Publish Books
Publish Ebooks On Iphone And Ipod Touch In 3 Simple Steps
Author: M and R Selected
eBooks are sold in Apple’s App Store via two main channels. First, an ebook sold as an individual App (the short form of “application”). It has its own application icon on the iPhone screen. Alternatively, some ebooks are sold through ebook reader applications. Buyers have to login into the particular reader in order to find the ebook to buy.
For selling an ebook as an App via App Store, Apple gives out 70% (fixed) of the revenue to the publisher. For an ebook selling at .99, the publisher gets .99 for each copy sold.
The revenue sharing ratios of selling-via-ebook-readers vary. They can be 50% (or less). Some writers and authors rely on those ebook readers to publish their books because they can leave the format conversion and programming works to the ebook readers’ developers. Their books will not appear in the App Store but in the ebook readers’ web pages. If an iPhone user has not installed the ebook reader, he/she will no notice the existence of the published ebook.
The format conversion and programming works deter a large number of authors from the first option though it gives significantly higher return.
M&R Selected is now providing an ebook conversion service to individual authors to publish ebooks on iPhone and iPod Touch platforms at www.publishebook123.com. In three simple steps, the ebooks are to be launched as individual Apps appearing in App Store. The authors are getting 70% of the revenue directly from Apple without being shared by any other party.
Self publishers should note a number of crucial points from the design of the book cover to the flow of information in the book. Tightly organized contents differ bestsellers from the others. Check out www.publishebook123.com to find out the resources.
If you are interested in publishing your ebook, it is an estimate of the cash flow to you. For example, the marked price of your ebook is .99. You get .99 for each copy sold. If you sell 30 copies everyday, you get 91 monthly. Remember there were 45 million iPhones and 3 million iPod Touch sold by the end of 2009. Thirty 30 sales per day is a very conservative estimation. 30 sales means 0.0000625% (or 1 in every 1.6 million) of the users buying from you. Your sales can easily exceed that number. Putting up 2 ebooks can easily give you ,000 per month. If your book attract enough readers and being put up in the “Top Paid” list, you may be selling over 2,500 copies per day. For the same .99 ebook, you are making at least ,475 per day. I leave the calculation to you. Just check out the “Books” category in the App Store, you can see many people are making it everyday.
With years of experience in designing portable device user interface, the conversion model in www.publishebook123.com can equip your ebook with all the features in enhancing reader experience. The features include night reading mode, changeable font, font size, background colour, remarkable bookmarks, and many more.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/ebooks-articles/publish-ebooks-on-iphone-and-ipod-touch-in-3-simple-steps-1810093.html
About the Author
M&R Selected is an experienced mobile software developer on iPhone, Symbian, Android and Windows platforms. We did freelance projects for customers in various fields. The ebook publishing service is a product designed for writers to publish their own ebooks on iPhone and iPod Touch systems.
Tagged with: e book • e shu • ebook creator • ebook publisher • ebook publishing • ebook self publishing • ebooks • electronic book • how to publish ebook • how to self publish ebook • iphone ebook • publish iphone ebook • self publish ebook • self publish iphone ebook
Filed under: Uncategorized
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The ones I receive books from for review all do i.e. Simon & Schuster, Penguin, St. Martin’s Press, Kensington, etc. They subclassify their books by imprint based on genre or content.
The solution to that problem is: don’t include your age when you submit your manuscript. Then they’ll just judge it like they would any other.
Copyright for printed works belong to the publisher and the author or, in the case of death, the heir. You cannot legally copy someone else’s work, even if the copyright is no longer registered, until it enters the public domain. For example, my website is copyrighted, but not registered, the moment that it is created on my computer at home. No one is *legally* permitted to copy it, even though I have not registered it. Lack of registration only puts the onus on me to prove authorship in the case of a legal claim. If I had registered the copyright, such registration would act as proof (making it easier for me to sue).
Jim, http://www.life-after-harry-potter.com
http://www.agentquery.com for a list of agents by genre.
http://www.writersmarket.com for publishers.
http://www.writersdigest.com for tips.
Good luck!
They don’t care who you are or how old you are, only that you’ve produced something worth selling. Query publishers and agents, but focus on promoting what you’ve written…not how old you are.
You can. Any text published in 1922 or earlier is in the public domain, and certainly this would include the plays of Shakespeare. On the other hand, editions of earlier books might have been edited recently. The editorial changes can be copyrighted. Your edition cannot claim to incorporate those copyrighted alterations. For instance, an edition of _Hamlet_ that includes textual corrections and footnotes published in 2005 is technically in copyright so your _Hamlet_ cannot claim to be identical to that edition.
