Numbers for Q4 and 2011 overall

It’s that time again, kids! Time for a huge post with way too many numbers. Love me some numbers. You should see the spreadsheets I’m working with, here – if you think these posts have a lot of confusing numbers, know this is a tiny fraction of the data. If you want it all, I’ll gladly share it, just ask. I figure for most people, these summaries are more than sufficient.

Briefly, first, before we get into the hard numbers: eBook downloads were way, way up for Q4 of 2011. This is largely due to traffic from getfreeebooks.com, which linked to Cheating, Death on October 16th, to Unspecified on November 9th, to Dragons’ Truth on November 29th, and to The First Untrue Trilogy on December 23rd. Total eBook downloads (across all titles) were up more than 100%, quarter-over-quarter. Podiobooks downloads continued their decline; my numbers there only seem to hold steady or increase while I’m actively releasing new content, but mostly they’ve just been declining for the last two years. For Q4 I had roughly $29 in eBook sales, and Podiobooks lumped Q3 and Q4 donations together – my cut was $9.74 for the 6-month period (which equates to $12.99 in donations). I also sold a full set of the Untrue Tales series in paper for $50.

Now, so they’re in the same format as the other quarters of 2011, here are all the eBook and Podiobook download numbers for/through Q4 of 2011, as usual giving the total of eBook downloads, the total of Podiobook downloads, and the more-accurate (re: # of people who dl’d a full book) total downloads of the final episodes of each Podiobook, as: eBook/total-PB/final-PB

  • Lost and Not Found: 494 / 1,376 / 97
  • Dragons’ Truth: 2,123 / 1,527 / 155
  • Forget What You Can’t Remember: 729 / 5,828 / 140
  • The First Untrue Trilogy: 1,034 (eBook only)
  • The Second Untrue Trilogy: 557 (eBook only)
  • Untrue Tales… Book One: 1 / 3,032 / 198
  • Untrue Tales… Book Two: N/A / 4,015 / 264
  • Untrue Tales… Book Three: N/A / 1,656 / 144
  • Untrue Tales… Book Four: N/A / 1,301 / 113
  • Untrue Tales… Book Five: N/A / 1,140 / 113
  • Untrue Tales… Book Six: N/A / 1,076 / 102
  • Cheating, Death: 1,567 / 5,834 / 356
  • Lost and Not Found – Director’s Cut: 260 / 345 / 29
  • More Lost Memories (full): 335 / 702 / 39
  • More Lost Memories (ind. stories, eBook only): 3
  • Time, emiT, and Time Again (full): 277 / 761 / 48
  • Time, emiT, and Time Again (ind. stories, eBook only): 6
  • Last Christmas: 3
  • Unspecified: 1,537
  • Total Q4: 7,390 / 28,593 / 1,798
  • Total 2011: 17,502 / 151,233 / 9,784
  • Total all-time: 33,195 / 543,595 / 35,237


re: Podiobooks downloads: It looks like about 200 people started the Untrue Tales series, I lost a good chunk in Book Two, more in Book Three, but the 100 people who made it to Book Four stuck with it to the end – which matches what I’ve previously observed. Downloads of my short story collections and the Lost and Not Found – Director’s Cut were off by about 50% quarter-over-quarter, to fewer than 50 people finishing each title during the entire quarter. Everything else is just less than flat, part of a gradual overall decline.

re: eBooks: Only about half of the people who downloaded The First Untrue Trilogy downloaded the second, which has remained roughly true since I released the eBooks (60% over the life of the eBooks). (This is unfortunate, as I believe books 5 & 6 are some of my best writing to date, and that the second trilogy is much better than the first.) Unspecified was released at the beginning of Q4, and has been downloaded more in Q4 than all but 2 of my titles, which is saying a lot, since it’s a poetry book. The only titles which did better where my YA novel and my zombie novel, and Unspecified was only 30 downloads (>2%) behind Cheating, Death. All free eBook downloads were up for the quarter, probably owing to the free-ebook-seeking traffic linked in as mentioned above, but eBook purchases for the period were down again. It looks like I only sold 21 eBooks across all titles and all platforms during Q4, 2011. Continue reading Numbers for Q4 and 2011 overall

