In this highly informative Huffington Post article, "Setting the Price for Your Novel -- What You Need to Know," Kristen Houghton lays out exactly how to price your novel. She also talks about discounts, how retail prices are calculated, and a lot of other factors that can affect the price of a book.
If you want to know which price gets the best performance in terms of maximizing readers and sales, Written Word Media has done an analysis. According to Written Word, if your only goal is to maximize the number of readers you acquire:
- $0.99 is the most effective price point.
- $1.99 is not far behind.
- Price your book at $4.99.
- but value acquiring new readers more than maximizing revenue, go for $1.99.
- but want to maximize revenue more than you want to acquire new readers, price your book at $2.99.
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Setting the Price for Your Novel -- What You Need to Know
By Kristen Houghton
Think you know all about publishing your book? The writing, the edits, etc., sure. But there's more. Do you know how to price your novel so it will sell well? This isn't about publicity, this is about the actual book price seen by your readers. There's a whole new world out there for authors and we need to be on top of all the "my book" related parts of publishing. Careful pricing is one of the keys to success.
One of the most important aspects with which an author must deal is the aspect of dollars and cents; in other words the selling price of your book and the profit you will make. If you are traditionally published, no worries; your publisher will determine the retail price of your print novel as well as your ebook version. Publishers will tell you the price point of your book and you're pretty much set.
However if you're going the route of a boutique publishing house of which you are a partner, or you are self-publishing, you need to know the publishing basics. The number one basic is how to do retail pricing. It isn't complicated; it is simple math. The retail price is achieved through an appraisal of your book's target audience and factors in the competitive price at which books in the same genre are selling. A simple example is if you're a romance writer and a competitor's print book of a similar length and size is priced at $9.95. You can feel secure in pricing your own at the same price.
The second basic is knowing how to actually arrive at the retail price. That figure should be at least 2.5 times the single-copy printing cost. This allows for a reasonable margin that will cover book-related costs and your profits after trade discounts are factored in. The retail price also helps establish the net sales payment amount. That's the amount you, the author, make from each sale. To make a nice profit per sale, and staying competitive, you price your book at $12.95.
But, there are some other things to consider when you set the price for your book. Remember the word discounts? Here's how it relates to the retail price.
Find out more about how to price your book HERE.