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I will be publishing My Digital Life on Kindle and in order to have it in the Kindle unlimited category, I need to remove it from this site. I thought it would be nice to give advanced warning before I remove it and figured this would be the easiest way to do that. In two days time, I intend to ask Erin to unpublish all but the first two chapters. I will also be changing the name to Earth 2.0 - My Digital Life.
Happy reading.
Savannah
Comments
Thank you for the heads up!
Thank you for the heads up!
I'll get a life when it's proven and substantiated to be better than what I'm currently experiencing.
why oh why
Are so many people so greedy? You don't have to do Kindle Unlimited! So you get a bit less if you don't but you don't then have to be exclusive to Amazon.
Just my opinion
Mads
Madeline Anafrid Bell
Being Greedy?
Actually, I was trying to be the opposite. A lot of people have unlimited and then it doesn't cost them anything to read the book. I have no idea if you earn more or less that way.
Just my opinion,
Savannah.
Does Kindle Unlimited earn more or less?
My personal opinion, based on nothing more than that I've been paying attention, is that it depends on how well known the author is. A new author will get a LOT more exposure under Kindle Unlimited because people can download the book and try out more than the first chapter or so. If the book is good the "people who liked / bought this book also liked / bought...." feature will let the book be found by a LOT more people. And people are a lot more likely to read the sequels to stories they like.
So if you are a relatively new author, Kindle Unlimited is good. An established author like Tanya Allan will make some of their titles available on Kindle Unlimited. Some authors will rotate through making some of their books available for 3 months. This way they attract in new readers, who will then either go buy a lot more books or will hang around waiting for other titles to be available on KU.
On the down side, authors don't earn a lot through Kindle Unlimited. Typically they earn around 0.45 cents per Kindle page read, counted by the last page read. (So if a user borrows a book, skips to the last page, then returns it, the system thinks the reader read every page.)
For instance, the Gaby books are probably sold on the Kindle program that earns 70% royalty less 15 cents/MB delivery fee. This means that Gaby 01 - The Anime days at 262 pages & 4 MB earns $3.83 * 0.70 - 0.60 = $2.081 royalty, i.e. 0.794 cents per page. Gaby 24 - Fame at 345 pages and 5 MB earns $7.18 * 0.70 - 0.75 = $4.276 royalty, i.e. 1.239 cents per page. (Note that most books are under 1 MB in size so they are only charged 15 cents delivery instead of 60 or 75 cents delivery so most authors would earn about 0.17 cents per page more in royalties.)
On the other hand, if they are sold under the 35% royalty and no delivery fee then these two books would earn 0.51 and 0.73 cents per page royalty for a sale but could also optionally be made available under KU, which would earn around 0.45 cents per page royalty per borrow if the book was read to the end.
So a typical 300 page novel by an established author probably sells for around 2 cents per page, which earns around 1.35 cents per page royalty after the 15 cent delivery fee. So the author earns about 3 times as much as they would from a fully read Kindle Unlimited borrow. But if there are 3 times as many readers due to it being available for borrowing then it is worth it.
EXCEPT FOR ONE NASTY PROBLEM. While the book is available for Kindle Unlimited borrowing it cannot be available any where else electronically. (Printed sales are OK.) Which means you can't make the book available for Kindle Unlimited and still have it available for free on BCTS. I think that is why Maddy doesn't make her books available on KU.
well
I wish that the returns were as good as your sums suggest! What you haven't factored in are the terrible exchange rates used to convert USD (and Yen etc) into usable currency. If i'm lucky I get about 2/3rds of the dollar value. Despite this i've kept pricing the same for some time now despite Amazon (and Lulu ftm) suggesting prices should be higher, I'm fully aware that many readers are, like me, strapped for funds.
But yes, part of the reason for not going KU is the exclusivity business - a bit like Pepsi only selling through Seven11. It's a very restrictive practice and does little for author development - it's all about Amazon screwing everyone. If there was a viable alternative I wouldn't use Amazon for publishing at all.
Madeline Anafrid Bell
Stuck with Amazon
I have heard that authors who both sell on Amazon and elsewhere find that 90% to 95% of the sales are on Amazon. So authors are stuck with Amazon. It's really too bad that large companies like that usually don't bother to do simple things that would cost them little or nothing to greatly improve customer and supplier satisfaction.