List of ePublishing Services and Platforms

October 22, 2009 · Posted in Book Publishing · Comment 

A while back I had a chat with an ePublishing company about the possibility of doing some eMarketing on their ePublished eBooks (all those e’s sound pretty silly). Anyway the landscape sounded like a nightmare of file formats and platforms which do or don’t work with each other.

This article tries to list these platforms without in depth analysis, I hope to keep this up to date, perhaps add the DRM stuff once I understand it all.

If you are looking for e-Book readers Mobileread has an impressive matrix.

Amazon Digital Text Platform (DTP)

https://dtp.amazon.com

The big thing here is that Amazon is to online retail what Google is to online search. Amazon have rarely missed a trick and their Kindle reader is one of the better known readers out there. But is your content limited if you are publishing to Amazon only? Your Amazon ebook will only be available on Amazon, so is there some way of publishing to Amazon and other platforms too?

Costs / Commission 35% commission on each ebook. You can suggest a retail price, but Amazon can change this.
DRM They retain the right to use DRM, but by their T&Cs they are not obliged to use it.

Lulu Self Publishing

http://www.lulu.com/

I just love Lulu’s name, not sure why, but it is friendly. That asside they also provide an amazing platform with a lot of options. You can make calendars, corporate brochures, CDs, DVDs etc using Lulu, but we are looking only at book publishing here.

Costs / Commission At the time of writing Lulu charges a 25% commission on each ebook download.
DRM Lulu does not offer DRM, copy protection is up to you. Puts DRM out of reach of the average Jo.

An additional consideration with Lulu is that they handle both book and eBook publishing through one interface, and adding ePublishing on an already published book is a breeze.

Smashwords – Ebooks from Independent Authors and Publishers

http://www.smashwords.com/

Smashwords has a really appealing offering with broad distribution. On the standard feed level you get Stanza on the iPhone and Aldiko on Google Android phone, but what you really want is their premium list. Having a premium listing is good as it will filter a lot of rubbish out, you have to comply with a reasonable list of requirements to attain premium listing.

What comes with premium listing? The online stores of Barnes and Noble (B&N) and Sony, with others to follow. You also have the option to remove your books from specific stores if you like.

Costs / Commission At the time of writing Smashwords charges a 15% commission. But purchases through a third party platform like B&N will incur that storefront’s commission in addition.

There is also a billing fee of 3-6% (higher price this fee falls to 3%)

Additionally any sales from visitors who clicked on affiliate links, you lose a further 11% to the affiliate.

DRM No DRM, but puts forward a strong argument against DRM.

So the costs in the table above are meant to be simple, but essentially for a $1 book you keep 58% (48% if an affiliate sold it), and for a $10 book you get 80% (66% if an affiliate sold it). You can opt out of the affiliate program, or if you like it you can juice your affiliate rates so they get a higher %.

Scribd Store

http://www.scribd.com/store/

The Scribd Store is only available to people in the US, which is a loss for them as the rest of the world is quite capable of getting used to another platform in the mean time. On the other hand a friend of mine set up a partnership with a friend of his in New York just so that he could publish in the Scribd Store.

I would really appreciate any comments you might have on the above article, as it is really in its infancy.