For me, I would probably use a pen name to keep from hurting people I love. For instance, I love my grandparents and aunts and uncles dearly. I despise my mother. But, even a work that I submitted as fiction would shame and hurt the family members I love because they would want to read it, and they would see that what I wrote was true. My grandparents already feel horrible enough about the way my mother treated me…they don’t need to feel the public shame too.
Others might want to write without having to worry about everyone knowing who they are. Being a famous author would bring anyone and everyone to your doorstep, asking for handouts and trying to claim false love or friendship. Pen names provide anonymity.
At one time, women were considered incapable of producing great literature. So, when they submitted their work, they often used just their first and maybe middle initials along with their last name…or they created a masculine sounding name.
Have you ever seen the Nancy Drew series, or books by V.C. Andrews? While the majority of these books were written by those authors, later (such as after V.C. Andrews died) other books were written under their names by ghostwriters. This helped the publishing houses continue to profit in a way that they wouldn’t have if they had changed the names of the authors.
Pen names can also help authors cross into various genres. For instance, would you buy a book for your child if you recognized the author as someone who wrote erotica novels…or were otherwise somehow connected to the “sex trade” industry? Pen names provide the anonymity to move into other genres that they may be just as fantastic at writing, but they would either be boycotted or not given the respect that is deserved if they used their real names.
I’m sure there might be a lot of other, more personal reasons, but these are the ones off the top of my head.
I bet you haven’t written (and completed) a book yet, have you?
If you haven’t, step away from Yahoo answers, put the calculator away and start writing. Complete something. Then go back and edit, edit and edit until it’s perfect.
Nobody’s interested in buying something that’s not even written. Nobody’s interested in buying a bad book that was written purely for profit, with no passion and inspiration behind it.
And please, do not quit your job at McDonald’s thinking you can live off your writing. Very few people can, especially those who aren’t creatively inspired.
It depends on the deal you make, but it also depends on the book itself. For example, if “Mystery House Publishing” only published mystery books and you wrote one, then stick with them for all of your mystery books. But say that you wrote a fantasy. Then you would have to find a new publisher, like “Fantasy R Us House.” When publishing, the book has to be like the type of books the company has a reputation of publishing. It has to be “right” for them.
Stephenie Meyer used Little, Brown for all of hers, but I’m not sure about the others.
How many words and how do I get books publish?
How many words if I were to make these size book?
Small
Medium
Large (not a large print type)
Where do I go to get books publish?
Were there any successful author that may have sold like 1,000 book a month?
What are the revenues and the profit margin, etc.?
Is it legal in Canada and USA, to scan and publish books (for free viewing) that are no longer in print?
These are books published from 1960s to 1980s. I’d like to scan them to PDF format, then publish on the web for free use. The copyright on some of the books is less than 50 years old. What if the publisher no longer exists? Any advice on quickly and easily obtaining permission from publishers, if necessary? I don’t want to have to write letters and wait several months or longer. Thanks.
Are there any publishing companies that publish books writen by teens?
Would like to find out so i can try to publish a book.
What book companies publish books with offensive material?
What companies publish books with drugs, cursing, sex, and other things like that.
Where can I find a publishing company near Sacramento,California that can publish books written by kids?
I love writing books and think it would be great to have them published as real books and sold at stores. I’ve been thinking about this for a long time, and now I’m writing a book that I really like and think it would be great to have it published. Thank you!
Are most agents and publishers willing to publish books written by 12 year olds?
I’m currently 12 years old and I just finished writing my first book. Some people have reported that publishers don’t always publish books by such young writers. Is that true? Will I immediately get rejected just because of my age?
Why do some authors publish books under a different name than themselves?
Like for example Agatha Christie published some books under the name Patricia Wentworth.
Can anyone publish books with no copyright?
Say, if I wanted to publish a book from hundreds of years ago, which has no copy right or has it’s copy right run out, can I? For example, can I publish and sell Shakespear plays right now without getting in trouble?
Would it be wise to publish books with the same Publisher all the time or is it best to have more than one Pub?
Also if you do publish more books, would it be best to publish all books with the same publisher or would it be wise to change?
Did Stephen King, Dean Koontz, or even Stephenie Meyer use the same publisher for all of their books? What would you recommend?
Thank you for all related answers in advance! : )