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	<title>Comments on: Lulu POD service gets rave in PC Mag&#8212;and is taking e-books more seriously, with iPhone and Sony options</title>
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	<link>http://www.teleread.com/ebooks/lulu-pod-service-gets-rave-in-pc-mag-and-is-taking-e-books-more-seriously-with-iphone-and-sony-options/</link>
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		<title>By: Rob Preece</title>
		<link>http://www.teleread.com/ebooks/lulu-pod-service-gets-rave-in-pc-mag-and-is-taking-e-books-more-seriously-with-iphone-and-sony-options/comment-page-1/#comment-804212</link>
		<dc:creator>Rob Preece</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 May 2008 13:09:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Although my primary focus is eBooks, I also offer paper books. My authors like having a physical book on their shelves so they can show friends and relatives, paper books do better at book signings, and some readers just don&#039;t read electronic books (yet). When I decided to get started with paper, I used LuLu because they have no setup fees. I have no complaints about their quality and found they had a number of tools that make it easy for authors to publish with them. One key advantage for me, because I have authors (and readers) around the world, is that they have printers on multiple continents, meaning that shipping costs to Europe and Asia are less painful than some other publishers.

I&#039;ve been shifting my POD publishing from LuLu to CreateSpace, however. CreateSpace doesn&#039;t have as nice tools and their international shipping is expensive, but their printing costs are lower and, because they&#039;re owned by Amazon, their integration with Amazon is far better. (To sell LuLu-printed books through Amazon, I have to join Amazon&#039;s Advantage program, purchase the LuLu books, have them shipped to my home, inventory them and ship them to Amazon when Amazon orders them, all to receive 45% of the cover price from Amazon. The combination of two separate sets of shipping charges, LuLu&#039;s high costs, and Amazon&#039;s high commission means that I lose money on every LuLu-printed book I sell through Amazon.

This said, LuLu is not really set up for publishers. It&#039;s designed for people who want to produce a book for their grandchildren and it does a great job at that.

Rob Preece
Publisher, www.BooksForABuck.com</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Although my primary focus is eBooks, I also offer paper books. My authors like having a physical book on their shelves so they can show friends and relatives, paper books do better at book signings, and some readers just don&#8217;t read electronic books (yet). When I decided to get started with paper, I used LuLu because they have no setup fees. I have no complaints about their quality and found they had a number of tools that make it easy for authors to publish with them. One key advantage for me, because I have authors (and readers) around the world, is that they have printers on multiple continents, meaning that shipping costs to Europe and Asia are less painful than some other publishers.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been shifting my POD publishing from LuLu to CreateSpace, however. CreateSpace doesn&#8217;t have as nice tools and their international shipping is expensive, but their printing costs are lower and, because they&#8217;re owned by Amazon, their integration with Amazon is far better. (To sell LuLu-printed books through Amazon, I have to join Amazon&#8217;s Advantage program, purchase the LuLu books, have them shipped to my home, inventory them and ship them to Amazon when Amazon orders them, all to receive 45% of the cover price from Amazon. The combination of two separate sets of shipping charges, LuLu&#8217;s high costs, and Amazon&#8217;s high commission means that I lose money on every LuLu-printed book I sell through Amazon.</p>
<p>This said, LuLu is not really set up for publishers. It&#8217;s designed for people who want to produce a book for their grandchildren and it does a great job at that.</p>
<p>Rob Preece<br />
Publisher, <a href="http://www.BooksForABuck.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.BooksForABuck.com</a></p>
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