I’m leaning towards using B&N Press to print 100 copies 5 by 8 paperbacks and @Libera_Rex is helping with the cover and formatting. My first version PDF I formatted myself using Google docs. Local printer actually sounds good so might look into that.
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Replying to @realryanbooth @mcclay_roman and
There’s a reason. B&N is collapsing and only exists because they had real estate to sell for the past several years to stay afloat while Amazon is growing. Amazon gives you 70% royalties on books plus visibility on the world’s largest market.
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Replying to @TheBrometheus @mcclay_roman and
Bear in mind paperbacks are only about 10% of your sales anyway. Choose based on digital availability. Amazon has no true competitors in that market space.
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Replying to @realryanbooth @mcclay_roman and
Hard cover eludes me as of yet. I’d ask
@robkroese as he has some experience there.2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @TheBrometheus @mcclay_roman and
I used Lulu for hardcovers. They're pricey compared to paperbacks, and the paper quality isn't as good. I only use them for higher Kickstarter levels.
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Replying to @robkroese @TheBrometheus and
I just remembered my other reason for printing and not posting on Amazon. I want to know who my customers are. I was under the impression that Amazon doesn’t tell you. Is that true?
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Pretty much, insofar as I’ve ever seen. Unless they leave a review.
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