Variable book pricing

With the resolute decision to put an end to the silliness of paying for full distribution of paper books, many things are now able to be changed. (If you haven’t read my last two posts, on the costs of distribution and my schedule for canceling it, you should.) One of the key things is book pricing. I’ve tried a few eBook pricing experiments in the past, but I’m giving up on the wild guessing method of pricing in favor of an explainable (if not immediately obvious) algorithm for determining prices. But first, some discussion on eBook pricing:

This conversation goes around and around and around, and as various players in the publishing industry take one tenuous step after another, the details may change, but one of the core responses coming from readers about the price of eBooks is this: “eBooks cost nothing to produce, so why should I pay more than $x?” (Where $x varies by reader, usually being one of $9.99, $5, $3, or $0.99 – and there are various reasons why they picked those numbers, some of which I’ll cover.) The biggest problem with that response is its inaccuracy. Really, the marginal cost of producing one more copy of an eBook is only pennies. The book itself cost quite a bit to produce, especially if you expect the author to be paid, but also because traditionally published books also have the cost of (often) three editors, a graphic designer, an illustrator, at least one marketing professional, and someone (whether internal or external) to create the various eBook formats, and all that even when they’re only going to produce an eBook; there are more people and expensive processes involved if the book also has a paper edition. Even among the new wave of indie publishers (some people prefer to think of them as self publishers, but whatever) there is a growing consensus that they need to hire a professional editor, pay for copy editing, and hire a cover artist, at the least – all of which, for quality results, costs thousands of dollars. So if you want to pretend eBooks cost nothing to produce, you have to remember that the first copy cost hundreds or thousands of dollars to produce, and it’s all the copies after that where the marginal cost of pennies may begin to have some meaning.

When this is brought up, sometimes an intelligent person will respond with something like “once the book has earned out, there’s no reason for the price to be so high!” – Usually they want to buy a back-list title and are shocked to discover it costs almost as much for the eBook as the paperback! There’s no getting through to such people that books have value (apart from how much it costs to produce the copy you’ll read, how much is that story/information worth?), and rarely are they interested in a conversation containing the words “what the market will bear” because their dollar vote says “no, I won’t pay more than $x for an eBook!” …often, in protest, they’ll go buy the more-expensive paper book. (Or a used book. I would estimate that 90% or more of all my book, music, and movie purchases, in my entire life, have been of used items. Publishers hate the idea of me. I hate the idea that the world would let people be so poor they can’t afford books. I also love that the world has libraries; support your local library!) Of course, for big publishers with hundreds of new books per year, and thousands or tens of thousands of back-list titles, trying to track which books have “earned out” and adjusting their prices accordingly is a massive task. (Or it would be, if they didn’t have to track all the expenses and revenues of all their titles, anyway. I mean, they pay royalties, don’t they? They keep track of exactly how much each title cost, how much it has earned, how many copies are out on shelves, who has them, et cetera… Hmm…)

Anyway, I’m a small publisher. I only publish a few books a year, and only have a few dozen titles to manage, so far. With agency pricing (You think you hate it because you think it means higher prices, but really what it means is “publishers set the retail price, and all retailers keep the same cut of that.” Watch what I’m about to do with it. This is a possible future for agency publishing, once publishers get up to speed. Give them a decade or so.) I can alter the prices of my eBooks any time I want, and all the eBook retailers have to sell it at the price I set, and I can know for certain how much I’ll be earning on each copy sold. So what I’m going to do is this: I’m going to adjust the prices of my books based on whether they’ve “earned out” yet, and I’m going to do it for both the eBook versions and the paper copies I sell directly.

For books I’ve already published, the starting price of the paperbacks will be the list price on the cover. For eBooks the starting price will be half of that, rounded up to the nearest $.99. The floor for eBook prices will be $2.99 for book-length works, $0.99 for short stories. (If a short story is in a collection, I’ll be combining expenses & revenue from all sources, and applying pricing based on that aggregate. More on that, below.)

