Shockingly naive article. "If he sold one million books at $100 each he would make so much more! What is he thinking?" Uh, maybe no one would buy his books if he charged more? Perhaps he's an intelligent man and has experimented with different prices? Perhaps the author of the article should have asked him?
This piece is bizarre because the author never once acknowledges that it's possible Locke could <i>not</i> sell a million of his books the conventional way. In other words, the author never acknowledges that Locke may have made <i>less money</i> with a traditional publisher.
> Locke makes less money with his 99-cent gambit than he would selling the same number of books with a traditional publisher.<p>It's like nobody has ever heard of a supply/demand curve.
This title made me do two double-takes.<p>My first thought: "Are people are buying public domain philosophy works as Kindle books?" <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Locke" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Locke</a><p>My second thought: "Is somebody writing as Locke as a reference to Ender's Game?"
>If he sold a million Kindle e-books at 99 cents, he'd clear $346,500 -- nice work if you can get it. But if he were working with a traditional publisher, that $346,500 might be a lot closer to $1 million.<p>If there's an "if" in every one of your hypothetical sentences, it's probably not an argument worth pursuing.
This article fails to bring several factors into its economic model. It should be about incentives and demand elasticity here - the "steepness" of the demand curve.<p>According to the article, he recieves $0.35 from a Kindle sale, and ~$2 from a traditional book sale. In this case, he would need to sell (2/0.35) = 5.7 times as many Kindle books as traditional books to be neutral between the options. To get the equivalent incentive from traditional books, he would need to sell ~175,000 traditional books.<p>Since he offers both physical and Kindle editions for his books, the question becomes, did ~175,000 customers purchase the Kindle book who normally would have purchased the physical book? Probably not, IMO.<p>So basically, it sounds like Locke actually knows what he's doing - he's driven by monetary incentives and his arrangement has more-or-less maximized his proceeds.
It will be interesting to see how sustainable his success is. I bought one of his books for $0.99, well below my impulse buy threshold, and found it to be worth about that. It wasn't a really bad book, but it wasn't much better than what you find in a college creative writing class.
So, is it known for sure that Amazon did not cut him a special deal? It might be rational to incent a "hot" author to offer up a good deal on an exclusive in the Kindle marketplace. Perhaps he got to keep a much higher percentage?