INDUSTRY BRIEF NO. 4: CHANGES IN AUTHORS FINANCIAL POSITION

Similar documents
Selling Canadian Books In Germany. A Market Survey

Media Today, 5 th Edition. Chapter Recaps & Study Guide. Chapter 7: The Book Industry

CALIFORNIA GERMANY TRAVEL TRADE BAROMETER

TOPIC: 5 WINNING WAYS TO MARKET TO BOOKSTORES AND LIBRARIES. TOPIC: Helping Each Other Achieve and Succeed PRESENTER: MIMI LE IBPA PROJECT MANAGER

Pulling the plug: Three-in-ten Canadians are forgoing home TV service in favour of online streaming

Don t Judge a Book by its Cover: A Discrete Choice Model of Cultural Experience Good Consumption

STOCK MARKET DOWN, NEW MEDIA UP

The Most Important Findings of the 2015 Music Industry Report

Library Acquisition Patterns Preliminary Findings

Composer Commissioning Survey Report 2015

Austin Brothers Publishing Process

Is Self Publishing for You? Presented by Bob Perry

Robin Sullivan 03/10/2019

Community Choirs in Australia

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. accompanying the. Proposal for a COUNCIL DIRECTIVE

BOOK READING IN NEW ZEALAND

Audiobooks and School Libraries

Basic Outline of Publishing Unit

THE WAGES OF WRITING KEY FINDINGS FROM THE AUTHORS GUILD 2015 MEMBER SURVEY AUTHORSGUILD.ORG

Merchants of Culture Revealed Interview with John B. Thompson. For podcast release Monday, January 24, 2011

REACHING THE UN-REACHABLE

Pantomime SALES DATA REPORT

Commissioning Report

The Wages of Writing. Key Findings from the Authors Guild 2015 Member Survey. authorsguild.org

Introduction. The report is broken down into four main sections:

FIM INTERNATIONAL SURVEY ON ORCHESTRAS

THE STATE OF BRITAIN S ORCHESTRAS IN 2016

BBC Trust Review of the BBC s Speech Radio Services

What s the Deal. with Self-Publishing. By Karen Hodges Miller. Published by People- Tested Books

Patron driven acquisition (PDA) is nothing

Life Sciences sales and marketing

Electronic Organ Survey, July 2011

Cracking the #TOCCON

BPI the British recorded music industry BRITISH ARTISTS SCORE HIGHEST RECORDED SHARE OF GLOBAL MUSIC SALES

THE SVOD REPORT: CHARTING THE GROWTH IN SVOD SERVICES ACROSS THE UK 1 DAILY CONSOLIDATED TV VIEWING 2 UNMATCHED VIEWING

DOWNLOAD PDF BOWKER ANNUAL LIBRARY AND TRADE ALMANAC 2005

Capturing the Mainstream: Subject-Based Approval

Consultation on Repurposing the 600 MHz Band. Notice No. SLPB Published in the Canada Gazette, Part 1 Dated January 3, 2015

australian multi-screen report QUARTER 2, 2012 trends in video viewership beyond conventional television sets

U.S. Book Consumer Demographics & Buying Behaviors Annual Report

GROWING VOICE COMPETITION SPOTLIGHTS URGENCY OF IP TRANSITION By Patrick Brogan, Vice President of Industry Analysis

Regional News. Summary Report

Jazz Bandleader Composer

Spice Bazaar. Exporting to Turkey for Canadian publishers. Mariusz Prusaczyk/iStockphoto/ThinkStock

BBC Television Services Review

Efficient, trusted, valued

The Relationship Between Movie Theatre Attendance and Streaming Behavior. Survey insights. April 24, 2018

bwresearch.com twitter.com/bw_research facebook.com/bwresearch

(Slide1) POD and The Long Tail

The Acting City Librarian recommends that the Budget Committee recommends that the Toronto Public Library Board:

Scholarly Reading in a Digital Age: Some things change, some stay the same

Information for organisations seeking to be prescribed as a 'key cultural institution'

