Sentences with phrase «paying wholesale prices»

The company is paying wholesale prices for some of the books in the lending library.
For existing members, you'll continue to pay the wholesale price.
BUY RETAIL PAY WHOLESALE PRICES @ NISSANCHICAGO.COM!!!
And because you only pay the wholesale price of the book and a few other fees (e.g., credit card processing, «pick and pack,» and / or storage), your total earnings are often higher than selling a copy in a store or online.
That used to be a good deal — publishers offered the only route to market, and were prepared to pay a wholesale price for the product.
It paid the wholesale price for some books, but started selling them below cost at $ 9.99.
In some cases, it's paying the wholesale price every time a book is checked out.
Oyster cut deals with some publishers that meant it paid them the wholesale price of the e-book each time one was read (beyond a certain percentage).
As the retailer Amazon is free to set the price as long as you are paid your wholesale price.
The merchants pay a wholesale price and sometimes they'll sell some items below wholesale in order to promote some other items.
You'll pay the wholesale price, usually around $ 5 for a 300 - page book.
It paid a wholesale price for eBooks then resold them at a retail price set by Amazon.
«I once did a series of calculations looking at the capital costs of various turbines and the income they would get from the electricity produced if they were paid the wholesale price received by power stations.

Not exact matches

The royalty: The percentage of the wholesale price that the licensee pays to the licenser on each sale.
Instead, the net metering rate will be set at wholesale prices — even though the utility doesn't have to pay for any of the solar panels» hardware or maintenance, and transmission costs are negligible, since the electricity is being generated close to where it is used.
Johnson & Johnson is prepared to pay the price per tendered share to the retail shareholders in CHF and therefore provide a wholesale exchange facility.
It focused on the average wholesale price, a benchmark that's roughly equivalent to what an uninsured patient might pay at the pharmacy without the 15 to 20 percent discounts that big health plans get, said Jim Yocum, executive vice president for DRX.
They pay this price at a premium in many cases compared to wholesale buyers.
But after paying for the bottle, the retailer receives a 30 per cent «rebate», which he said was a cash deposit in to his bank account that meant the average wholesale price he was paying for 2009 Grange was now $ 406 a bottle.
Changes in the wholesale prices that Coles, Woolworths and Metcash pay suppliers are reflected in movements in shelf prices over time.
100 % of the wholesale price paid to Bel Soley goes to building up agriculture in Haiti.
«New York households pay some of the highest electric bills in the nation, and the wholesale electricity market overseen by NYISO has a major impact on prices,» said Beth Finkel, state director for AARP in New York state.
Wind generators can offer their electricity for bid into the Texas wholesale market at a zero price because they pay no fuel costs.
However, unbranded sites purchase from several different sources based on price at the wholesale level and not all of those sources are willing to pay for injection systems to bring the base fuel up to TOP TIER standards.
That approach came into conflict with the «wholesale» model used by Amazon, where the bookseller pays roughly half the recommended cover price, then sets its own pricing.
The wholesale discount is the percentage of the retail price paid to the retailer.
Before the arrival of the «agency pricing» model that Apple negotiated with ebook publishers — which allowed the publishers to decide what price Apple would charge for their books on the iPad — Amazon had deals that paid a specific wholesale price to publishers for a certain number of copies, and then it was able to charge whatever it wanted for the books in the Kindle store.
Key question to ask the publisher: Can I choose any retail price and wholesale discount for my book, without having to pay an additional fee?
The Pay per Use model would insure frontlist and backlist titles would always be purchased, which would help drive down prices to less than wholesale.
But Random and its imprints and authors have benefited hugely from the price flexibility that Amazon and other retailers have been allowed, especially since the publisher and the authors get paid based on full list price even if a title is discounted below wholesale cost in the Kindle Store and elsewhere.
Last Week: Amazon paid Macmillan 50 % of the list price for the book in a wholesale agreement.
