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Question: Money earnt by authors?
Hi Books/Publications,
What could first time poker authors (of the not-a-high-profile-pro variety) expect to earn for their efforts? And is payment made as a single agreed payment, or commission on sales? Examples that come to mind would be Ed Miller for SSHE or Russell Fox for MNLHE. |
#2
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
I believe the standard royalty rate is 15%, Mason has posted that 2+2 authors can get up to 50% but I believe that's only if the author writes the book by themselves. Otherwise I believe that the 50% total would be spread between the authors.
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#3
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
That's between the publisher and the authors. Like most things in the world, it's negotiable.
I have been paid with royalties on an ongoing basis by my publisher. That's likely how most poker authors are paid. |
#4
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
My guess would be that they eventually go on to make more if they use words like "earned". [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]
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#5
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
Hi Chris:
It's my best guess that most first time authors make very little if they make anything at all, and this includes those in poker. That's because most royalty rates are very low and most books don't sell very well. To see how poor most poker books actually do, just go to Amazon and look at sales ranks. At Two Plus Two we have built a reputation of producing very good books that are essential to winning play. Thus we can anticipate very good sales and do compensate our authors with royalties that are much higher than industry average. The exact royalty does depend on who the author is and on exactly how well we anticipate their book to do. Best wishes, Mason |
#6
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
Hi dragon14:
[ QUOTE ] I believe the standard royalty rate is 15% [/ QUOTE ] Just to clarify, the 15 percent is a typical rate for many publishers and that's based on the wholesale price. Some publishers tag the roaylty to the retail price, then the equivalent would be 7 1/2 percent. [ QUOTE ] Mason has posted that 2+2 authors can get up to 50% but I believe that's only if the author writes the book by themselves. Otherwise I believe that the 50% total would be spread between the authors. [/ QUOTE ] I don't want to be specific here since if I do you might be able to figure out exactly what a particular author makes and they might not want that as public knowledge. But we do pay royalties that are much higher than the typical rate I just quoted above, but the exact amount varies from book to book. Best wishes, Mason |
#7
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
[ QUOTE ]
My guess would be that they eventually go on to make more if they use words like "earned". [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] [/ QUOTE ] Huh? Is this some kind of attempted dig at me? My grammar in the OP is completely correct. |
#8
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
Is "earnt" a real word or it one of those deals like when foreigners want to add extra letters or use a "y" when spelling a word when it is obvious that an "e" is a much better fit?
And what's up with calling a truck a lorry anyways? |
#9
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
In my experience from working at bookstores and now selling our company's books to bookstores and distributors, the retail price is discounted 40% to bookstores and 55% to distributors such as Amazon.com.
A weighted average would probably show that most books are sold from a publisher at a 50% discount. For a $30 2+2 title I would estimate that Mason sells them to for an average of around $15 per book wholesale. Somewhere from $5.00 to $7.50 would be distributed to the author(s) (this is from Mason's own post where he stated that 2+2 pays up to 50% royalties) and Mason would collect the remaining $7.50. I would estimate a production cost per book of $3.00 or so. I have recently (last month) ordered two books to be printed; both 8.5 X 11 paperbacks so I have a pretty good idea of what a book costs to manufacture. The initial print run is more expensive, while the later runs are much cheaper. Mason should show a profit per book of around $4 to $5 I would imagine. Of course if he writes the book himself profits should run around $12 per book. For a standard royalty rate of 15% the numbers above should be multiplied by 30% showing a royalty of $2.25 or so per book for the author(s) assuming a retail price of $30.00. |
#10
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Re: Question: Money earnt by authors?
Hi dragon14:
A couple of points. First, most paperback books do not sell for $30. Thus those authors make less than the $2.25 you mention. Second, we do very high quality printing and use paper far superior than anyone else in our field. So depending on the length of the print run, our costs can go over $3.00 a book on some titles. Finally, we do not use any distributors since our books don't need any additional marketing. We do use wholesalers (who do not do additional marketing) so we do a little better than 55 percent off or we sell directly to the major chains (including Amazon) and thus also do a little better than 55 percent off. So your 50 percent figure is accurate for us, but it would be too high for many other publishers. Two other points: The first is that we have approximately 400,000 books in inventory. And the second, is that our biggest competitor pays a standard royalty rate on almost all of his books of 6 percent of retail. So our authors, in general, make about five times as much as his. Best wishes, Mason |
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