Authors will receive a guaranteed $ 1,500 advance and 50 % royalties on
net eBook revenue.
Not exact matches
2 min readAccording to a recent MediaBistro article, «
net sales
revenue from
eBooks have surpassed hardcover books in the first quarter of 2012.»
The company's website states they publish in both paperback and
ebook formats, with royalties equaling 75 % of the
net revenue from the book.
The figures, which were posted on GalleyCat on Friday, show that
net sales
revenue from
ebooks exceeded that of hardcover books in the first quarter of the year: a first.
To that end, this particular edition included brief explanation as to why the big gap in
eBook total
net revenue numbers, seen through most of 2013 as compared to 2012's unprecedented comparable figures, had almost closed by year's end.
Jason Boog at GalleyCat writes that the sales report from the March Association of American Publishers indicates that
net sales
revenue from adult
eBooks were $ 282.3 million; hardcover sales, $ 229.6 million.
According to a recent MediaBistro article, «
net sales
revenue from
eBooks have surpassed hardcover books in the first quarter of 2012.»
Hi - We specilaise in
Ebook self publishing - which is a great way of earning extra
revenue from your writing and also making sure more eyes see your work even when browsing the
net.
Publishers will be forced to cede more
revenue to authors, the idea that 25 %
Net is a defensible long - term
ebook royalty rate is a farce best forgotten about quickly.
With BookBaby, independent authors keep up to 100 % of the
net revenue generated from their
eBook sales.
25 % of
ebook net revenue forever is no more written in stone than was «No Print Only Deals.»
They can then
net the same
revenue in the
ebook ($ 5.80 — $ 6.80) that they get from the hardcover.
The truth then is that very few authors receive a proportion of a publisher's
net revenue from home sales which is anywhere close to the rusty standard of a 25 - percent
net receipts
ebook royalty.»
Barry:... a 25 % royalty on the
net revenue produced by an
ebook equals 17.5 % of the retail price after Amazon takes its 30 % cut, and 14.9 % after the agents takes 15 % of the 17.5 %.
According to the March Association of American Publishers (AAP)
net sales
revenue report (collecting data from 1,189 publishers), adult
eBook sales were $ 282.3 million while adult hardcover sales counted $ 229.6 million during the first quarter of 2012.
Here's more from the report (Q1 2012 chart embedded above): «In Q1 2012,
net sales
revenue for
eBooks was higher than that for Hardcover; this represents a switch of positions in the category vs Q1 2011.
It seem like in the 7K report, you show
net revenue from big 5
ebooks at just under 1.1 million and author's share of that at over 200,000, which is more than 17.5 %.