T. «Wholesale Price» means (1) the net amount, after any discounts or other adjustments (not including promotional allowances subject to Section 2 (d) of the Robinson - Patman Act, 15 U.S.C. 13 (d)-RRB-, that an E-book Retailer pays to an E-book Publisher for an E-book that the E-book Retailer Sells to consumers; or (2) the Retail Price at which an E-book Publisher, under an Agency Agreement, Sells an E-book to consumers through an E-book Retailer minus the commission or other payment that E-book Publisher pays to the E-book Retailer in connection with or that is reasonably allocated to that Sale.
Certainly you'll have a hard time selling to bookstores and libraries — by the time you pay the POD / subsidy company, and factor in the wholesale discount that the middlemen require, the price points are too narrow for most bookstores or libraries ‡.
If they were purchasing the book wholesale they would have paid as much as 60 % off the list price.
That was meant to replace the wholesale model, where sellers like Amazon sold ebooks at prices they set themselves, paying publishers flat rates.
If the wholesale price, that is, the price the ebooksellers have to pay the publisher, of the new James Patterson ebook novel is $ 13 and Amazon sells it for $ 10 and sells 1 million ebook copies for a $ 3 million loss, somehow Amazon must sell enough other books in that publisher's line to overcome the loss.
We'd have to adapt because ultimately, the agency pricing results in readers paying high prices across the board when in a wholesale / retail market, competition would keep prices lower.
That's the key underlying point, in fact, to the whole argument: Amazon could sell ebooks for $ 9.99 and break even or make a bit of money even if they pay their wholesale pulp brink price to the publishers, and the publishers make money on the ebooks even if they do take some discount, because ebooks cost nothing on the margin to produce.
Amazon Publishing pays royalties to both authors and rights holders: For works of at least 10,000 words, authors receive 35 percent of net revenue (based on sales price rather than the standard, but lower, wholesale), paid monthly.
Macmillan said Amazon could continue to buy e-books under its current wholesale model, paying the publisher 50 percent of the hardcover list price while pricing the e-book at any level Amazon chooses, but that Macmillan would delay those e-book editions by seven months after hardcover release.
The cost to print your book (based on format choices you've made such as hardcover or paperback, black - and - white or premium color, page count, etc.) will be deducted from the $ 7.05 wholesale price, and you will be paid what is left over as your publisher earnings on that sale.
Whenever a customer reads past a set preview point (between 8 % and 10 % of the book), it triggers a sale, and the publisher gets paid the full wholesale price for that book.
As long as the wholesale pricing actually is wholesale pricingâ $» as in, the retailers are paying publishers a specific amount per e-book sold no matter what the retailer price isâ $» I have no problem with wholesaler pricing. I actually prefer its precedent to agency pricing, but I fear that the wholesale pricing scheme would end up modified if forced upon retailers, with retailers only paying content providers a percentage of whatever retail price the retailers choose.
Amazon used to pay publishers a wholesale price for e - books, just as it does for physical copies.
The business model that Scribd and Oyster used to get big publishers to sign on — one in which the publisher was paid, essentially, an ebook's full wholesale price when a reader completed just a portion of it — doesn't appear to be sustainable, especially when the customers willing to pay a flat monthly fee are also those who read a lot.
As long as Amazon still has to pay the full wholesale discount price publishers and authors won't suffer.
The Wholesale Price is $ 5.83 (the price Ingram pays to buy it from the printer: Retail Price times 4Price is $ 5.83 (the price Ingram pays to buy it from the printer: Retail Price times 4price Ingram pays to buy it from the printer: Retail Price times 4Price times 45 %.)
Publishers had to pay a fixed commission on each book rather than set a high wholesale price then benefit from high sales due to Amazon's discounting.
If the retailer is paying a set price at the wholesale level and has the ability to discount, it is a wholesale model, else anything with an MSRP would be considered agency pricing.
Amazon buys and resells e-books in the same way it handles printed books, by paying publishers a wholesale price that is generally equivalent to half the list price of a print edition.
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