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TechCrunch reports that Amazon has launched a 70% royalty option for Kindle e-books (sold to US customers), as a complement to its existing 35% Digital Text Platform royalty.

The 70% royalty comes with a number of requirements, none of which seems particularly onerous. The price must be $2.99 to $9.99, and must be at least 20% below the lowest list price for the paper version of the book. It must be offered in all geographic areas to which the author or publisher has the rights, at or below price parity with competition (including physical book prices). And it must have features such as text-to-speech read-aloud enabled.

In return for this consideration, Amazon will give the author/publisher 70% of the retail price (less 15 cents per megabyte delivery costs) rather than its current 35%. This is similar to the agency pricing split that the big publishing houses have imposed on Amazon, but gives Amazon more control over the price range than they get under the agency model.

This could be quite attractive to self-publishing authors, giving them incentive to lower their prices, sell more books, and take in more money. And it gives authors incentive to consider Amazon ahead of competing e-book stores. It remains to be seen whether Amazon’s competitors will follow suit.

 
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