An aside: Why $2.99, and not $0.99? Blame Amazon; they pay me 70% on eBooks priced from $2.99 to $9.99 and only 35% on all other-priced eBooks. (On the high end, this means that even when my formula says an eBook should be more than $9.99, it won’t be, so you win on that end.) Well, plus this: In my calculations, which I’ll detail in a moment, I don’t assign a value to my time. As the author (& everything else) I only get paid after the book “earns out” anyway. Oh, and this: If you want the book for free, it’s still available for free on modernevil.com. So, that $2.99 price is for people who want to support the creator, but can’t afford the premium options.

Oh, and the floor for the paper versions will be based on (cost to print 1 copy + $2), rounded up to the nearest $.99. The $2 is what I earn from Amazon on those $2.99 eBooks when they actually pay the 70% (they don’t, always), so the amount I pocket from “earned out” books is roughly the same, regardless of format.

I have the prices I’ll be using for the updates I’ll be putting through over the next few days, and I plan to update prices once a month during 2012. (We’ll see where we are, after a year of this.) Probably in the first week of each month, based on the prior month’s sales. Or, if/when a premium item sells, immediately for the relevant title. Premium items will include: signed paperbacks, original artwork, and my original poetry journals, for now. I plan to leave most of my signed paperbacks at $25, and the prices of the cover art & journals have always been based roughly on covering the full expense of producing the published books. I still believe in the pay what you can model, also known as “Freemium” since it lets some people get the content for free, while others pay, and at the high end there are premium goods. I’m just modifying the way the cheaper of the for-pay versions of my content will be priced.

Here is how I’m calculating prices: Calculate what percentage of the total cost of publishing the book still needs to be earned, multiply it by the difference between the starting price and the floor price, and add that to the floor price. So, for example, my first novel, Lost and Not Found, has a paperback list price of $13.99 and a price floor of $6.99 (the eBook price starting point would be $6.99 and the eBook price floor $2.99). So far, it has earned 65% of what it cost to publish (not including my time) and has 35% left to earn. The difference between the list and floor is $7 and 35% of that is $2.45 (the difference is $4 for the eBook, 35% of which is $1.40), which gives us the (rounded up, remember) new direct paperback price I’ll be offering of $9.99 (the eBook will be $4.99).

If you didn’t follow that, don’t worry, you don’t have to figure anything out or update the spreadsheet. You just get to buy the books at a discount. Here are all the new prices (title: paperback / ebook / % left to “earn out”):

  • Lost and Not Found: $9.99 / $4.99 / 35%
  • Lost and Not Found – Director’s Cut: $6.99 / $3.99 / 33%
  • Forget What You Can’t Remember: $8.99 / $4.99 / 26%
  • More Lost Memories: $8.99 / $4.99 / 41%
  • Cheating, Death: $4.99 / $2.99 / N/A
  • The First Untrue Trilogy: $9.99 / $4.99 / 12%
  • The Second Untrue Trilogy: $19.99 / $8.99 / 65%
  • Dragons’ Truth: $7.99 / $3.99 / 28%
  • Time, emiT, and Time Again: $5.99 / $2.99 / N/A
  • Unspecified: $4.99 / $2.99 / N/A
  • Worth 1k — Volume 1: $9.99 / $4.99 / 87%
  • Worth 1k — Volume 2: $9.99 / $4.99 / 83%

Where it says “N/A” it means the title has already “earned out”. I should note that for the purposes of this calculation, I am considering all expenses and revenue from the individual sales of Untrue Tales… Books 1-3 as part of those for The First Untrue Trilogy, and the same for 4-6 for the second. Since I originally published Book One back in 2004 but didn’t put out Book Four until last Fall, the first trilogy has had some time to get closer to “earning out”. Also, for reference, the percent of total expenses for the entire series combined remaining to earn out is only 35%, and if that ever crosses the line I may just drop the price of all editions of all books in the series to their floor prices. Also of note: Time, emiT, and Time Again has “earned out”, so all its individual short stories will drop from $1.99 to $0.99, whereas More Lost Memories is far from earning out, so most of its individually-available short stories will be increasing from $0.99 to $1.99.

For most of my books, selling just another 10 or 15 paperback copies (or twice that many eBooks) will allow them to “earn out” and both: reach their price floor, and start earning me money. A small handful of collectors could create the same impact.

