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WritersReaders.com Glossary and FAQ's

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Audio Message from Jerry
Providing writers an explanation of common publishing terms and answers to questions they need to know to achieve success.

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Glossary
Booksellers - Any customer that retails books to the end consumer or resells to book retailers, acting as a middleman. Booksellers come in a variety of customer types such as retailers, distributors, jobbers, mass merchants, membership clubs, Internet, and the specialty market.
Distribution - The process of shipping books to selected booksellers. A "good distribution" refers to the correct quantity of books being shipped to the correct bookseller based on the customer type, price, format, category, and potential for sales. Good distribution is the key to a high percent of sale.
Guaranteed Sale - When publishers ship books to booksellers, they guarantee that any unsold books can be returned to the publisher for full credit. For example, if a book retails for $20 and the publisher sells that book to a bookseller at a 50% discount, they will bill the customer $10. If that book remains unsold over the course of several months, the bookseller can return that copy and be credited for the cost of the book or $10.
Percent of Sale - Also referred at as sell-through percentage, the percentage of books sold by the publisher compared to the number printed. If you print 1000 copies and sell 750, you have a percent of sale of 75%. An accurate percent of sale can only be measured after several weeks on sale in the marketplace because the system requires time for the book to have a shelf life, return unwanted copies to the publisher, counted and recorded as returns.
Return Percent - The percentage of books returned compared to the number printed. If you print 1000 copies and sell 600, then after several weeks on sale 400 will be returned, your return percent would be 40%.
Returns - Copies of books distributed into the marketplace that did not sell at retail. These unsold copies are returned to their publisher for full price. This is the result of a guaranteed sale, the method in which all publishers does business.
Sell Through - Another term for Percent of Sale.

Please use the "Email Jerry" form on the About Jerry page to send me your terms for explanation.
FAQ's
Q-If understanding your book publishing audience is critical, how does a writer go about doing that?

A-First, you should become a regular visitor to a bookstore, make observations about and read the competition in your writing genre. Of course, there are many more things to do, but these are the beginning steps. Once you become a regular weekly visitor I will outline more specifically what you need to start looking for.
Q-I'm curious how other publishers view category romance authors—does a good sales record in category fiction mean anything to a mainstream publisher or agent? Could it actually be a negative thing (work against you in some weird way)?

A-Consistent sales with high sell-through (net sales divided by total printed) is a gold mine to publishers. Regardless of whether the author is a category writer, consistent levels of sales over the course of many years with high sell-through are what publishers are seeking. Good sales history is the key; category is a distant second in viewing the success of an author. So category fiction or any category sales that remain consistent book after book is how publishers make real money.
Q-Do you think the industry has restructured in such a way that they've basically made it impossible, from the inside, to become another Nora Roberts?

A-NO! Definitely not. Rest assured, the industry is trying all they can to find more authors like Nora Roberts. One problem is that writers seem reluctant to do what it takes to become a Nora Roberts, and I'm not referring to the writing, but to the marketing, promotion and publicity aspects of what it takes to be successful.
Q-What would it take for independent booksellers to be given a level competitive playing field with the larger nationwide booksellers?

A-It's not possible, simply because the business centers around the volume of books sold which generates revenue and billing and the independents are typically only one or two stores compared to several hundred of the national chain bookstores. The volume the independents can generate compared to their larger competitors is apples to oranges. It’s unfortunate but that’s the nature of the business.

Please use the "Email Jerry" form on the About Jerry page to send me your questions.
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