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TekTok's avatar

I worked for Barnes and Noble 10 years ago on contract as a tech, reverse-engineering their book buying sysstem written in Java, Oracle and JavaScript. There was no manual for it and the original developers had long since left. So I clicked every button on every screen and traced the code back to the Oracle stored procedure or whatever. This eventually produced a (rough) manual.

Anyway, I learned from the sales figures that the stores really only needed to be open a few times a year: Winter Holiday Season, Graduation Season, and briefly for special events - Superbowl, Presidential Election, etc. Those periods provided 90% of the sales. The rest of the time they are barely breaking even keeping the stores open.....

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Mark Starlin's avatar

I get that most writers dream of a book deal and the prestige of being published by a large publishing house. But I felt it was a waste of time (for me) to pursue traditional publishing when the odds of sucess were so miniscule. I felt my time would be better spent on building my own audience. And once I did built my own audience, why not just sell directly to them and keep the bulk of the money?

We can't all be superstar writers, but that doesn't mean our writing (or books) shouldn't be available to a smaller audience who enjoy our writing.

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