There are some who will say I’m doing this backwards. That I should start prices as low as possible, to encourage “early adopters” and “build a critical mass” and gradually raise prices so that, when my book “hits it big” I’ll be “maximizing my revenue”. Actually, I read that exact plan on someone else’s blog a few weeks ago. It was by a guy who thought the book reaches full price point was after it had sold 15,000 copies. My highest-volume title has sold 62 copies (and well over 7k free downloads), so … not in the same ball park. On the other hand, with the system I’ve designed, my prices bottom out within about 25 paperback sales (or 50 eBook sales), so if ever I had such a popular book, most of the copies would sell at a low, low price – and earn me $2 apiece. Plus, as I keep saying, the for-pay versions of my books are all intended for people who want to support the creator, which is to say that “early adopters” are people who love my work and want to support it however they can; they’re willing to spend a little extra (and sometimes a lot extra). The free versions are for “building a critical mass” and if I ever had 15k sales of a title I’d know every one earned me at least $2/copy, or roughly a year’s pay if I got a “normal” day job (though likely I’d earn less at a day job, at my current theoretical earning potential).

I’ll begin updating eBook retailers soon, along with modernevil.com, so hopefully by the end of next week the new prices will be rolled out almost everywhere. Oh, and right now I’m thinking that, for future books, I’d start the eBook price at $9.99 and the paperback price at $25, to be sure they go down quickly… though that’s all in the air; with a successful fundraiser, they’d start at the price floor, and without one, the expenses are super-low. I don’t know. Cross that bridge, and all that…

Your feedback on this change is welcome. Comment, email, call, txt, whatever…

*Updated* I just updated the numbers (just after midnight, 1/1/2012) after doing a little more bookkeeping for the end of the year, and made a change for how I’ll be calculating expenses on Dragons’ Truth, so prices for both Untrue Trilogies and Dragons’ Truth have been updated in the chart above to reflect the most current numbers. For reference: selling one extra copy of each Untrue Trilogy (Thanks, John!) dropped the price of each book by another dollar. Sorry I hadn’t already taken that sale into account; I knew about it… Also: My latest calculations show that, for my first two poetry collections, I can’t afford to drop the price from $9.99/copy. I didn’t order enough copies to make the new model work, and I’ve already cancelled them at LSI so I can’t order more without paying setup fees again. So … for those two books, the paper editions are super-limited, and will be stuck at $9.99.

on canceling book distribution

(Read my last post, first.)

So, since I pay for each book’s digital catalog fee a year in advance and LSI doesn’t refund a prorated amount based on what wasn’t used, I’ve decided that -for now- I’m going to cancel each title in the month before the pre-paid distribution-availability runs out. I’ve gone through my records to find when I was billed last for each title, and created calendar reminders 11 months after each came up, so I have 4-8 weeks to actually get around to sending the email (rather than actually waiting for the last minute). As I said before, it may take several months (or forever?) after I tell LSI to cancel the title before other sites recognize them as out of print (even though I’ve been (and will continue to be) updating Bowker with their out of print status at the same time), and LSI may even allow book stores (Amazon included) to order them for quite some time after I tell them to stop. Not that I expect anyone to order. Here’s a quick breakdown of the schedule:

Please keep in mind: These books won’t actually be going away. They’ll still be available as eBooks, for free at modernevil.com and for purchase through eBookstores and on eReaders (and tablets and phones) everywhere. They’ll still be available as audiobooks, for free through Podiobooks.com and for purchase through Audible/iTunes. They’ll even continue to be available in paperback for a long while, exclusively through modernevil.com – I have up to 45 copies of some titles, and not fewer than a dozen, and if I feel the need, I may order a few copies of anything I’m running low on before canceling them. Likely you’ll be able to order all my books from me for years to come – knowing that when you do, they’re now part of extremely limited print editions. (Perhaps I’ll calculate the edition sizes for all my books and note it on my site.)

