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Books The Almighty Buck

Spotify Tries To Win Indie Authors By Cutting Audiobook Fees (theverge.com) 5

In an effort to appeal to indie authors, Spotify's Findaway audiobook seller "will no longer take a 20 percent cut of royalties for titles sold on its DIY Voices platform -- so long as the sales are made on Spotify," reports The Verge. From the report: In a company blog post published on Monday, Findaway said that it would "pass on cost-saving efficiencies" from its integration with the streaming service. While it's free for authors to upload their audiobooks onto Findaway's Voices platform, the company normally uses an 80/20 pricing structure -- where Findaway takes a 20 percent fee on all royalties earned. But that fee comes after sales platforms take their own 50 percent cut on the list price. So under the old revenue split, an author who sold a $10 audiobook would have to give $5 to Spotify and $1 to Findaway. But moving forward, that same author will no longer have to pay the $1 distribution fee to Findaway when a sale is made through Spotify.

The margins on audiobooks are exceptionally high, much to the chagrin of the authors. For example, Audible takes 75 percent of retail sales (though it'll only take 60 percent with an exclusivity contract). Many authors share royalties with their narrators and have to pay production fees -- meaning they get an even smaller share of royalties. The move by Spotify and Findaway is likely a bid to draw more indie authors from Audible, which is currently its biggest competitor. But Spotify's audiobooks business -- which it launched last fall -- still has a long way to go. Unlike music or podcasts, most audiobooks on Spotify must be purchased individually, and sales are restricted to its web version. Even CEO Daniel Ek admitted that the current process of buying an audiobook through Spotify is "pretty horrible."
"We at Spotify are just at the beginning of our journey supporting independent authors -- we have many plans for how to help authors expand their reach, maximize revenue, and ultimately build a strong audiobooks business," said Audiobook's communications chief, Laura Pezzini.
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Spotify Tries To Win Indie Authors By Cutting Audiobook Fees

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  • I wonder if they can see the end of the high profit margins on audio books. With AI readers getting better it's going to reach the point where you can just throw the text of the book at one and get an audiobook at least as good as the commercial ones. Maybe better, as the AI will be able to reproduce many different voices and genders more convincingly.

    There might be an opening for a platform that sells such books, but I have a feeling there will be apps that make it trivial for end users to do themselves.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      I wonder if they can see the end of the high profit margins on audio books. With AI readers getting better it's going to reach the point where you can just throw the text of the book at one and get an audiobook at least as good as the commercial ones. Maybe better, as the AI will be able to reproduce many different voices and genders more convincingly.

      There might be an opening for a platform that sells such books, but I have a feeling there will be apps that make it trivial for end users to do themselves.

      No

  • And people thought Apple App Store was bad.....
  • Why would I buy something DRM riddled from Spotify or Audible that I can't legally move to a USB and play in my car? https://locusmag.com/2019/09/c... [locusmag.com]
  • Audible might be even worse than that. The content providers (authors and narrators) are really, really upset at Audible because of some alleged accounting tricks that Audible uses to deny royalties. According to them, Audible's profit margin is astronomical, but it is never enough for the corporate overlords they always seem to be looking for ways to squeeze the content producers. Check out the full story at https://www.audiblegate.com/ [audiblegate.com] I have never see a situation where authors/narrators are so upset

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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