Hi there. My name is Scott Duffy, and welcome to my book writing log. I have documented the process of writing my last two books on this site, and have started my third. This book will be called Visual Studio Team System In Action, and should be available in 2005.
Sunday, June 22, 2003
What Makes Me Happy
Whenever I enter a bookstore these days, I regularly check to see if my first JavaScript book is in stock.
For about a month, I have been largely disappointed. Most Chapters bookstores in my area were sold out of the book. I wasn't sure if this was good or bad. The book is obviously selling, which is good. But if it's not in bookstores, sales will slump quickly. Could it be that Chapters won't order any more?
Well, I went to two bookstores over the past two days, and both of them had MULTIPLE copies. (By multiple, I mean two of course.) One of the two stores was out of the book a few weeks ago. Yipee! Evidence they are reordering! I wonder how overall book sales are doing? I can't wait for the next statement.
Is it possible I've sold 10,000 copies? That would be amazing!
Scott
Tuesday, June 10, 2003
MCSD Study Guide Goes To Press
MCSD Analyzing Requirements Study Guide has been sent to the printer. Look for it in stores within a few weeks.
Monday, June 09, 2003
First Royalty Statement
Every three months, I expect to receive a letter (sent by my agent, but really from my publisher) called a "royalty statement". This statement tells me about book sales. How many were sold, broken down by region (domestic, foreign, Canada, deep discount). Just as importantly, these letters will contain a statement of how much I earned and possibly even a check.
I just received my first royalty statement ever, and no, it did not contain a check. Of course, I received a rather large advance for my JavaScript book, and it might take another statement or two to pay it back.
Of course, receiving the statement has got me thinking about my next book. What should the topic be? Something really interesting this time. The MCSD book was not as much fun to write as the JavaScript book was, I must say. Of course, the "fun" level is inversely proportional to the "work" level. The MCSD book was a lot more work...
Royalties and Advances
Each deal, of course, is a bit different. But in my four book deals, there has been some similarities as well.
The first thing you're likely to care about is the advance. The advance is the amount of money a publisher will pay you in advance of your book being written and/or published. The most important thing to know about an advance is that it is a loan against future royalties. So if author A received a $5,000 advance while author B received a $10,000 advance, that just means that author B will have to sell twice as many copies of his book in order to start making any more money.
The second thing to take note of is the royalty rate. I get 10% of net sales. Net sales, as best as I can determine, is the amount the publisher receives from the booksellers minus the amount of any returns. It is NOT the cover price. My book retails for $24.99 and sells for $17.49 at Amazon.com. From my latest statement, it appears the publisher gets $11.81 per copy from booksellers (wholesale price). I get $1.18 per copy (or 10%). Also, if your book suffers from a high number of returns (ie: books that did not sell at the bookstore and get sent back to the publisher for a refund), that reduces your royalties.
If your book does not sell enough copies to earn back the advance, you do not have to pay it back.
Friday, June 06, 2003
Web Questions Submitted
That's it. It's over. I. Am. Outta here.
The final piece of the puzzle has been put in place. I submitted the questions that will be placed on the book's web site early this morning. It wasn't difficult to write, just time consuming. 41 questions took about 20 hours to write all told. It's a time consuming process.
When I get word on the book's availability date, I'll let you know.