Also keep in mind that my future books aren’t going away, either. I’ll still be writing them, and I’ll still be publishing them. They’ll simply become available as eBooks and audiobooks first, and paper if/when doing so makes financial sense. I’m really hoping I can find a way to do a limited print edition of the books I’m currently writing, as I’m quite enamored with the idea of putting the two books out in a single binding, as a flipbook (the two books upside down & reverse of one another) – and being limited-edition rather than full-distribution makes that easier, as both covers can look like covers if I don’t have to put a barcode “on the back” or any marketing copy there, either. Whether it makes sense to do it as a hardback (and then put the marketing info & barcode on the dust jacket flap) or not will depend on what the financial situation surrounding the book turns out to be. Will the cover art sell? Will people want to pre-order? Will I do a Kickstarter? (And will anyone pledge, if I do?) We’ll have to wait and see… I’ve still got a long road to go before we get there. Half the text left to write. Then the editing, the beta-reading, the audio version… all before I’m ready for fundraising, let alone publishing.

Publishing, paper, distribution, and doing what works

This has been a long time coming. I think I’ve even announced it here, before, in one form or two others. I just can’t make sense of publishing books on paper and having them available for distribution/wholesale-sales. Warning: This post is going to be full of numbers. Numbers about money.

Here’s some backstory before I get into the numbers: Back in the before-times, I began writing stories. By the turn of the millennia, I’d begun thinking about writing novels. By the end of 2002 I’d written (and published, albeit in extremely low quantity and quality, and quietly) my first novel. By 2004 I’d done a nearly-professional job publishing it, and my second novel, though I still lacked distribution. At the end of 2004, my life went off a cliff, right after I published my 3rd novel, and publishing my 4th novel in 2005 was part of the long descent into Hell, which didn’t begin to let up until the Fall of 2006, when I also finished my 5th novel. Coming out of those dark days, I decided to take publishing seriously, started Modern Evil Press officially in 2007, and re-published my first 5 novels via Lightning Source (LSI), along with two poetry books. With LSI, I had professional (though not offset) printing, and I also had professional distribution (though not the sort of distribution where sales reps were trying to get my books onto store shelves; ‘distribution’ has two definitions in the publishing world, and mine just meant that if a bookstore ordered a book, it would be printed & delivered), and my books began appearing on Amazon &c. in their new forms. In 2008 I left my day job and began working as a full time creative, putting out professional-level eBooks and near-professional audiobooks along with the paper editions. Since then I’ve continued writing, editing, recording and publishing books, and as of right now I’ve written 11 novels, 2 short story collections, 2 poetry collections, and edited & published my first book by someone else. I’ve also published one short story exclusively in digital (eBook & audio).

If you read here much, you probably knew all that. (If not, please check out modernevil.com.) You may even have some idea of my financials. But… Did you know that, of my books released on paper, none one of them has ever made enough sales (even including sales across all formats, to try to make up for the cost of the paper editions through digital sales) to cover the cost of putting out that paper edition? My only “profitable” titles are the ones where I either 1) never published a paper edition, or 2) sold the original work of art I created for the cover of the book. Then there’s that short story I linked to in the last paragraph, Last Christmas (have you read it? It’s only $1.99!), which has both earned more than it cost me to publish the eBook (I still have to buy an ISBN) and for which I sold the cover art. Including some of the other books’ cover art means it’s not my most profitable book, but it feels that way, since it’s earned close to $70 but cost me less than $10 to publish.

Here are some fun numbers about my relationship with LSI: Since I began working with them in 2007, I have paid LSI $2163.46. By my calculation, $408 of that was in “Digital Catalog Fees”, which is an Invoice-y way of saying I pay $12/year/title to have my books available for distribution to booksellers (i.e.: Amazon &c.), and the other $1728.46 was for things like setup fees, shipping and handling, proof copies, oh, and actually printing copies of my books for me to have for direct sales. Let’s take that second number first, and compare it to the total revenue I’ve had come in from direct sales of paper books, which is approximately $1531.33, or a couple hundred dollars less than I spent getting those books. That’s from nearly 5 years of sales. Of course, I have a fair amount of inventory on hand. If all the books I have on the shelves next to me sold for their full cover prices, my bookkeeping software tells me I’d have another $4716.93 from the sale of those 307 books. By retail value, roughly 40% of that is in the two Untrue Trilogies I published this year, fewer than ten of which have sold (between the two titles), so far. Theoretically, if I could ever sell all these books, I’d still make quite a good margin on selling paper copies directly. With the nearly-2/3 margin I calculate for that, I can even afford to do some discounting (which I regularly do, a dollar or two at a time, whenever it’ll help make a sale).

