Writers Tricks of the Trade January-February 2015 | Page 22

PRESS “CONTROL” THEN CLICK BUY TO PURCHASE THE BOOK PUBLISH OR PERISH? (CONT’D) www.scribd.com SINCE SCRIBD LAUNCHED IN 2013, THEIR READERS HAVE CLOCKED MORE THAN 17 MILLION HOURS OF READING TIME ACROSS ALL GENRES. THEY HAVE BUILT A VERY POPULAR OPEN PLATFORM FOR PUBLISHING AND SHARING DOCUMENTS OF ALL KINDS. TO DATE, PEOPLE ALL OVER THE WORLD HAVE SHARED MORE THAN 60 MILLION DOCUMENTS VIA SCRIBD, FROM LANDMARK COURT FILINGS TO BUSINESS PRESENTATIONS TO ACADEMIC PAPERS FROM SCHOLARS AROUND THE WORLD. THEY CLAIM TO HAVE 80 MILLION READERS PER MONTH. looked at as one of the biggest experiments in reshaping reading ever undertaken. The question now is whether Kindle Unlimited will foster a new generation of readers, as Amazon hopes, or will those readers drown in bad work? Will it put most indie authors on a treadmill of writing and promoting that only a few can hope to escape, or will it be a tool for liberation? These questions are shaking up the independent publishing community. Don’t look for it to go away any time soon. Scribd had received an additional $22 million in financing in the last week of December 2014, bringing its total funding to $48 million. Rest assured, Amazon did or will take notice. Since Scribd began its service a little more than a year ago, it says it had monthly subscriber growth of 31 percent. Historically when artists became more popular, their works got more expensive. Writers began by writing cheap paperbacks and then graduated to pricier hardcovers as the acclaim built. With Kindle Unlimited some authors are getting more popular by becoming less expensive, which makes them more popular. This seems to confirm Amazon’s argument that “lowering e-book prices will help — not hurt — the reading culture.” However, taking a closer look, Kindle Unlimited could be “a double-edged sword.” For one thing, not every writer is equipped with a huge supply of work from all years of going unpublished. Those that do are able to drop prices and, by sheer volume of sales, increase income. Authors like multi-published Kathryn Le Veque say, “Most readers like to read their favorite books over and over. I’m getting a crowd that not only borrows my book, but will then buy that same book to keep.” Also, she says, some of her books are not available in Kindle Unlimited, “so there are some they must buy in order to read.” Authors have no control over the payment for books that are borrowed in Kindle Unlimited, which changes every month. Although it started high, the amount has begun to drop. With 50 books currently in publication, Le Veque has stated that she also has to worry about the service embracing more and more work. A higher number of books in Kindle Unlimited “is not what we want to see as authors, because that drives down the royalty even more,” she said. Or so it seems. Amazon has not explained itself to the writers’ satisfaction. Cont’d… JAN-FEB 2015 PAGE 14 WRITERS TRICKS OF THE TRADE