I'm so over FREE - by Debbie Bennett
I’ve
written much over the years about the pros and cons of offering ebooks for free.
I once swore I’d never do it, that I’d sweated blood and wasn’t about to give
my efforts away for nothing, that writers should always be paid for their work.
And then
sales dried up. With a six-book series, FREE seemed the way to generate
interest and offer readers a way to see if they liked my books. Try before you buy, in effect. And for a
while it worked. For well over a year, I was selling more books by giving one
away than I was when they were all at a fixed price.
And then
sales dried up. To be fair, the past year or so seems to have been hard for a
lot of us. Blame the referendum, Brexit, Trump – whatever excuses you can come
up with – but sales aren’t what they were eighteen months ago. At all. The
traditional authors are squeezed in different ways, and I can’t pretend to
understand how it all works in the rarefied strata of the big 6/5/4/whatever,
but the indie pecking-order is somewhat different. Somewhere online, there’s a
saying that less than 10% of “authors” sell more than 100 books – or it might
be copies of a single book: for a huge number of authors, that amounts to the
same thing. And at the top of the indie pile, there are authors who are making
five and even six-figure sums from ebook sales. Not the Hugh Howeys of the
world, but less well-known indie writers, quietly writing and selling, writing
and selling. The key, I think is probably in the writing …
They talk
over on the venerated kboards
of writing and releasing a novel a month. A month.
I don’t think that would be sustainable for me even without the day job. I’d burn
out rapidly, even supposing I could manage a few months of such pressure. Yet
that seems to be the best route to sales, to being good at this writing job. And if that’s what it takes to be in the
race, I’m afraid I’m out before the start of the sprint. To me it’s more of a
marathon anyway. Yet I suspect these are your big-sellers at the top of the
indie list, the writers who are making a comfortable living at this game.
So –
reasons to be cheerful? Or optimistic, at least … Well I’ve sold a lot more
than 100 books, for starters. Hell, I’ve sold more than 100 paperbacks – which given that I have no
shop-front or store to sell from, isn’t actually bad going, is it? Add on
ebooks and I’m by no means anywhere near the bottom of the list. And my books
are regularly borrowed from the local library (I check these things…) No, I’m
not making anything like a living out of this – but it’s what I do. I could no
more stop being a writer than stop being a reader. And while I haven’t put anything
new out for a while, I’m still in the game and not planning on quitting any
time soon.
But free?
Nah, I’m not doing that any more. I put Hamelin’s Child back to
paid a few weeks ago on Apple and Barnes & Noble. It took Amazon a week or
so to catch up, but it will now cost a whole 99p to buy, including VAT.
Bizarrely there are still a few copies going as free on Amazon – I can’t quite
figure out why – but surprisingly sales are up. Maybe the old adage that you get what you pay for actually is true?
Some posts
about the state of book publishing and selling:
Comments
I think we have to accept that the market will fluctuate from time to time and we just have to roll with it. But, like you Debbie, I've certainly sold more than 100 copies of every book I've written. So I think we have to take comfort from that.
I still use free as a promotional tool, but only for limited periods. The 'permafree' idea used to be effective for the first book in a series, but now I think there are so many freebies around that readers are spoilt for choice. Ditto charity shop and 2nd hand paper books. There never used to be so many cheap/free books around, many of them in unread condition. Great for readers, of course - I haven't paid full price for a book in years - but not so good for authors.