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Quill and Feather Pub [Public] / Re: Article: No one buys books
« Last post by TimothyEllis on Today at 09:59:17 PM »
Interesting breakdown of Trad publishing, and it's worse than I thought.

I think I agree with the conclusion, the Trads are going to die, but not as fast as stated. It's going to be a long slow self strangulation. One that is already well underway.

[Moved this, as it's not really about marketing, but discussing the Trad model.]
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Quill and Feather Pub [Public] / Re: Article: No one buys books
« Last post by LilyBLily on Today at 01:56:39 PM »
Interesting that the bread-and butter earners for trad pubs are now franchise authors. Still genre, just less trend-driven.
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Quill and Feather Pub [Public] / Re: Article: No one buys books
« Last post by Matthew on Today at 12:53:33 PM »
Interesting write-up, hadn't heard of The Trial.

This confirms a few things I suspected, mainly, even the big names hardly earn out their advances, and trad pub wants to spend as little on marketing as possible. The second point is why it never interested me. If I have to do all of the work of building up the audience to begin with, what do I need trad pub for?

The rest of the doom and gloom ... I think we could have expected.

So many interesting tidbits copied into that article. Thanks for sharing, it's worth the read.
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Quill and Feather Pub [Public] / Re: Article: No one buys books
« Last post by elleoco on Today at 07:56:39 AM »
From what I see on reader forums, there are voracious Romance readers determined not to pay anything for their books. They use Libby and other sources like that. At a guess some have no problem with piracy. However, I don't believe "no one" buys books. As a voracious reader myself I have a monthly book budget to keep it under control and do get ebooks from the library and KU, and also use up that book budget every month. There are even a few authors whose overpriced traditionally published ebooks I buy every year rather than wait until I can get them at the library. I also see a lot of posts on those forums by readers who are like me or who do buy hard copies of their books.
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Quill and Feather Pub [Public] / Re: Article: No one buys books
« Last post by Post-Crisis D on Today at 06:40:20 AM »
I haven't published traditionally, but from what I recall, publishers expected authors to do most of their own marketing.  And authors had to pay out of their own pocket (or advance) for most, if not all, of that.  That would be stuff like traveling to book signings, radio/TV promos/interviews where possible and whatever other means of marketing the author may do.

Even just a few years ago, self-publishing had a stigma despite the number of authors who had historically self-published.  There is no as much of a stigma against self-publishing anymore.  And, more and more people are opting for eBooks and self-published eBooks are pretty much identical to eBooks from big publishing companies.

So, I wonder if the big publishers have effectively experienced a "brain drain" where those authors that were successful at marketing their books just sort of cut out the middleman and newer authors just skipped the middleman entirely, both due to the ease of self-publishing these days and the growing loss of stigma around it.

Which would mean not that people aren't buying books but that people aren't buying very many books from the big publishers.
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Quill and Feather Pub [Public] / Re: Article: No one buys books
« Last post by R. C. on Today at 06:31:07 AM »
Wow.
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I most often read on a sepia background with a contrasting font color. The built-in choice for font against the sepia isn't often dark enough, but the sepia background is a lot easier to read for long stretches at a time for me. So I read in apps that give me a choice of colors so I can find one that works best. I'm always looking for the least glare because I read so much and I do it for long stretches at a time.

But that can depend on lighting in the area too. Sometimes I do switch to a white background, and sometimes I switch to a black one if the room light is very dim.

For paper, I love the way white looks. But reading from it does seem to make my eyes tired faster. And reading outdoors on a sunny day is blinding if the paper is white. Since cream has been the traditional color expectation for fiction, I've stuck with it in my print books and will probably keep doing it.

But eyes are different. I don't think there's enough of a reason to choose one over the other. And I wouldn't think it weird if I saw a hardcover book with white paper. The paper colors of most paperbacks vary wildly even within the cream family. Who is to say it isn't just a really, really pale cream? :D

If I'm remembering correctly, the last time I got a good look at a large print book, other than having really thin paper, it was also bright, crisp white. So that could be the standard for helping the most people see clearly. I don't know. :)

I know this is getting off-topic, but here are some large print guidelines I found from The American Printing House for the Blind:
https://www.aph.org/resources/large-print-guidelines/

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Paper

Paper that is white with black text is considered the best for contrast.
However, many people who have low vision have difficulty with white
paper because it produces glare in some cases. Other options are ivory,
antique white, eggshell, light beige, pastel yellow, or pastel pink paper
with black text. Other good combinations are light beige paper with navy
text, yellow paper with navy text, eggshell paper with dark brown text.
Gray paper is not recommended under any circumstances. Neither is gray
text. This is true for both print and electronic text.
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Yeah, accessibility in other areas is a lot more straightforward.

Also, unless someone is a programmer, there are limits to how customization is available. You're basically stuck with what someone else has designed. And in a lot of cases, accessibility isn't really built in all that effectively.
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Quill and Feather Pub [Public] / Article: No one buys books
« Last post by German Translator on Today at 05:49:04 AM »
https://www.elysian.press/p/no-one-buys-books
No one buys books
Everything we learned about the publishing industry from Penguin vs. DOJ.


---Discusses the celebrity and beststeller-driven Big 5 and also mentions indy authors:
Quote
If publishing houses make minimal investment in marketing their authors and focus largely on celebrity books and their backlist, authors who can’t snag a large advance might have better luck building their own audience and publishing elsewhere.


Quote
The romance category has already gone independent.

Many of those heavy readers of romance novels at that time switched to self-published stories. A very different price point. 99 cents, $1.99, away from what we call mass-market trade paperbacks… The mass-market trade paperback is the sort of small-format mass-market book, like it is a trade paperback, but a smaller format. It has been declining for the last 25 years. But we had a step change around ’14, ‘15, with this trend that so many consumers went away from mass-market books into electronic ebooks in particular and self-published books.”

— Markus Dohle, CEO, Penguin Random House
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The greater the contrast, the more likely a combination is to pass.

And that is one of the problems with ADA compliance on websites.  Websites weren't a thing when the ADA was passed and, because Congress (U.S.) didn't make new laws to cover websites, they went around Congress and claimed the ADA applied anyway.  And courts are using the accessibility guidelines for websites to determine whether a site is ADA accessible.  And that's the problem: they are guidelines.  Some of those guidelines contradict one another.  Some of those guidelines may not improve things.

The contrast issue is one example.  If you have black on white or white on black, that's the highest contrast and your site is going to pass, but as demonstrated here, that might not be the most accessible option for a lot of people.

But courts use the guidelines as if they were rules.

And then you have the problem of predatory lawyers looking for sites to sue.

It would be far better for everyone if web design software developers, web designers, accessibility device manufacturers and groups with accessibility needs all worked together to develop tools as well as guidelines to make it easy and understandable for web designers and developers and small businesses and individuals to build websites that are accessible to widest possible audience.

But instead we have a situation where you face potential lawsuits for not adhering to at times self-contradictory guidelines.
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