Looks good. Thanks for the hard work! I will get it!
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Originally posted by Larry Ragman View Post
No issue with you running the business the way you think best. But by the same token Amazon author compensation policies are not my concern. I was just answering Lithium’s question. I don’t have much interest in a kindle version for $25.Helping those who wear the white coat get a fair shake on Wall Street since 2011
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Originally posted by Hatton View PostIs it possible to buy the book directly from you and not go thru amazon.Helping those who wear the white coat get a fair shake on Wall Street since 2011
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Originally posted by StarTrekDoc View PostInteresting - so at $30 for paperback any more than the 9.99 kindle -- along with the carrying cost of production, unless the publisher covers?
At any rate, I think the information in the book is a great value at $30. If I packaged the same exact information up into an online course I'd charge $1000 for it. From a business perspective, people who aren't willing to buy a $30 book from us probably aren't going to be any kind of a customer for us. That doesn't mean we don't like them nor want to serve them. We're not JUST here to make money, but no margin, no mission.
The book is # 1 in three different Amazon categories today and # 2 in another. In fact, in a relatively large category (Law) it is # 4, besting Michelle Obama's book, William Barr's book published last month, and even Getting to Yes. It's even up to # 25 in the huge category of "medical ebooks" (3 spots behind When Breath Becomes Air.) Don't know how long it'll stay there, but I'm pretty happy with the launch today.Helping those who wear the white coat get a fair shake on Wall Street since 2011
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Originally posted by The White Coat Investor View Post
Yea, that's an experiment too. I'm worried that Kindle sales are cannibalizing our paperback sales. If it turns out they are, you'll likely see $25 pricing on the Kindle version of all the books soon.
You know Amazon screws over authors on Kindle versions, right? Basically, the author's royalty on a Kindle sold for $9.99 or less is 70%. For anything $10.00 or more, it's 35%. So there's no point to selling anything on Kindle between $10 and 20. They basically force authors to sell books for less than they're worth and that figure hasn't even been adjusted for inflation in the 8 years since I first published. At $9.99, I'm getting paid 2+ times as much to sell a paperback as a Kindle version.
So the question is do people look at the $25 Kindle price and just buy the paperback instead? Or are we just losing Kindle sales? We'll find out soon I'm sure. Fun with business/entrepreneurship!
Still running a for profit business here....
As one who reads a lot, and almost exclusively on Kindle, I will prolly still get it, despite the hefty price tag.
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Originally posted by The White Coat Investor View Post
Perhaps surprisingly, a lot of people do. 45% of the copies purchased today were the Kindle version.
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