Now let’s look at that other number. The Digital Catalog Fees. I spent $408 to make and keep my titles available for distribution over the last 5 years. I earned $131.26 from wholesale sales of my books (after LSI took their cut for printing them). That’s right. Over the last five years I spent $408 to earn $131.26. On one hand, I’m also paying for visibility; that fee covers getting my books listed on Amazon, bn.com, and theoretically hundreds of other online booksellers, plus it gets them listed as available in the computers of all the bookstores, large and small, across the country. On the other hand, they (bookstores, and customers of online stores) rarely, if ever, order my paper books. Of the 13 titles I’ve printed & distributed with LSI, only 5 titles have ever sold wholesale via LSI, and only one title earned enough from wholesale sales to cover its own Digital Catalog Fees (until/unless I get one more annual fee, then it’s just as red as the others). That includes zero books sold in 2011. (Actually, technically, I sold negative two books via LSI in 2011 – I recently received two returns. Because of strange LSI policies I didn’t fully understand, the cost of the return of one of them exceeded the value of all 5 sales that book had made in prior years. Five sales, one return, zero profit (for that title).) So what is that visibility getting me? Not more sales from my own website. Maybe more eBook sales, though that’s impossible to track. Oh, and speaking of eBook sales: For the 5 titles which had wholesale sales, all earned more from eBook sales than from wholesale paperback sales. All. To readers who paid at least 50% less than those who bought paper copies.

So, what do we learn from this? Well, for one: Paying for distribution of paper books doesn’t make sense, at all. Also: I need to better gauge the number of paper books I’ll be able to sell directly; when I sell them, they’re profitable, but when they sit on my shelf, they aren’t. (To clarify: It was a terrible idea to publish a new edition of the First Untrue Trilogy, and was probably a bad idea to put out a paper edition of the Second Untrue Trilogy. Of the ~$1700 I spent on getting paper books made in the last 5 years, ~$700 was for those two books. Which is to say: Without those books, I’d have had ~$1300 in direct sales and ~$1000 in printing costs, and at least that aspect of it would have been profitable.) Another detail which comes up: Publishing digital-only is much more likely to be profitable for me, even when only a few copies sell.

Really, because only a few copies sell.

I can pretend that “someday I’ll reach a bigger paying audience”, and maybe I will, but I can’t count on it. I need to make decisions based on reality. Right now the reality is that I have a few, very dedicated readers and supporters (the so-called “true fans”) and a whole lot of readers who are very unlikely to spend anything at all on my work. (And when they do, it isn’t on a paperback.) So: I’ve already begun taking my books “out of print”.

I told LSI to “cancel” my two poetry books (right after publishing Unspecified), which have earned about $70 between them and cost me somewhat over $480, so far. They weren’t making even enough sales to cover the annual Digital Catalog Fees, so I cancelled them. (I’ll have full eBook editions for sale… soon.) I’ll probably cancel all the rest when my LSI reps get back from holiday. I have literally no idea when they’ll stop being listed as available on Amazon and other sites. Right now my poetry books are listed as “temporarily out of stock” on Amazon, even though I cancelled them months ago. Note: I still have plenty of copies available. That actually goes for all my books. I have over 300 books sitting here, waiting for readers. Even after they’re removed from all the bookstores’ databases, I’ll still have them for sale. I’ll work on updating modernevil.com in the new year, too. I’ll probably offer them unsigned for the cover price and signed for a little more, close to what I have now, but my own buy button instead of external links. (Since those links literally never worked for getting sales, anyway.)

