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Seriously How Much Money Can You Make Publishing A Book?

It’s not about how people look at you as a writer, it is about how much is right for you- in terms of making money publishing a book.  

If this means asking if how much money should I make publishing a book, the better question to ask is how much can you make?

I think this is a question that each writer and potential author needs to consider. I don’t mean to suggest that you should base your idea of success on the sales of a book, but rather, how much money can you make by publishing your book?  If you write a blog, and then plan on improving your writing you will earn some income, but you will have to publish a book to know if you can make a lot of money.  

This does not factor in royalties or working with a co-writer, but it does deal with costs and profits with your book sales.

The most important thing to know is that you have to improve your writing if you want to have readers buy your book.  This is a good reason to go to writing classes and build some online articles, so that your mistakes are caught early on.  It is about making money but it is also about branding and being professional in all areas of writing and publishing.  If you self-publish, this is by far is more important than social networking or branding.
Before I go on a personal rant, I would like to clarify something: I am using my own book as an example, and I am adding the links so you can see the numbers.
I think that if you sit down and ask yourself a question like “How much money can I make publishing a book?”, you might be in for a big surprise, this is most true if you did not bother to spend time with an editor or have a plan to improve your writing.  Even if you publish traditionally, you cannot simply sit back and wish for your book to sell.  The work is not easy, it means that you will have to market your book and build a following, and spend money to market your book some more.  Only some authors make back what they were given as an advance.
I don’t know of an author who hasn’t made some money publishing a book, but it isn’t the amount of money that will let a person quit her day job– this is most true if you self-publish your book.  

My first book, In Search of the Lost Ones, published in November of 2011, is doing fairly well; however, if you go and look at the numbers on amazon.co.uk or amazon.com and either at the Kindle edition or the paperback edition, you won’t find much to get excited about.

Since both of the Kindle editions were released, and they were free to download, I’ve sold about 50 copies of the book on amazon.com.  I did put it on Kindle Select and then there were a number of days when the e-book was available for free, to anyone who wanted to download the book.  Yes, I wrote “free.”  (Keep in mind, I probably sold over 100 copies during that free promotional period.  I am certainly not going to complain about close to $100 — but I won’t say that that is a lot of money! ) 

On Amazon.com I have earned roughly 100 dollars whereas, on Amazon.co.uk I count about 25 e-books sold and about 50 free e-books, so that number is closer to 50 dollars when converted from the British pound. That is not a lot if you factor in how much time it took to write and edit this book.  After all, I had to pay for an editor, and for help with the interior of the book.  This alone cost me closer to $1000 when I have added all the incidentals with this.
With these numbers in mind, I can say that at least I have made money publishing my book, but I am certain that others have made more… and less.  I have also not made a profit, and I am about 10% away from my ROI.  That is the nature of the publishing industry.  It is not for the writer who thinks that it’s quick and easy, and that marketing will just happen.
I am not saying that paperback sales are as high — for example since I live in Canada, my amazon.ca sales are much higher than those on amazon.com. This is because I am reasonably known in the area, and that has made a difference. I have sold about 250 copies to readers in Canada from amazon.com, and I have sold about 200 copies on amazon.ca in a shorter period of time, but In Search of the Lost Ones doesn’t have as much competition here as it does in the United States.  

My book is usually in the top 100 in the category History, Europe, Eastern. Seriously how much of a niche market is this?  How much money can I make publishing a book in this market?

I can see over time, I will need to publish another book to continue earning money.  I don’t know if it will make a profit, but having another book means there is more of a readership base who will make a purchase.  
I am happy to say that a few times it’s even been in the top 100 of the History, Europe section, but that was shortly after it was published.  It will take a lot of marketing to continue earning high ranks like that.
It is true you can make money publishing your book in a more traditional fashion, and the same holds true for self-published books, but maybe the part most people forget is “how much money can I earn.”  Rather, I think it is time to work with real world numbers.
If you decide to self-publish a book through the Kindle Direct Publishing, and you choose to sell a book at 99 cents, you will receive for each download, which is not listed as “free” 35 cents.  Selling a book a week will earn you less than two dollars per month, which in turn means less than 25 dollars per year.  Should you sell your book for more, and get the 70% royalty- which begins at 2.99 and you sell the same number of books based on the 99 cent book, you will earn just over 12 dollars in one month, and a few pennies over 100 dollars in a year.  If you publish another book, it might double these numbers, but not without some author platform.
I would like to make more than $10,000 in profit when I think of my current book and future published works, but I also know how much work I need to put in to achieve that.  I believe an author can make a lot of money, but it’s not an easy road, and I don’t think it’s a way that you can make money very quickly.  It is a snowball effect. 
I am sure I can make money – I already have – but ‘how much?’ is a very personal question for each author, and it is one that can only be answered by that author of the book.  So, how much money can you make publishing a book?

12 Comments

  • Ana Cristina Marin

    I think that one should want to have an amount in his head about what profit he wants to have from sells while writing. To some, that can be a motivation to do the job well, and write a very good book that will really sell. If we as people do not have expectation, we very often lose hearth. I just finished my first book, and I am very excited: this excitement will be the fuel that will help me make future steps about making the book visible wherever it's possible. Determinations equals profit. Don't lose your faith in what you wrote. Thank you for this post!
    Storyteller Queen passed by

  • Kairi Wilson

    Hi I am 11 years old and I am writing a book called Darkness Is Coming, For Me, and You. It is almost done actually, 10 chapters and I am typing it. Wish me luck on my dream!!

  • Ken Preston

    Hi Rebecca,
    Interesting article, and I'm glad to see other authors paying more money for editing, etc, than they are earning back from the books. Not because I don't want you to earn money (I would sincerely love to read a post by you bragging about how much money you are making off book sales) but because we both know that authors who are prepared to spend time and money on making their books better, are serious about their craft.
    And I think that's what it comes down to at the end of the day, not sales, but the writing itself.
    Yes, I obsess over my KDP reports page like everybody else, but that's not why I get up at 5:55am every day, while everybody else is still asleep in bed. I get up because I love what I do.
    This morning I got up with a vague idea of a story and a title: How to eat a car. And I was scared, because I could see myself finishing the morning having written nothing. Five hours later, (and that includes me having breakfast, going for a run, spending time with my family, etc) I had 2600 words of my story written down.
    That, for me, is the magic. And a big part of why I love writing so much.
    (But Mr Spielberg, if you're reading, please feel free to throw a few million my way for one of my books. I'll happily take it!)

  • Rebecca A Emrich

    Ken– I think that's the main reason why people do write, but then again, that might be just me. Although if any director came my way…. well like you I'd jump at the chance. But, for now, I'll just keep on writing.

  • Rebecca A Emrich

    philip- there is a lot of writers who sell their books on their blogs, but you're right the more traffic you have the more chance you'll have of selling your books.

  • Amy

    wow, it's a numbers game isn't it? making money publishing a book seems like you have to have luck and knowledge to make a go of it.