Promise keeping

Tuesday, December 10th, 2013 12:27 pm
rolanni: (Mouse and Dragon)

Back in, oh...October, I guess, 2012, a couple folks who are interested in the nittier-grittier part of our careers asked me to let them know if Dragon Ship earned out.  I agreed to do that, though they may have thought I'd forgotten about them by now.

In point of fact, Dragon Ship, by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, published in two hardcover editions in September 2012, has earned out.  I know this because we have received the royalty reports for January-June 2013, covering sales made during the six months prior to that period, aka July-December 2012.

Y'all didn't believe me when I told you that the Wheels of Publishing Grind Slow, did you?

While I'm here, let me address a couple of other frequent questions.

A question that we're asked frequently, with regard to all of our books, is "Where do you make the most money, from paper sales or from esales?"

Based on this batch of royalty statements, it looks like print still has a slim sales edge, for new books.  Books that have been out for awhile (I give you Mouse and Dragon, the gift that keeps on giving) seem to have stronger esales.

The third frequent question has to do with how well our indie ebooks, offered through Pinbeam Books, sell.  This is often part of a conversation about how it's no longer in the best interest of authors to be yoked to a trad publisher.

So, the indie sales more than pay the mortgage every month, which is pretty good for something that's a sideline, which we don't promote, and only update the inventory sporadically.  We have seen sales fall off since early 2011, when we first started making the chapbooks available electronically.

I think there are two reasons for that.  One is that when the Kindles and the Nooks were Hot Items that everybody had to have, all those people with their new toys tried to make sure that all their favorite books were on the toys.  There was, in a word, a Great eBook Rush.

The second reason is that Steve and I are simply not bearing down and making new eChapbooks available every month or two.  See "sideline," above.

Regarding the larger discussion of Trad Publishing vs. Total Author Control. . .our experience has shown -- since 1995, when SRM Publisher published it's first paper chapbook, Two Tales of Korval by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller -- that a hybrid approach to publishing -- some trad, some self-publishing -- is the path that produces the greater rewards.

Anybody have any other nitty-gritty publish-y type questions?  Now's the time to ask.

EDITED TO ADD:  This just in, from Forbes:  How Much Money Do Self-Published Authors Make?

Zoooooommmmmm

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009 11:30 am
rolanni: (Illusionist)
New car is registered, taxes paid, plates attached and appropriately adorned with an expiration date of next July. Automagic toll-payer has been reattched to windshield. Old car has gone back to the dealer from whence it was purchased; money has flowed toward the driver. The insurance company has removed the old car from the policy. Doctor has been talked into providing retroactive referral to eye doctor (Note to Rolanni: You belong to an HMO. Referral. Referral. Referral. Sigh).

Next on board! Lunch, then a doctor's visit, for a change.

New car sure is pretty...


Edited to Add: Oooh! Enough money left over from sale, minus taxes/registration, to maybe buy a GPS. High Finance, we haz it.

Hot Wheels

Friday, June 29th, 2007 05:20 pm
rolanni: (Dr. Teeth)
I am now the proud owner of a 1997 Nissa Altima GXE in a color that three different people have opined is: brown, maroon, and metallic purple. Whatever. Once I have proof of insurance, I can register the car with the town. Once I register it with the town, I can order vanity plates so that I have an actual shot at remembering my license plate number. Once I have a license plate number that I can remember, I can get a coveted Faculty/Staff parking sticker, and everything will be binjali.

Faithful auditors of this journal will note that the vehicle I have acquired is not a Subaru. The Subarus on offer in our price range being, um...non-viable, we were required, as is so often the case, to go to Plan B.

Astute readers will also note that, Good and Useful though it was, acquiring a vehicle was Not Exactly the work I was to be doing today.

Right. I'll be doing that tonight, then.

On another topic, I'd just like to say that Girl Genius has exceeded its monthly bandwidth allowance at a most inconvenient time! Aaagh!

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