What about my future books, you may be wondering? Well, how about digital-first? (Maybe digital-only.) How about digital first, and maybe a Kickstarter or just-straight-painting-sale or maybe a pre-order signup process to see whether there’s any interest in a limited-edition, direct-only, paper version of the book (probably hardback). If I’m not doing distribution, if each paper book is limited edition from copy one, the whole thing gets turned on its head, from price to quality to design. Offset printing still won’t make sense until/unless I get that theoretical larger-audience, but I can design a very nice hardback edition for LSI to print just for me and my readers. If I don’t have to give a retailer 50% (or more) off the top of every sale, even POD hardbacks can be reasonable prices. If I’m producing collector’s items, even relatively affordable ones, even just selling a few can make me a lot more money than I’ve been getting from book sales. It’ll be a sort of cautious Freemium model. Less-popular books will make most of their money from digital, more-popular books will make vastly more money from paper books, and I’ll still probably make more money from art than from books for years to come. (These aren’t final numbers, but it looks like for 2011 I’ll have had a little over $700 in book sales, a little over $1400 in art sales, and a little over $1600 in expenses. Profitable again, which is good, but not by a whole lot. If I just get an order of magnitude more successful, I might actually have to think about things like paying quarterly estimated taxes! In the meantime, I’m generally happy where I’m at.)

I’m going to play around with numbers a lot more in the next few weeks. Keep your eyes out for a new set of quarterly (and end-of-year) download numbers, with some interesting spikes, some time next month. I’ve actually got about 3 months of bookkeeping I’ve got to go through; I’ve been slacking. (The numbers above are all estimates; I have numbers, I just haven’t got them all in the right places for business purposes, yet.) I’ll also want to run all the numbers I can think of on … everything I’ve been talking about. And some projections into the new year.

Oh, and I’ve got to finish writing those books. I’ve not been working on them in the last week or two, partially because sitting down every day to grind out more chapters was beginning to feel more like work and less like something I wanted to be doing – and I want to write these books. So I’m taking most of the money/expenses out of my business, and I’m taking most of the pressure off my process, and I think I’ll be better off for it. In fact, I think my business will be more successful, financially, and I’ll personally be more successful, creatively and emotionally. Win, win, win, and win for anyone who likes reading my books, too.

Numbers for Q3, 2011

Downloads were down about 15%, compared to Q2, for both eBooks and Podiobooks. eBook sales are… still unpredictable. July had pretty strong sales (still nothing to write home about), but August and September were back in the old “single-digit-sales-per-month” zone. I spent most of the last two months working on a new poetry collection, Unspecified, which “came out” this weekend (the eBook is still wending its way to all the eBook stores, and while the paperback is listed on Amazon already, I haven’t received my own initial print run, yet), so we’ll see how it does – having an October 1st release date means that the next time I make a post like this one, I’ll have a full quarter’s data on it.

Anyhow, here are all the eBook and Podiobook download numbers for/through Q3 of 2011, as usual giving the total of eBook downloads, the total of Podiobook downloads, and the more-accurate (re: # of people who dl’d a full book) total downloads of the final episodes of each Podiobook, as: eBook/total-PB/final-PB

  • Lost and Not Found: 296 / 1,751 / 73
  • Dragons’ Truth: 710 / 1,781 / 175
  • Forget What You Can’t Remember: 322 / 6,686 / 126
  • The First Untrue Trilogy: 409 (eBook only)
  • The Second Untrue Trilogy: 299 (eBook only)
  • Untrue Tales… Book One: 2 / 3,797 / 237
  • Untrue Tales… Book Two: 1 / 4,534 / 310
  • Untrue Tales… Book Three: 1 / 2,124 / 166
  • Untrue Tales… Book Four: N/A / 1,728 / 154
  • Untrue Tales… Book Five: N/A / 1,636 / 168
  • Untrue Tales… Book Six: N/A / 2,607 / 312
  • Cheating, Death: 261 / 7,663 / 467
  • Lost and Not Found – Director’s Cut: 180 / 511 / 63
  • More Lost Memories (full): 182 / 1,409 / 80
  • More Lost Memories (ind. stories, eBook only): 15
  • Time, emiT, and Time Again (full): 177 / 1,286 / 75
  • Time, emiT, and Time Again (ind. stories, eBook only): 8
  • Last Christmas: 1
  • Total Q3: 2,864 / 37,513 / 2,406
  • Total all-time: 25,805 / 515,002 / 33,439

Continue reading Numbers for Q3, 2011