Writers Tricks of the Trade Volume 5, Issue 5 | Page 23

PRESS “CONTROL” THEN CLICK “BUY” TO PURCHASE THE BOOK FUN MYSTERY BOOKS RETURNS (CONT’D) Even when they come back in good condition, the profit margin to resell them is not as good because of the shipping costs in each direction. So unless you have a great marketing network, for a small press or self-published author small orders are much better than those killer orders that can wind up killing your publishing business. Supposedly Simon & Schuster came up with the idea of books being returnable in this manner to give themselves an edge on the competition—and then it became industry standard. Although the world has changed, the model remains the same one that gives massive cuts to retailers and allows them to return whatever they can't sell. BUY BUY B In a perfect world, book publishers would join together to change return policies to something reasonable, but where is the leverage? Would retailers choose to only order from those who kept the high discount/long return time /not pay for until sold policy? Is the print-on-demand model one that can help reduce large inventories that must be available to fulfill actual orders that are moving? Even publishers who use print-on-demand technology have to overprint in order to have books available. Small bookstores might be upset if things changed, but their returns are already (generally) relatively low. Small publishers could cut special deals with those who actually sell their books. BUY So here’s the bottom line. Authors need to understand that you have to pay to play. In the current environment, there is no alternative. It doesn't matter whether you're traditionally published or footing the print bill. Saying that you will not accept returns, or marking your self-published book as "non-returnable" is the kiss of death. If you do that, no bookstore will touch it, and you'll