FILM, TV & GAMES CONFERENCE 2015

Multimedia Polska S.A. 4March 2015

Media Comparisons 2012 Persons

Assessing the Significance of a Museum Object

Unit 2 Assignment - Selecting a Vendor. ILS 519 Collection Development. Dr. Arlene Bielefield. Prepared by: Lucinda D. Mazza

Association of Book Distributors of Independent States

The Urbana Free Library Patron Survey. Final Report

National Code of Best Practice. in Editorial Discretion and Peer Review for South African Scholarly Journals

The Chorus Impact Study

FILM ON DIGITAL VIDEO

Publishers Directory

Sundance Institute: Artist Demographics in Submissions & Acceptances. Dr. Stacy L. Smith, Marc Choueiti, Hannah Clark & Dr.

The Influence of Open Access on Monograph Sales

Contemporary Chamber Ensemble

ABOUT ASCE JOURNALS ASCE LIBRARY

CANADIAN AUDIENCE REPORT. Full report

Boxbeat Media Limited Reply to the Consultation by Digital UK on the Reorganisation of the DTT LCN Listing and Changes to Digital UK's LCN Policy

Viewers and Voters: Attitudes to television coverage of the 2005 General Election

The Omnichannel Challenge for Supply Chain Management. Ton de Kok

The speed of life. How consumers are changing the way they watch, rent, and buy movies. Consumer intelligence series.

Set-Top-Box Pilot and Market Assessment

Our Book Together The Traditional Publishing Model

Southbank Centre Business Model Case Study

Northern Ireland: setting the scene

Self-Publishing and Collection Development

Don t Stop the Presses! Study of Short-Term Return on Investment on Print Books Purchased under Different Acquisition Modes

Student attitudes towards e-books at UW-Sheboygan, and what does it mean to us?

Credits. Guidance Note. Status of Guidance Note. Key Editorial Standards. Issued: 11 April 2011

Georgia Department of Education. School Nutrition Program

Don t Skip the Commercial: Televisions in California s Business Sector

AUSTRALIAN MULTI-SCREEN REPORT QUARTER

Assessing the Value of E-books to Academic Libraries and Users. Webcast Association of Research Libraries April 18, 2013

SALES DATA REPORT

etflix Reducing Our Rating from BUY to HOLD

Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts

Assignment #1 Collection Assessment Graphic Novels at UCLA College Library

Author Frequently Asked Questions

Book Marketing Guide for Independent Authors REVIEWS

If you really want the widest possible audience,

Digital Day 2016 Overview of findings

Copper Valley Community Library COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT POLICY

E-Books in Academic Libraries

DRAFT Sandown Cable Access Board Meeting Town of Sandown, NH

Digital differences. New data and trends. Kathryn Zickuhr, Research Specialist Pew Research Center s Internet & American Life Project

Where Should I Publish? Margaret Davies Associate Head, Research Education, Humanities and Law

CASE STUDY: MELBOURNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Book Retailers Uk List

AN EXPERIMENT WITH CATI IN ISRAEL

Transcription:

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Faculty of Business and Economics Australian authors INDUSTRY BRIEF NO. 4: CHANGES IN AUTHORS FINANCIAL POSITION The Australian book industry: Authors, publishers and readers in a time of change October 2015

