So how do we get those little Amazon ads these days?
Amazon itself says get a link. So:
https://amzn.to/4j5fFe4
Which is fuck all use to anyone
How to get those links with a little ad attached to them?
Ah, “full link”.
So how do we get those little Amazon ads these days?
Amazon itself says get a link. So:
https://amzn.to/4j5fFe4
Which is fuck all use to anyone
How to get those links with a little ad attached to them?
Ah, “full link”.
Just purchased it!
I just “one-clicked” for it.
Tim, I have wondered about the differences to the author of a physical purchase versus a Kindle purchase? The Kindle version was $9.95 (CAD) while the paperback was (IIRC) $23 or so. Obviously there are costs to produce the physical product, where the Kindle is more-or-less 100% margin – how much of that production saving does Amazon keep, and how much flows to the author?
As well, I had the option of getting the book for free (OK at zero incremental cost) as part of my “Kindle Unlimited” subscription. I decided to buy it, since I thought that was more likely to put money in your pocket, Tim – but if I had taken the “free at the point of use” alternaitve, how much comes to you, if anything?
The physical version is really only set up to print in UK. That’s the expense there. Given likely audience no grand point in setting it up more than that.
Unlimited? If you read to the end the nett to me is a decent percentage of the purchase option. They actually pay per pages read…..
Another calculation. Kindle and physical both pay me $4 or $5. -ish. Amazon/printing/distribution get all the rest.
All you can read $2 or $3, if all pages are read. Perhaps.
Thanks Tim. Interesting business proposition on Kindle Unlimited. Bezos not being stupid, you have to assume that people don’t read all that much on the unlimited plan (although it seems a lot of the KU selection is public domain – Three Musketeers and the like). I guess it also serves as a ‘lock-in’ for Kindle users.