Welcome to Blogging A to Z! My theme this year is Going Indie. I hope you enjoy it. Don't forget to check out the other participating blogs.
So now that I'm trying to treat my writing life with a little more respect and be more of a businesswoman about it, I have to pay attention to things like profits. And the big question is how to measure that.
There's a lot that I've bought for my writing life (see my M post on Money for details), but which things count in my reckoning for whether a book is profitable yet?
Mostly, I've decided that things I buy that are for author life in general or serve as infrastructure don't go in the reckoning for any single book. So, buying an author banner, getting bookmarks made, paying a table fee at an event, doesn't count.
But things specific to that book like editing, book cover, buying copies, etc. DO count.
So for Not Too Late as an example: I came up with $726.10 as my starting number, my "sunk cost."
That includes:
- $62.50 for Vellum (not sure this should actually count, because I'll use it for ALL my future books, but if it does count, that is 1/4 of what the software cost me, since I've used it on 4 books so far)
- $59 for two ISBNs, one for ebook, one for paperback (since I bought in a group of ten--they're cheaper if you buy more at a time)
- $196.80 editing
- $400 book cover
- $7.80 for a paper proof copy
Since then, I've purchased 68 copies of the book for resale. I know that's a weird number, but it's because I shipped to bookstores in weird amounts for consignment arrangements as well as buying for my own in-person re-sale. I've sold 9 copies at full price in person, three at lower price to the cover artist, and one through one of those consignment arrangements.
When I track how much I spent buying books, I always include the shipping, too. So each book costs me between $4 and $5 on average. So, the copy that sold through consignment paid me $9, but it's really $4 or $5 profit since I had to buy the book in the first place. I hope that makes sense. The copies I sell in person make me $10 or $11 each, for comparison.
So I've put all that into a spreadsheet and currently, I'm further in the hole than I started, at $834.35. I'm not worried though, because, like I said, this book hasn't actually released yet. This is all PRESALE still.
My *hope* is that the book will be "in the black" within its first six months. So, just in time for Halloween. I'll let you know how it pans out!

Your accounting makes sense. Good luck making back your investment (and making a profit).
ReplyDeleteThanks! This is my first time trying to track this kind of data and be more business-minded about my art. I'm hoping it means I make choices that make this sustainable.
DeleteMay your profit be enough you will need to pay self-employment taxes on profitability in 2028 for the 2027 year.
ReplyDeleteLove it! From your lips to G-d's ears.
DeleteVery business-like approach!
ReplyDeleteI'm trying :-) It doesn't come naturally, though.
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