The Australian Book Industry: Authors, publishers and readers in a time of change is a threeyear research project led by Prof. David Throsby, funded by the Australian Research Council under Discovery Project grant DP 140101479 and Macquarie University. In February 2015 the researchers conducted an online survey of over 1,000 Australian book authors. INTRODUCTION The previous brief in this series (No. 3: Authors Income) establishes that the average income of authors is relatively modest, with fewer than one in twenty authors earning the average Australian annual income or more from their creative practice in the 2013-2014 FY. Therefore, most authors supplement this income with other paid work. There has been considerable discussion and speculation among the profession about whether recent changes in the book industry have had a favourable or unfavourable impact on authors income. We asked authors about the financial impact of changes in the industry over the past five years on their financial situation. Table 1 demonstrates that nearly 40% of book authors have not experienced a change, while 15% are better off and 15% are worse off. Nearly 10% are experiencing greater variability in their financial position. The 17% who respond don t know/can t say may be more recent participants in the industry as authors or simply may not be able to make a judgment. Table 1 Change in financial position due to changes in the industry (percent of authors within each genre) Improvement 9.0 26.6 7.1 12.2 15.8 8.3 16.6 12.9 9.3 15.3 No discernible change 36.0 26.6 32.3 46.9 40.0 54.8 36.0 43.5 54.6 39.0 Deterioration 30.3 14.2 19.2 10.2 17.9 9.5 16.2 15.0 10.3 15.4 Greater variability Don't know/can't say 5.6 11.7 14.1 8.2 3.2 9.5 9.5 10.2 5.2 9.2 15.7 16.3 25.3 16.3 17.9 13.1 17.3 16.3 16.5 17.1 3.4 4.6 2.0 6.1 5.3 4.8 4.4 2.0 4.1 4.0 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 n 89 282 99 98 95 84 747 147 97 991 The findings show that the financial impact of changes in the industry is not being experienced uniformly by Australian authors. fiction authors are the most likely to report an improvement in their financial position, with over one quarter of respondents assessing that they are better off. (Further investigation reveals that the greatest proportion of genre fiction authors who are benefitting from changes are established in their careers.) Nearly one third of literary fiction authors are experiencing a deterioration in their income, followed by nearly one fifth of children s authors and other non-fiction authors (the latter includes authors of illustrated books for adults, which are discussed further on). Poets and scholarly authors are the most likely not to experience a change in their financial position, perhaps because income from their creative practice is a relatively small proportion of their total income. To investigate further, we also asked authors about the impact of specific changes on their income, including publishing in multiple formats, self-publishing, and the release of backlist publications as ebooks. PUBLISHING IN MULTIPLE FORMATS Table 2 demonstrates that genre fiction authors are most likely to report a large (3.5%) or modest (23%) in income due to publishing in multiple formats, followed by creative non-fiction authors. authors to report modest s in their income for this reason include education and literary fiction, followed by children s authors. Roughly one-fifth of authors indicate that their income has stayed the in relation to publishing in multiple formats and over half of the authors indicated that the question was not relevant, suggesting that many authors have been published in a variety of formats throughout their careers or they do not have sufficient longevity in their careers to report a change in income due to this factor. 2

Table 2. During your career as an author has your income changed due to publishing in multiple formats? (Percent of authors within genres) Large 0.0 3.5 1.0 3.3 2.3 0.0 2.2 0.7 0.0 1.7 15.3 23.2 14.6 12.0 11.6 5.1 16.1 19.0 7.3 15.6 22.4 24.7 25.0 18.5 24.4 19.2 23.0 14.6 24.0 21.9 4.7 2.3 1.0 3.3 2.3 2.6 2.6 2.9 1.0 2.5 Large 2.4 1.2 0.0 1.1 1.2 0.0 1.0 3.6 1.0 1.+4 Not relevant 55.3 45.2 58.3 62.0 58.1 73.1 55.2 59.1 66.7 56.9 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 n 85 259 96 92 86 78 696 137 96 929 SELF-PUBLISHING In Table 3, we see that only 3.2% of authors are experiencing a large in their income due to self-publishing, with creative non-fiction authors the most likely (6.6%), followed by genre fiction and other non-fiction authors (5.7% each). Overall, genre fiction authors are the most likely to report a combined modest or large in their income due to self-publishing. Less than half of genre authors respond that this question is not relevant, indicating that they have not been involved with selfpublishing, compared to a much higher proportion of other types of authors who indicate that the question is not relevant. Table 3. During your career as an author has your income changed due to self-publishing? (Percent of authors within genres) Large 0.0 5.7 2.1 6.6 5.7 0.0 4.0 1.5 0.0 3.2 3.8 17.9 11.6 14.3 10.3 7.5 12.8 9.5 1.1 11.1 10.0 21.0 9.5 13.2 18.4 21.3 16.8 13.9 14.9 16.2 2.5 1.5 1.1 4.4 3.4 0.0 2.0 2.2 1.1 1.9 Large 1.3 1.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.7 1.5 1.1 0.9 Not relevant 82.5 52.3 75.8 61.5 62.1 71.3 63.6 71.5 81.9 66.6 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 n 80 262 95 91 87 80 695 137 94 926 3

