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July 26, 2008
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Business/Legal Matters »
Online Contractors: Book Publishing in the Age of the Internet
Online Contractors: Book Publishing in the Age of the Internet
February 11, 2008
by Howard Zaharoff Before signing an e-publishing contract, there are five important issues that you need to understand. If you're an author wondering about e-books, let's start with the bad news: Most people won't read long text from computer screens, and dedicated e-book readers (like the Gemstar REB series) are costly ($300-$700) and few. So unless you're Stephen King (and perhaps even if you are), you won't make big bucks overnight as an e-book author. But there's good news, too: The potential market for electronic books is huge. Experts believe that, within five years, the market will be hundreds of millions of dollars. And for authors, the really good news is that the contracts used by click-and-order publishers often offer favorable terms and opportunities unavailable from brick-and-mortar publishers. Still, writers must be wary when reviewing e-publishing contracts. This discussion is based on materials through October 2000. Due diligence
Some fine publishers have horrible contracts, while some undesirable publishers have wonderful forms. So make contract review part of, but not the whole of, your due diligence. Money matters
The relatively low (5 to 15 percent) royalty rate results from the high cost of traditional publishing. The semiannual payments can mean that, for a book sold in January, the author won't get paid until late September. Many e-publishers turn the above approach on its head. On the negative side, most e-publishers offer little or no advance. Indeed, often the writer must pay to start the project. For example, BookLocker.com (www.booklocker.com)which bills itself as an online bookseller, not a publisherpublishes books electronically for free, but charges $99 to set up a book for print-on-demand (POD) publishing. 1stBooks (www.1stBooks.com) charges a $159 setup fee plus a $300 deposit that gets returned only if 1stBooks sells 1,000 copies. It does offer promotional services, but charges anywhere from $300 (Standard Promotion) to $750 (Special Expanded Promotion). On the plus side, many e-publishers apply a substantially higher royalty rate. For example, 1stBooks pays 100 percent of the first $300 in sales, 40 percent of the purchase price thereafter and 30 percent for POD. BookLocker.com pays a whopping 70 percent of the list price for books priced over $8.95, and 50 percent for other electronic books, while offering 35 percent of the list price for POD books. Perhaps most significant, last fall Random House became the first major publisher to offer its authors a 50/50 split on proceeds from electronic sales. (But beware: E-books may be priced significantly cheaper than printed books, so the significantly higher rate may not yield a significantly higher payment.) Finally, e-publishers usually pay more frequently. MightyWords (www.mightywords.com) pays writers a quarterly royalty (which is common), while BookLocker.com pays its authors on a monthly basis. eNovel (ssl.enovel.com), like traditional publishers, pays semiannually. So what should a writer look for regarding payment? E-publishers may charge a modest fee for set up, particularly for POD; but if you're paying hundreds of dollars for the privilege of being published, you're probably paying too much. (Many authors' advocates vehemently oppose authors paying publishers any money at all.) The royalty offered should be substantially higher than traditional publishing, generally in the 25 to 50 percent (or higher) range. But remember:
Rights granted
In contrast, eNovel acquires only electronic rights, including electronic books, POD, online services and interactive and multimedia technologies; while under the MightyWords contract the "Content Provider" grants only a "nonexclusive worldwide license to create, market, sell, display, transmit and distribute digital reproductions." So what should a writer look for regarding rights?
Time together
POD wreaks havoc on that traditional approach: If a book is always "available"?which POD makes possibleit may never be "out of print" even if the publisher doesn't advertise it and hasn't sold a copy in ages. Some e-publishers and distributors are responding to this concern. For example, the iUniversity Press contract runs for three years, then renews automatically for one-year terms unless either party gives the other 90 days notice of termination. MightyWord's contract allows either party to terminate "at any time with or without cause upon 30 day notice." BookLocker.com allows either party to terminate "immediately by e-mailed request." Not all publishers provide an easy exit. For example, eNovel allows rights to revert if "the Work is no longer available for consumers to download from the publisher's Web site" and, within three months after the author's request, the publisher does not offer the work from its Web site. The ease of making a work available for download means that eNovel needn't lose any book it wants to keep, no matter how poor a job it's doing. So what should a writer look for regarding the term?
Traditional publishers generally provide editing, cover design, promotion and sales fulfillment, all without extra cost (that's why they keep 85 to 95 percent). E-publishers are all over the lot, some offering these services without charge, others offering them for a fee, still others not offering them at all. For example, regarding what many consider the publisher's penultimate dutyto editeNovel, like a traditional press, includes among its Free Standard Publishing Services "editing services provided by the eNovel.com Editing Staff." In contrast, most of the above publishers claim they're only vehicles for self-publishing. Thus, the MightyWords contract states: "All copies ... shall faithfully reproduce the content, layout, pagination and covers specified in the Material provided by Content Provider." Similarly, 1stBooks proudly trumpets: "No one edits your manuscript and you retain all rights and control of content." Edit-less publishing is fine if you write flawlessly or need an electronic outlet for a previously published book. But it's not fine if you're an ordinary writer trying to publish a new book. Editing is only one service real publishers offer. Two other important services are presentation and promotion. For example, eNovel's free services include standard cover and interior templates, while BookLocker.com offers to use author-provided art, provide a free "attractive generic cover" or design a cover for $95. Regarding promotion, eNovel offers to list books on Internet retail sites, and to publish a synopsis, author bio and photo, and excerpts for public sampling. Meanwhile, 1stBooks advertises "an entire department dedicated to helping promote your book," and its contract promises "reasonable efforts to electronically market and sell the WORK." On the other hand, iUniversity Press merely states that it "may post and publish pertinent information regarding AUTHOR or WORK."
Security priorities
But security technologies are increasingly available: Just be sure you deal with e-publishers who are sensitive to that issue. For example, MightyWords advertises that it uses a lock-and-key encryption process that ties each copy of your work permanently to one computer. Indeed, a recent federal law makes it illegal to break security features, which could help deter the rampant copyright abuse that has plagued the Net in its early years. The above issues are not the only ones that matter when evaluating your e-publishing options. For example, can the publisher amend the contract at will? Are you subject to suit in far off places? Are you restricted by noncompetition or option clauses? Are you assuming significant liability? No contract review is complete without evaluating all the terms. So what is the final message? Mainly, deal with reputable publishers who demand nothing unreasonable and offer what you need, and be sure you can escape the contract if things turn out differently than you expectas they usually will.
Howard Zaharoff, a lawyer in Waltham, Mass., has helped many writers negotiate their publishing contracts. |