Pricing Guidelines for Kindle

This is in general response to another post. These are guidelines that I use and it has served me well.

The advent of the e-reader has brought to it a lot of good and some bad. The good is that a lot of authors have been able to publish without going through big publishers. Another good thing is that people can enjoy books in niche genres like TG fiction and zombie romances.

There is also an influx of extremely short pieces. People have turned blogs into books. You see stories as short as, and this is no lie, 2 pages. The big issue that is going around is pricing. How much do you charge for a work.

These are the guidelines I use, but there are no hard and fast rules

Fiction stories under 50 pages should be priced around .99 cents. The issue authors have with that is that if you charge under 2.99 you only get 35% royalties instead of 70%. It is a downer, but that's kind of the margin. My 99 cent books are the following along with number of pages.

The Dress Punishment: 19 pages ... extremely short but I mention word count for the story alone in the description.
The Cure: 127 pages
The Wishing blanket 34 pages
The Stranger at the table 41 pages

My shortest book for 2.99 is The Long Ride home at 52 pages and that is probably going to drop to the 99 cents range pretty soon.

With the amount of free books and bargain books (99 cents) on Amazon, most people are looking for value. They are also looking for something that is edited and well thought out and executed. I recently read a book (will not name names) where at least 10 percent of the words were spelled wrong, the author swapped briefly from second to first person, and the main character's name changed in the middle of the story only to return to the original name for the last two paragraphs.

It is great that author's get to sell on Amazon. I for one am appreciative. But there is always going to be a backlash if pricing doesn't meet expectations. If you spent 50 dollars on a copper engraving of the Emancipating Father, Abraham Lincoln, think how upset you would be when a penny came in the mail.

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