Saturday, June 25, 2011

Setting E-Books Prices Tips

The self-publishing industry is certainly changing and this can certainly be seen in the e-book segment. It’s safe to say that e-books are now fully embraced by the traditional publishing industry as well. Even so, the e-publishing industry is still maturing and things will look radically different a year from now than they do today. This is especially true for e-book prices.

As a self-published author of an e-book title, one of the decisions you’ll have to make is where to price your book. And what sounded like a low price yesterday may be a high price today. The e-book pricing model is fluid and opinions cover the whole spectrum. Some books sell for $20 or $30+ while others are given away for free. So, how do you decide what to price your book at?

Here are some tips for pricing your e-book along with my own predictions of what will happen.

1. Do A Market Study Of e-Book Prices - This is a timeless pricing strategy. By seeing what the market is bearing, you’ll have an idea of where you need to be. To make this work, you’ll have to compare apples to apples. That means comparing prices of books similar to yours and books sold on similar channels.

2. Don’t Be Afraid To Change Your Price - One of the great things about publishing your own e-book is the ease with which you can change your book price. If you see that the market supports a higher price, then you can raise yours with the click of the button. And contrary to some ideas, it is not always a bad thing to raise your book price.

3. Remember The Power Of Volume - Why would someone consider pricing their book at $.99? It’s because 100,000 books sold at $1 will be more profitable than 1000 books sold for $10. If you find your sweet spot with price, and you have a good book, then what you lose on each sale you will make up in volume.

4. Overhead Makes This Possible - The reason e-book prices can be so low is because it takes so little capital to publish and distribute them. There is virtually no shipping cost (maybe a download fee), no printing cost, and no storage cost. In fact, your e-book only exists as electrons (or something like that). Remember, the more you raise your overhead, the less control you will have over your book price and still be profitable. Overhead is every cost it takes for you to create and market your e-book (cover design, marketing plans, etc…)

5. Consider Bundling – People always like a value. If you have two books, consider selling them bundled together at a higher price point. For example, if book #1 and #2 cost $2.99 each, why not create a 3rd book, “Book 1 And Book 2″ and sell it for $4.99? Your reader gets a chance to save 17% and you get the chance to sell more books by offering your readers a deal.

Here are my predictions for how I think that e-books and e-book pricing will affect the publishing industry:

I predict that 2011 will be a fun year to watch with the maturing of the e-book industry. I do think most titles will remain low, between $.99 and $2.99, but you will still have outliers. I think more people will purchase e-book readers and e-books will become the book of choice over physical books. I think that the e-book industry will be the final nail in the coffin of the antiquated distribution system that traditional publishers still use. They will be forced to become more efficient as they see their production costs rise, their volume fall, and their profit margins shrink. In fact, the profit margin for their e-book divisions may help their physical book sales limp along.

Who knows how things may eventually shake out, but it’s definitely a great time to be an author and reader of e-books. And somehow, the e-book industry may just be the savior for the print book industry.