Once upon a time, book royalty contracts stipulated royalties based on a simple percentage of all books “sold,” and royalty accounting was a minor part of a publisher’s overall accounting workflow. If 10,000 books sold in a year, and the author’s contract stipulated a royalty rate of 20%, the publisher would cut a check for $2,000. That simplicity is long gone.
In today’s bookselling landscape, even the most simple book contracts involve a mind-boggling number of calculations. In each of the basic categories of hardcover, trade paperback, and mass-market paperback, there are separate calculations for print, e-book (both wholesale and agency), physical book (again, both wholesale and agency). Each of these specific segments of a book’s sale demands its own royalty calculation. In practice, a single book can span several of these sales categories.
On top of this segmentation between “types” of sales, the majority of book contracts involve sales thresholds, or “escalators.” These allow for a separate and differing royalty rates to be paid, depending on the numbers of books sold. For example, an initial royalty rate may be set on the first 10,000 sales of a book. Once that benchmark is hit, a separate rate – an “escalator” – may kick in.
Keeping on top of royalty contracts is critical for publishers, for both profitability and regulatory compliance. However, without an efficient way to run the major bookkeeping operations involved, managing royalties can eat into time that should be spent on finding great new books to bring to market, and working with authors to do so. Publishers need specific tools to manage royalty processing, so that they can focus on the core functions of their business. This is why dedicated royalty processing software is becoming ubiquitous in publishing, for organizations large and small.
How Good Royalty Software Works
Good royalty management software supports multiple or unlimited royalty recipients per contract, and author splits, so that managing dozens or hundreds of royalty recipients per contract is automated. Many books attribute royalties to more than one author, and publishers can’t spend time hammering out separate royalty amounts for multiple authors on a single contract. Flexibility in parceling out royalties can be a huge time-saver in the long run, and the ability to slice up royalty calculations in many ways within a single contract is one of the very first, and most time-saving benefits of using royalty software. In addition, royalty contracts will typically have clauses for when books get sold at discount prices. Given that so many books do end up with a discounted retail price, automatically re-calculating royalty rates based on final sale price is another area in which royalty software proves it’s worth. A good royalty management system will be able to easily incorporate any changes in actual sale price of a book; and if at a later point an author wants to pore through their royalty earnings, data on when discount prices were set, and how they affected royalty payments, is all documented.
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