This topic came up in another thread.
I suggested that writing/releasing one book a year is an acceptable release schedule, and Deposed King added that this would be true only if you were with a traditional publisher, writing as a part-time job, or just trying to see if you're any good.
There aren't many online sources that present the merits and flaws of different release schedule options, so I thought it would be a good idea to start a thread discussing it. I think any writer, no matter how experienced, can benefit from finding out what other writers and readers prefer when it comes to how often new books in a series (or separate series' by the same author) should come out.
My experience as an Amazon indie guy. Is that my first book took 2.5 months to start taking off. First two weeks I sold 2-4 and after that I was in the dead zone of 1 sale a day, give or take. July I started doubling my sales every week. By august I was smoking hot and by september I was in the sharp decline. (top sales for who was 50 per day at the peak)
Gambit came out in september and took off like a light. But by november sales had slacked into single digits. By december I was doing 4 or less. Jan-april I wasat 1.5 per day for Who and 2 per day for Gamit with it clearly slowing even further. (top sales per day was high 60's per at the peak)
Lady (a novella came out april 15th) and it started out maybe peak of 20's and been drifting 4-8 ever since. Also got online and spread the word about book three and then lady
Tribulation came out (april 23) and everything picked up. But most of my sales came in a 6 week period. Peak of 120+ and held steady at 80-100 for weeks. Took less than a week before sales were up over 60 per day and then it jumped
By the time Tribulation dropped down to about 40 sales per day Admiral's Trial came out Jun 2nd promptly shot right up almost as high as Tribulation. Its now July 10 and as of last week Tribulation has fallen to about teens to 20 per day and is holding and Trial which was in the forties last week is now down to teens to twenties sales wise.
While who and gambit were doing high single digits to low teens ever since two weeks after Trib and since Trial came back out held steady at that until the new covers. Where who jumped to low twenties to high teens with Gambit about 2/3rds to 3/4th's of Who. As of now Who is back down to low teens and Gambit a couple less at high single digits.
You're sales fall off with time and I don't just mean your peak sales. You get a reader base and it floods in. I got 1500 sales per month easy on Tribulation and for Trial the same. But after that first 1500 things for me slowed down on the peaks as everyone who was waiting purchased. But being high on the amazon charts for space opera, adventure, space fleets, whatever got me lots of looks on Trib and Trial and old readers picked it up as soon as they heard, this linked into the 'also bought' sales for who, gambit and lady and after about 2-3 weeks started linking them in. And bumped up their sales.
But when you fall off the charts, your back list falls off too and you slowly spiral down. I took six months off between publishing Gambit and publishing Tribulation. I fell down to low single digits after 3 months. That's not enough to live on. I was bringing home maybe 150-300 bucks a month off the two.
So to my mind if you've got a big backlist of 20-30 books you can live off of 1-2 sales per day and write a new book every six months or whatever. 1.5 sales per day x 20 books is 30 sales per day (at take home of 2 bucks off a 2.99 book) and you've got 60 dollars per day before taxes. 60 bucks per day time 30 days in a month = 1800 take home before taxes. Now if you're selling 30 books at 1.5 per day x $2.00/book x 30 days = $2700.00 per month before taxes. Now you can flog the dog at 30 book backlist and 'probably' make a life writing one book a year it wouldn't even have to be in any of the same series for buy through interest like I have on my Admiral Books.
But if you hit back in every 3-4 months on a series like I have, you not only get the about 3-6k of one time 'spike' sales that you get from all your former readers 'buying through' but you keep your backlist of 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 books, as you get going, fresh and up there in the mid single digits. If you could keep say 5 sales per day on each back list book instead of 1.5. 4 of your back listed books would = 20 sales per day without missing a beat if you kept it all fresh. And to me that's the same as flogging the dog with a back list of 12 or 13 book backlist.
Now I'm not the worst author out there. But I'm certainly not the best. I have trouble breaking the amazon 1000k ranking but I see guys out there doing 200-600k amazon rank easy. They've got to be selling 2-4 times what I do on my spikes easy. Turning my 6k six week spike sales into 12-24k easy. Some I'm sure who get down into the 200 amazon ranking with books at 3.99 or better possibly even more.
So if you're the next david weber or jim buther or the guy who wrote poorman's fight. Maybe you can afford to parlay your home run into a 1 book a year success. But if you're just a stable house guy or a writer like me, I still think you can still win, its just a numbers game.
So I guess I've just added another catagory to Wordmaker's list of ways to be a successful 1 book a year guy. But I would point out David weber writes two books a year, Jim butcher 1.5?
Anyways I'm eager for everyone else's thoughts.
The Deposed King