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Authors Guild Afraid of Synthesizer Speech

I wish the Author’s Guild wouldn’t put themselves in the position of complaining about everything new.

When the Kindle has a Text-to-Speech service that sounds like James Earl Jones, then I’ll start worrying.

What the Author’s Guild could do that would actually be helpful to its members is to set up a registry where authors can sign up, indicate whether they prefer to read their own books and whether they want to be considered for reading other people’s works, and leave a voice sample in a format that can (eventually) be transferred to the Kindle.

This will put a political and possibly legal  burden on Amazon and audio publishers to look at the registry first.

The Authors Guild is warning its members that Kindle 2’s Text-to-Speech function is an unauthorized use of audio rights and may be “undermining” publishers’ audio markets. The organization today sent an alert to members and posted the alert on its website.

via Authors Guild and Amazon Disagree Over Kindle’s Text-to-Speech Software – 2/12/2009 12:30:00 PM – Publishers Weekly.

Understanding Your Amazon sales rank

I just came across the following online comments from a multiple New York Times-bestselling author, one of the authors I respect and enjoy most in all the world:

Ah, Amazon sales rankings.  What do these numbers — changing every hour
in their hypnotic fashion that drives authors mad — really mean?

Here’s the skinny:

Ranking above 10,000 — essentially meaningless.  At that point, the
books are in order by ISBN or alphabetically or something.  Don’t even look.

8k – 10 k — your title is selling one or two units a month, maybe.

4k – 7k — your title is selling one or two units a week.  Nationwide.

2 – 4 k — OK, maybe a little better than that.

Ranking below 1000 — Now, at 3 figures, we’re getting into “selling
briskly for its genre” territory.

Below 100 — Pay dirt at last.  A book pretty much has to attain and
sustain rankings at two figures to crack any of the bestseller lists; to
crack the big lists like the NYTimes, the title needs to hold well below 50.

The key thing about her comments is that the numbers are completely wrong.


It’s amazing, and depressing, that someone who should be extremely well informed by her publisher, is operating in a near complete informatoin vacuum. I try to give my authors a hell of a lot more transparency than that.

I am a publisher with more than 75 books in print (all POD, so 90% of my business is via Amazon) and I watch the sales ranks v. my inventory closely.

The real numbers are more like this. When a title hits

80,000 that means 1 sale today (within the last couple of hours)
40,000 = 2 sales today
20,000 = 4 sales today
10,000 = 8 sales today
and so on.

It’s a logarithmic function, so as sales rank decreases, unit sales rise exponentially. For a great explanation, see http://www.fonerbooks.com/surfing.html, and for the goriest possible details, see http://www.nimblebooks.com/wordpress/2006/06/power-law-converting-amazon-sales-ranks-to-units-sold/.

The trick is that the sales rank “decays” as soon as you sell a book, so if it’s down around 500,000 that means you haven’t sold a book for a week or so. 1,000,000 means you’re probably doing 1 or 2 a month. Whenever it bounces back up to around 80,000, that means a sale within the last hour or two.

You can follow all your titles (24 x 7, compulsively ;-) ) using free services www.salesrankexpress.com or titlez.com. After you watch them bounce up and down for a while, you’ll get a feeling for what’s happening.

Sample copies of Aiming At Amazon now available

Aiming at Amazon is far and away the best book on modern low-inventory, low-cost publishing. Makes Poynter look like a dinosaur. Free PDF available at address below.  Essential for any forward-thinking publisher.

AIMING AT AMAZON–The NEW Business of Self Publishing

via Books ~ Aiming at Amazon (Self Publishing, Print on Demand, Online Book Marketing, Amazon.com).