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z2007-03-31- Stross Ebook Market
A strange game. The only winning move is .

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last edited by BillSeitz on May 10, 2008 3:07 am

on the broken market. Right now, many of the largest publishers charge a cover price for ebooks that is 80% to 100% of the [Hard Cover] price. Virtually nobody except [Baen Books] (and now a couple of other publishers who've dipped a toe in the Webscription market, and some self-publishers) is even thinking about trying to establish what an ebook is really worth in the market. We know roughly what it costs to produce a book, and we can point to the areas where ebooks are cheaper than paper editions (no dead trees and ink, for one thing; no warehousing or distribution for another) and more expensive (downloads, website maintenance). But we don't really know what an ebook is worth to the readers, because the market that could give us meaningful on pricing has been strangled in the crib. My take on ebooks is that they are - and should be seen as - the cheapest form of disposable literature... And the [Consumer Electronics] industry will not cut off its own nose to spite its face by producing an ebook reader for $20, if it can produce one with extra bells and whistles that sells for $350. We've had the tech for a $20 (or $50, anyway) ebook reader for a decade; it would resemble a grey-scale [Palm Pilot], albeit without even the functionality... We might see such a device (at $200) take off in the market. But 80% of readers don't do -s. I've seen my sales, and they're piss-poor (except in France, which is different).

August'2007 update: his publisher is providing his [Atrocity Archvives] as an (ugh, with ) for half the paperback price. (In the comments, he notes I get five times as much money for a hardback as for a paperback but doesn't note how much he gets per .)

Dec'2007 update: he doesn't like the . He does like the .


 




Bill Seitz, fluxent at gmail dot com, Weblog