It could soon pay more to write lengthier
books, if you are an author self-publishing on Amazon.com’s Kindle ebook
platform
It could soon pay more to write lengthier
books, if you are an author self-publishing on Amazon.com Inc.’s Kindle ebook
platform.
Starting next month, the e-commerce giant
will pay independent authors based on the number of pages read, rather than the
number of times their book has been borrowed.
The move is aimed at authors enrolled in
Kindle direct publishing platform—which lets authors set list prices, decide
rights and edit the book at any time—and is applicable to ebooks made available
via the Kindle unlimited and Kindle owners’ lending library programmes.
Self-publishing has transformed what it means
to be an author. Simply uploading a document and adding a cover layout to it
can turn anyone into a published writer on ebook platforms such as Kindle and
Smashwords.
Amazon said on Monday the move would better
align payout with the length of books and how much customers read.
“We’re making this switch in response to
great feedback we received from authors,” Amazon said on its self-publishing
portal.
Amazon uses a complex method to determine
payments for independent authors—payouts are based on a fund, the size of which
is set by Amazon every month.
Under the new plan, authors will get a share
of the fund proportionate to the number of pages read.
While independent authors have largely
embraced Amazon’s self-publishing platform, the company has in the past been
involved in bitter fights with large publishers.
The company had a stand-off with publisher
Hachette Book Group and some authors last year over pricing. The fight ended
when Hachette and Amazon reached a multi-year agreement for e-book and print
book sales in November. Reuters
Source | Mint - The Wall Street Journal | 24 June 2015
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