Showing posts with label publishing deals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publishing deals. Show all posts

Friday, June 17, 2011

Are e-Readers Wiping out Paper Books For Good?

Kindle. Nook. iPad. These are all examples of what is called an e-reader. An e-reader is a portable electronic device that people use primarily for the purpose of reading digital periodicals and books. I was actually thinking of purchasing one myself since it is one of the most booming technology buzzes around. One can even turn his or her iPod Touch into an e-reader just by acquiring e-reader applications. As I was contemplating that, I came across a YouTube video titled “What e-Reader Means for Books”, since I am also of thinking of self-publishing my own urban fiction novel in the future. That is a project in the making.

The video itself is a clip from CBSnews.com and is a matter-of-fact discussion with journalist and author of “What Would Google Do?” Jeff Jarvis. It starts off with the gentlemen talking about the soaring sales of the Kindle e-reader from Amazon and whether or not paper books are heading to extinction. I did not realize that back in Christmas of 2009 that Amazon actually sold more electronic books than real physical books. I agree with Jeff that everything that can become digital, will become digital. You can store so much on these e-readers and they are portable and convenient; info comes to you right at the speed of light practically.

The publishing business has to be able to keep up with the changes of authors not needing a middleman much longer because the format of the book is changing. An author can just put his or her book on Kindle on their own time in a quick second, and really may not need the publisher or retail chain to get their books out to the public. I agree with the author that the decline in popularity that has been happening with newspapers will happen with physical books as well. However, I am enjoying the idea that once a digital book is published, an author can still go back and edit and correct things and that that book becomes searchable online, unlike the traditional solid book. I am praying that printed books will still be around in the next decade because there will never be anything close to the joy that comes with the pleasure of opening up a physical book, holding it in your hands and turning the pages as you get more and more into the story. 





Reference: http://youtu.be/6JzjN7MvbRo

Sunday, February 13, 2011

VIPSTAND & Wallace Collins Ask PRO's "What is The Exact Royalty Formula?"


Today I was just randomly googling search terms and I saw this link pop up for a site I haven’t had a chance to visit called vipstand. I ended up opening a video on its site called “ You Are Watching: Publishing Deals and Performance Rights Organizations” (PRO’s) and decided to watch this video uploaded from one of my fav sites, artistshousemusic.org, with entertainment attorney Wallace Collins speaking because he appeared to be relaxed and ready to give us viewers some good insight into his point of view on publishing. 



I liked how he explained owning the copyright in a publishing deal and how much is typically divided in splits. He briefly went over how one may co-own the copyright and get 50 percent as the writer while the rest goes to the publisher and writer, an example of an average co-publishing deal. I didn’t realize how administration deals worked. They get commission for just collecting your money but it is straightforward calculation regardless of how much percent they get.

Collins says the X factor on the publishing side is the PRO’s (i.e ASCAP, BMI, SESAC) and how its not always clear how much they are taking from the money you may make on your songs. He said he has never been told a formula and how much percentage they get for calculating song royalties but he was not trying to indict any of them. I thought the system was doing a good job on tracking these numbers but apparently not! I have heard stories of people signed to separate PROS’s as songwriters and received different monies even when they worked and co-wrote the same record and had the same contract splits. I believe ASCAP is the way to go as far as the signed writer advantages I feel they have over the other two, but more details about them in a later post. That topic can go on for weeks!


 We will have better tracking systems in the future so you know you are getting your exact money the first time around and worldwide changes need to occur so the whole planet is in sync in royalty tracking because business is international. And you shouldn’t have to wait to see what your co-writer received on a record in a check to know you may have been cheated and for them (the PRO’s) to give you the difference. I will be checking out future videos on this site and even some old ones already uploaded about music publishing, indie labels, and copyrights (fun and informative videos alike) and so should you!

http://www.vipstand.me/en/online-videos/play/Us-beRRxYdk/Publishing-Deals-and-Performance-Rights-Organizations.html