eBook definedDespite being around now for over twenty years, no-one has yet come up with a stable definition for the word ‘eBook’. However, one can di...
(1) The item is distributed as a single file (so CD encyclopaedias are not considered to be eBooks) and can be opened as a data file in an application, rather than being launched as an executable (.exe) file
(2) The item is both complete & completed – i.e. neither a chapter / episode / serial nor an unfinished work in progress
(3) The item is familiar to readers, as obeying most or all of the standard conventions of a book (e.g. contains a table of contents, preface, index, etc. and is between 25,000 and 400,000 words in length)The advantages of an eBookAside from the financial advantages for the author (which I will cover below) there are a number of intrinsic benefits to eBooks when compared to the traditional printed book:
(1) Readers can search the text to quickly find key information, particularly when reading for a second time
(2) Readers can adjust the font face and size to make the book easier to read (ever more vital for an ageing population!)
(3) Blind or partially-sighted readers can make further use of text-to-speech conversion software (“screen readers”)
(4) eBooks can be read in low light or total darkness by using the back-lighting features of PC or mobile devices
(5) Distribution costs are extremely low and eBook authors and publishers can respond quickly to any erratum or addendum, with more frequent, incremental editions
(6) eBooks are environmentally friendly. Many hundreds can be stored on a single device and paper use (through printing) is minimised or avoided altogether
(7) eBooks without DRM protection can be instantly copied and backed up easilyThe Advantages for the AuthorWhen writing a traditional printed book, the odds are stacked against the author making a decent living from their work! eBooks, by contrast, deliver a real return on investment for the author:
(1) You cannot get rejected! A traditional book may get rejected 50 or 60 times by different publishers and agents before finally being accepted – or indeed may never find a home! Many authors paper their walls with rejection letters. You won’t have to!
(2) You don’t have to wait! For the traditional book, it can take up to two years for the publisher to get your book to market (managing as she does a huge and inefficient supply chain of printers, shippers, wholesalers, distributors, marketers and booksellers). An eBook may take no more than 10 weeks!
(3) You can make a lot more money! To illustrate this, imagine a traditionally published book with a list price of £20. The Distributor and buying public share a 50% trade discount between them (£10 in this case) and the Publisher takes £9; leaving the author with a 10% royalty on the discounted “net” price (£1). For a trade paperback, this might be less (perhaps 70 pence). For an equivalent £20 eBook, you could earn 14 times as much on each copy (£14)! More on this later in the guide.
(4) You get your money sooner and with less surprises! On a traditional book, an author would generally get their cut up to 120 days after the actual sale, with 20% of their cash witheld as insurance against unsold books. With eBooks it varies from immediate receipt to 90 days, with no portion witheld.
(5) The practical advantages; eBooks can be changed or updated easily, without the need for new print runs and thrown-away old editions. They need never go out of print and can cross genres or use unusual formulas without aggravating an interfering editor! Finally, you retain complete rights to the title and agreements will be non-exclusive (so you can sell through other publishers).
ConclusionsI hope I have convinced you that the eBook option is very much worth investigation, particularly for the new author. You can avoid publisher rejection letters, get to market 12 times faster and make 14 times the income per book than you would in the traditional publishing model.
In chapter 2 of my free eBook Publishing Guide ("features of the eBook Market"), I explore the Book market itself and the different emerging publishing models therein.
How to Submit your SiteMap to Google, Yahoo! and MSN
Want Google, MSN, Ask and Yahoo! to index your site? UK SEO Expert, David Viney, shows you how to create and submit a sitemap to all of the major search engines in this simple article.Better Google.co.uk Search Engine Rankings
Want to rank better on the “pages from the UK” section Google.co.uk? This is more of a challenge than it might appear (particularly for .com domains). In this article, David Viney shows you how.Search Engine History - The Early Years
In this first of three articles on search engine history, SEO Expert David Viney looks at the emergence of the internet and the forerunners to modern, web-based search engines (including WAIS & Archie).