Writers Tricks of the Trade Volume 5, Issue 5 | Page 22

PRESS “CONTROL” THEN CLICK “BUY” TO PURCHASE THE BOOK Do you have a Life WHAT SMALL PUBLISHERS SHOULD KNOW ABOUT BIG BOX STORE RETURN POLICY You have jumped into self-publishing like many authors have these days, or your book is published by a small press. You dream of seeing your book(s) on the shelves of Barnes & Noble, Target, Walmart and the like. Well, then you need to know about the return policies for these Big Box stores because it's an important piece of the book publishing business that few authors (and readers) understand. Can you think of any other industry where returns are allowed months into the future if the product doesn’t sell, and in any condition and invoices don’t have to be paid for months? Well, it is the norm in the publishing industry and should be a concern to small presses and self-published authors when aspiring to those big orders. The fact that books are returnable for full credit in the first place, in time frames that would be unacceptable in almost any other industry, raises the red flag. For one thing, that policy causes retailers to order quantities of books that have less chance of selling than a snowball in Hell not melting. And, on the publisher’s side, one of those big orders from a chain store could be the big score, so they rarely push back on what might be unrealistic orders because it gets their product in a position where it might really move. Stores like Barnes & Noble, Target, Costco and Walmart tend to take large up-front buys at horribly steep discounts, but every single one of the books they order is returnable at full tilt. They generally take at least a 60 percent discount, leaving 40 percent to cover the cost of producing the product, shipping and then paying royalties (in the case of a small publisher) and hopefully posting a profit. With the likelihood that the book might be returned in large quantities, there has to be a hold on the royalties, but all of the up-front production and shipping costs have to be paid by the publisher or self-published author. This can amount to thousands of dollars, depending upon the size of the order. When news of the big returns come, many find it’s cheaper to have the unsold books/returns destroyed rather than ship them back in a undetermined condition, because the also publisher pays to ship returns. One large, unsold order can sink a small publisher, and be devastating to an author. Story you would like to see published in Writers’ Tricks of the Trade? See the submission guidelines at the front of the eZine. We are looking for stories with humor, or nostalgia, or drama Just about everyone has something they have experienced and would like to share with readers. Check the Life Story Feature in past issues by visiting the Writers Tricks of the Trade blog archives. However, it isn’t all gloom and doom Barnes & Noble isn't quite as bad as a superstore. You can submit your book through the Small Press Department, and if they decide to order it the quantities are generally small for the first order and limited to stores they think the author can interact with to promote the book. Even if the books don’t sell, so never get paid for, the dollar amount isn’t enough to hurt that badly. It’s as though you took a gamble and lost. The bad part is publishers have reported that the books B&N returns are often damaged. SEPT - OCTOBER 2015 PAGE 12 WRITERS’ TRICKS OF THE TRADE