The difference between a hobbyist and an entrepreneur, as illustrated by a con interaction with a fellow vendor.
Vendor, a hobbyist: "Do you want to swap books?"
Translation: "I want your book but I don't want to pay your price for it, but I'm willing to lose the cost of a book I paid for it, and also shove my own stupid book that may or may not interest you into your face."
Me, an entrepreneur: "No thank you."
Translation: "No thank you." #cosowriters #WritingCommunity
If somebody challenges me ("Why don't you want to trade books?") I explain this to them, and it often opens their eyes. I love #writing, and I love getting to share my books with people, but I also have a business to run and a business must turn a profit or else it's...just a hobby.
My profits pay for contractors (cover artists, narrators, editors), advertising, company expenses, and royalties to authors whose books I've published. Also, an occasional cup of coffee for me. If I don't make a profit, the company suffers, and I will never let Local Hero Press be That Company Who Doesn't Pay Its Authors. That's why I don't want to trade books.
@ianthealy Yes to all this.
Hey, we should talk. I'm launching a Work for Hire project soon, and any tips about publishing books written by others would be appreciated.
@WestofMars You can DM me here if you're Pro or email me [email protected]. I'm also on the face space and twatter, but tend not to reply to DMs there.
@ianthealy I will, when I get a second. (don't look for it anytime soon) Thanks! :)
If I said yes, I'd not only lose the cost I paid for my book, but I'd have to reorder it. Thus I've lost the cost and potential sale value of two books while only gained someone else's book, that I'm unlikely to read because I only consume audiobooks these days (I read like an editor, which makes enjoyment difficult). Also, if I wanted that person's book, I'd ask about it's availability in my chosen medium and would buy it with my funds, not company funds.