charity, in the country where the book is purchased.
If you sell your book for $ 14, you earn a dollar per book.
@BBU In Amazon's KDP pricing page linked from their Terms and Conditions the state: «You must set your Digital Book's List Price (and change it from time - to - time if necessary) so that it is no higher than the list price in any sales channel for any digital or physical edition of the Digital Book... By «list price in any sales channel,» we (Amazon) mean the suggested or recommended retail price or, if you sell your book directly to end users, your own sales price, for an edition of the book available outside of our Program.»
So much better than the meaningless «follow you follow me» dance on Twitter to have followers who actually care if you sell your book or know they'll have to look you in the eye and tell you why they haven't retweeted your link.
If you sell your book for $ 10 and set a 50 % discount, Amazon might actually sell it for $ 8 giving readers the impression that it has been marked down in price, which can help with sales.
If I sold my book for $ 25 I would make about $ 15 a book.
If you sell your book through the CreateSpace store, then you do NOT have to pay to use Amazon's standard distribution channel but you do have to pay 20 % to use CreateSpace's store platform:
The way I described books being treated two years ago is how a book is treated today and there isn't a thing an author can do to change that if you sell your book to New York traditional publishing.
Basically what I'm asking is if I publish an ebook with you will you be owed 20 % of all future profits regardless if I sell the book through lulu.com or another online retailer?
There's no risk for the bookstore owner, because they only pay me if they sell the book.
But if selling your books in physical stores is important to you, then traditional publishing is still your best bet.
If you sell all your books via signings, maybe you'd do best posting reviews on your own website — and maybe even selling via your own website Some authors do well controlling their own sales.
«If we sell a book at $ 9.99, the author would get the full $ 9.99, many multiples of what they would normally get.
@Fiordiligii I'm sure someone else can explain this better, but a self - pubbed author makes about 70 % of the $ 2.99 if they sell their books through Amazon, so about $ 2.10 a book.
They penalize you in the form of lower commission if you sell a book for less than $ 2.99 or more than $ 9.99.
If I sold a book to a New York traditional publisher, I would be stuck with an editor who hadn't yet been born when I started selling novels.
So next time you hear someone say they could spend far less time if they sold their book traditional, just turn away before you laugh.
If I sold a book to New York City today and I signed a contract today, in about six weeks I would get the first payment.
This is the most expensive option, but the least expensive in the long run if you sell the books.
And to be honest, if you sell your book, if you have an agent at home, that's what they're doing.
Even if you sold your book for 99 cents, plenty of people wouldn't buy it.
If you sell your book for around $ 15, you'll be taking home around $ 8 a sale after printing costs.
So if you sell your book on Amazon, put the Amazon link up on your website.
Basically, if you link to your book on Amazon, you are a personal blog, if you sell your book from your website with your own shopping cart system, you are a commercial blog.
Even if you sell all your books to the big six, you'll need a way to market yourself and help your book sales.
I hate returns and I despise the practice of returning books at 87 days to pay invoices, but if I sell a book on a returnable basis, I can not very well turn around and cry foul when they get returned.
If I sell my book on Amazon at $ 17, which means 40 % to me would be $ 6.80.
If they sell the book for.99 to a reader, do I pay the amount to have it printed?
Even if you sell all your books to the big six, you'll need a way to market... Continue reading →
If selling books is not your main income, then fair enough
In other words, if you sell a book to Hatchette UK and then sell the US rights or Asian rights, etc., to someone else, it is up to you, dear author, to make sure the other publisher adds DRM in order to «protect» Hatchette UK's investment.
This role can be rewarding because you have so much more control than if you sell your books to a publishing company.
if you sell a book to one of the big six publishers, and its a single book deal, and it's something deemed more quiet or literary, you may see $ 7,500 - $ 10,000.
If you sell your books directly from your own website, your site receives «top billing,» appearing first in the list of purchase links.
Now it's true that having your own platform helps regardless of where you sell your books, but it's absolutely imperative if you sell your books exclusively on your website.
If you sell a book, we will send you an email to notify you when the book is purchased, or when the book is reviewed.
Remember, if you sell your book to the wrong reader, you have only yourself to blame for the bad reviews.
If you sell your books and live in the US, you'll need to provide a U.S. Tax ID.
They care only if you sold books.
If you sell your books directly from your own website, your site receives «top billing,» appearing first in the list of «Buy this book» links.
If you sell a book for $ 2.99 or $ 3.99, do you really think books that sell for three times as much are three times better?
Cons: If you sell your books to a bookstore, don't expect to turn a profit.

Not exact matches

If you are lucky enough to sell the book, you have to promote it.
You'll get negative reviews if you attempt to sell books that are falling apart.
If as an author your plans are to write the book and expect others to sell it... do not write the book.
If the process is new to you, get a good book like Compensating New Sales Roles: How to Design Rewards That Work in Today's Selling Environment, by Jerome Colletti and Mary Fiss.
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