: Royalties - how to calculate author's take from the end-price? Supposedly I'm offered 16% royalty rate and the book store-price is 15$. How much would that be in royalty amount per sold copy?
Supposedly I'm offered 16% royalty rate and the book store-price is 15$. How much would that be in royalty amount per sold copy?
Would that be just 16% out of 15$, or is 16% out of (15$ - reseller discount - whatever book tax - whatever publisher fees) ?
More posts by @Bethany377
: Taking notes while reading I read books for fun and to help my writing. I want to remember the cool things I read, but I don't want to distract from the enjoyment of reading. Any suggestions
: Formula for a memoir If one were to distill memoir writing to a formula, what would the formula be? This question is inspired by the following quote from the article America's Top Parent:
1 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
For a really certain answer, you'd need to look at the contract. 16% is a sort of unusual rate (at least for the fields I work in) - it's a little high to be a % of list, but quite low to be a % of net.
Are you working with an agent? One of their useful features is their familiarity with publishing terms (and scams), so they can explain the individual terms of your contract to you.
If you're working on your own, you REALLY need to read the contract, and to ask for clarification on exactly what's meant if the royalties are paid on net. (this might just be the deduction of the bookseller's discount, but it could also include printing costs, etc.) Some of the writers' associations have model contracts online for your to compare yours to. I like the one at EPIC for e-book contracts, and I know the SFWA has some up for their genre, as well, although I've never used that one.
Sorry it's not a more concrete answer, but I don't want to steer you wrong.
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © selfpublishingguru.com2024 All Rights reserved.