Friday, May 09, 2014

Does anyone know the optimum price for a Kindle book?

77p on Amazon Kindle
 This time last year another writer suggested that I put my Regency books in a virtual box set. I took her advice and got the wonderful Jane Dixon-Smith to design me a 3-D cover and put up the first of two Duke Series box sets. I was astonished that the first box set sold over 1000 in the first week and continued to sell well until the end of June. I priced it at £1.99 – the books were selling individually at 99 p
£1.99 on Amazon Kindle
Emboldened by this I got the second box set up in July and this also sold hundreds of copies. Strangely I still continue to sell individual copies of the books that could be bought much cheaper as a box set.
I told several friends about the wonders of box sets and they also had remarkable sales.
However, when I adjusted the price of my books to take into account that some are novellas and others full-length books, I was forced to put up the price of my box sets as well. Not unexpectedly books that were now £1.99 instead of 99 p and box sets that were now £2.99 instead of £1.99, no longer sold in their hundreds. I put the price down to the novellas to 77 p and sell hundreds of these every week.
Although I have double the amount of books available for sale on the Kindle I'm selling fewer copies of my longer books than I did this time last year but my royalties remain about the same. I'm about to release a four book box set – all the titles are novellas. This will be at £1.99 and I'm waiting to see if this is in fact the magic price.
I wonder how many readers only look at books under a certain price – I tend to go for bargains when Amazon  sends me a list. The other day I bought a recent Michael Connelly for £1.32 and three Lee Child novellas for less than a pound each. I rarely pay over £3.50 for any e-book– even one by Christian Cameron.
Are you prepared to pay more than £4.00 for an e-book if it's by an author you want to read? What about books by indie authors? Do you always expect them to be less than two pounds?
I wanted to buy Julie Cohen's 'Dear Thing' - but to my surprise the paperback was cheaper than the e-book so I got that instead.
I know that other writers change the prices of their books on a regular basis – sometimes putting them as high as £4.99 – I would be interested to know if their royalties remain the same despite the change in prices.
I'm still not sure whether putting the longer books up was a good idea, but I'm going to stick with it as I don't think a 30,000 word novella should be the same price as a full-length book.
Mass-market paperbacks are on their way out – so the pundits say. I certainly buy more books for my Kindle than I would ever have considered when there were only paperbacks. Imagine buying over 100 paperbacks a year? I doubt many people do that, but I'm sure thousands of people by over 100 e-books.
£1.99 - out May 23rd.


7 comments:

Jean Fullerton-East End Girl & Author said...

That is a very interesting post. It's the same equation Supermarket use. Price them low: sell them high.

Fenella J Miller said...

Seems to work, Jean, -but it balances our royality wise as at the higher price one gets 70% instead of 35%.
Maureen told me someone who write ssimilar thing to her ahs her e-book at 20p!!

Sheila Norton said...

I grapple with this myself, Fenella. When I first put my back list on Amazon for Kindle I had no idea what I was doing and priced them too high (can't remember how much, now!), and after a short while slashed them all to 77p 'as an experiment'. The experiment worked so well, I sold so many, I kept the price at 77p. These are all full length novels, all but 3 of them previously published. As another experiment (!) I've now priced my new book YESTERDAY at £1.99 to see if the sales will suffer - too early yet to say - and if so, whether my royalties will even out, as you suggest. Sometimes I think 77p is selling too cheap - but if I earn more that way ...? Personally if I want an ebook badly enough I'll pay up to about £4 for it (or wait for the price to come down to that level).

Rena George said...

A very thought provoking post, Fenella. I really don't believe there is any norm in this. As an experiment earlier this year I reduced all my books to 99p, but there was no notable difference in my sales. When I reinstated the original prices, my sales substantially increased. Sod's law, I think, but I'm not complaining.
Most of my books hover around the £2 mark, which I think is a fair price that most people are prepared to pay. I certainly think £4.99 would be too much for an eBook, even if it was a best-seller.

Fenella J Miller said...

Thanks for your input, Sheila, Rena, intersting how things work. This week my sales are down - selling less than in April no idea why this is. Perhaps Easter boosted sales last month?.

Helena said...

I doubt if most people distinguish much between 77p and 99p, but that 22p per book would make a lot of difference to the author over time.

Fenella J Miller said...

Helena, I sell far more at 77p than at 99p - silly really -but readers do seem to pick thr cheaper titles.