GMSkarka said:
Unlike many of my peers, I do not consider the PDF business to be separate from the game industry as a whole -- and in the print side of this industry, publishers only make 35-40% of the retail price of a product. The current increase in fees from the new OneBookShelf company would have publishers making 65-70% of the retail price. The reason that some vocal publishers are complaining is because they are accustomed to making 75%.
My point is this: 65-70% is still nearly double what we make on print releases. This isn't going to be a hardship.
Well, what is the average retail price of a print release versus a PDF release of the same pagecount? If I do X hours of work, and produce a HC for $35 and get $14 per copy, or I can produce a PDF with the same X hours of work, which sells for $15/20 and I get $10/13 from it, that doesn't mean the 65% was more than the 40%.
OTOH, if you can eat the 10% without complaint, then why didn't you lower your rate before? Profit is profit, and that money comes from somewhere.
From what I understand, plenty of folks were already in a 35% bracket, so for them the changeover makes little difference except to potentially give them a larger audience if they were not on all 3 sites. For others that have been furthering the market for a while and produce lots of sales, they're getting hit with it.
My main problem with it, is the rate increase seems to penalize the exact folks it shouldn't. High volume long standing publishers that probably bring lots of business that helps sell other PDFs SHOULD get a reduced rate. Setting some arbitrary level system for reduced percentage by total sales would be my opinion.
The flip side of it being that the high volume guys are most likely the ones that draw a regular income, compared to lower volume guys that do it for extra money or fun. For them, you're saying "listen, we know you do a great job, so you're going to take a pay cut".
Also, as has been mentioned, usualy during a merger you save money by cutting redundant staff. The reasons for the % all seem like things the Store should front, not the publishers. The publishers are paying for something down the line, and they're paying directly for the stores marketing, while still being required to do their own marketing.