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Publishers are not as dumb
as people think
By Scott Nicholson
Most observers and
even some authors believe the major publishing industry
has been slow to respond to the electronic-book era.
True, the industry is struggling with pricing while
trying to protect hardcover sales and has not been
especially welcoming of digital books, especially those
that compete with their higher-priced versions. But they
have not been putting their heads in the sand, either.
Publishing contracts of this century almost universally
grant publishers the electronic rights to the content,
and those clauses may have seemed innocuous even two
years ago, when e-book sales were negligible. The clauses
that were afterthoughts returned the electronic rights to
the writers when the book went out of print, back when
that term was more cut-and-dried.
But, increasingly, the publishers are setting clauses
that lock in the license as long as some minimum sales
levels are reached. I don't get a lot of contracts these
days, but the ones I know about generally have numbers
like "If ebook royalties reach $100 in a six-month
period, the clause automatically renews." In other
words, if some laughable minimum of sales is met, the
publisher retains the rights. Possibly forever, if the
clause keeps renewing.
That is literally indentured servitude that traps writers
over an entire career, at least those unlucky enough to
have the moderate success needed to stay trapped by the
clause. Ironically, those writers who are most deeply
invested in The System are the ones who are going to be
in the worst shape in five years, and even worse in 10 or
20, their retirement years, when they will be getting
nickels instead of dollars.
You'd think agents and authors would be screaming about
this development, but the ones who are most invested in
The System are the ones most actively in denial. Look at
the agent blogs--most are talking about how challenging
the current system is and how lousy the quality of
submissions are (when they are not actively making fun of
some poor author's query letter), not how their roles may
be diminishing, and very few (I've only found one) will
admit that the current ebook clauses are suicide. I know
agents have fought these battles with publishers,
insisting on better e-book terms, but at the end of the
day, you just get the most you can right now and take
your 15 percent. Any agent who did otherwise would be
either looking for job or heralded as a true advocate of
the author. In other words, blackballed by New York.
In today's publishing environment, you still need an
agent and the agent still needs to get a significant
deal. It makes sense for them to do the best they can
right now and not worry so much about the long term.
Unless the client is a blockbuster, the client likely
will not be earning royalties or a lifetime revenue
stream anyway.
Even if you are an e-book phenomenon, you will do better
if you have shelf presence. Take Boyd Morrison's deal for
The Ark, after making a name selling $1.99 e-books. He
was signed by a major publisher and now his e-book is
$11.99 and he's not making much more per sale than he did
back then--and the poor consumer is expected to pay six
times the price. By Boyd's own admission, the biggest
edits were some minor stuff and the changing of one
character's name. Where's all that extra money going and
what value was added?
Publishers are great at distributing books and can afford
to ship free copies to the numerous book bloggers, who
often seem to be reviewing the same book at the same
time. That's been the carrot publishers are still holding
out while they grip the stick to beat authors over the
head. "You're not a real writer and no one will
review your books" is still a powerful tool.
If publishers use the carrot to lock down long-time
e-book rights, and ebooks become even 20 percent of the
market (as is predicted by 2015), then those publishers
have just made major bank, and will continue to do so as
e-books increase in popularity. I don't see anyone
predicting the genie will be shoved back in the bottle
and all this new-fangled technology will get boring.
After an e-book is published, it is nothing but content,
and the publishers will be skimming both the cream and
the milk, with little additional work besides dipping the
ladle. As the e-book market grows, those publishers who
have hoarded the most content will be on Easy Street.
Those writers who gave the most away will be in the
soup-kitchen lines, or, if they're lucky, they will be
the beneficiaries of charity auctions at fan conventions.
Agents are debating whether it's better for the writers
to get 15 percent of list or 25 percent of net--well,
what about 70 percent of gross? How about that, Mr. Agent
and Ms. Publisher? (And, by the way, you can trim 15
percent off that 15 percent, so the writer is getting
around 13 percent.) And when e-books reach their natural
price range of $1-$5, those writers will be getting a
quarter a copy and have no control over anything, while
publishers will have an easy, ongoing revenue stream
because they essentially own the content (you can call it
a "license," but if it's for a rock-bottom
e-book floor to keep the clause active, then it will last
forever).
Sure, publishers will be happy to return your rights once
the content is worthless, meaning your career is dead and
every drop has been squeezed from the teat. Of course,
agents will get their spillover as long as their names
were on the original contracts.
The odd thing is how little the word "author"
appears in all this discussion of "The Future of
E-books." But, then, most authors went into writing
because they were lousy at math. And, I suspect, they
like getting beaten with sticks.
-------------------------
Scott Nicholson is author of 10 novels, including Drummer
Boy, The Red Church, The Skull Ring, and They Hunger.
He's also written three story collections and six
screenplays. He works as a journalist and freelance
editor in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. His
web site is www.hauntedcomputer.com.
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