RELEASE OF BACKLIST PUBLICATIONS AS EBOOKS Table 4 shows that genre fiction authors are the most likely to report a large in their income due to the release of backlisted publications as ebooks, but the proportion is still low (3%). Overall, 10% of all authors are experiencing a modest in income from epublication of backlisted titles, particularly genre authors, literary fiction authors and other nonfiction authors. Table 4. During your career as an author has your income changed due to the release of backlist publications as ebooks? (Percent of authors within genres) Large 0.0 3.0 1.1 0.0 1.2 0.0 1.5 0.0 1.1 1.2 13.8 16.3 7.4 8.2 10.7 1.3 11.4 3.7 8.6 10.0 13.8 18.3 19.1 11.8 13.1 10.5 15.5 11.2 10.8 14.4 0.0 1.9 2.1 1.2 1.2 0.0 1.3 0.7 0.0 1.1 Large 1.3 0.8 0.0 0.0 1.2 0.0 0.6 2.2 0.0 0.8 Not relevant 71.3 59.7 70.2 78.8 72.6 88.2 69.6 82.1 79.6 72.5 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 n 80 263 94 85 84 76 682 134 93 909 CONCLUDING COMMENTS It is apparent that any benefits attributable to changes in the industry are not being felt consistently across different types of Australian authors. Although 9% of literary fiction authors report an improvement in their financial position due to changes, literary authors are the largest group whose financial position has deteriorated (30%). fiction, creative non-fiction and other non-fiction authors are most likely to be benefitting financially from changes in the book industry, while literary fiction, children s and other non-fiction authors (again) are in the groups of authors who are the most negatively affected. One factor that contributes to these outcomes is suggested by a senior Australian publisher. It relates to the closure of REDgroup Retail in 2011, which owned Borders and the Angus and Robertson chain of bookstores and was responsible for 20% of trade sales in the Australian (onshore) market. The book industry s view is that apart from the stores that were taken over, the closure of the remaining bookstores contributed to a contraction of book sales because many consumers didn t buy books elsewhere, instead they spent their discretionary income on other goods. fiction, children s and illustrated book authors are likely to be among those most affected because bricks and mortar bookstores are particularly important for the sales of these types of books. In contrast, during the past five years discount department stores (DDS) have d their retail market share of books in Australia. Authors of genres which are sold through these channels may have benefited, such as genre fiction authors. Further, ebooks are a popular format for genre fiction, which would have been financially beneficial for some genre fiction authors. This potentially poses some interesting policy challenges. Are there opportunities to learn from factors which are enabling some authors to benefit from changes in the industry (and to celebrate the success of these? If, as it appears, some types of authors are not benefitting, are there ways to improve their situation? If that is not possible then other measures may need to be considered if Australia s book culture is to flourish based on the contributions of a diverse range of Australian authors and their writing. It s also worth reiterating that the financial changes being experienced by most authors are from a fairly modest baseline of income derived from creative practice for many authors. 4

This industry brief is part of a series prepared for Australian book authors and other members of the Australian book industry to highlight key findings of the 2015 survey. Thank you to all the authors who gave generously of their time and expertise by participating. The complete series of industry briefs about this survey is: 1. Key Findings 2. Demographics of Australian Book Authors 3. Authors Income 4. Changes in the Financial Position of Australian Book Authors 5. Authors Changing Professional Practices 6. Authors Allocation of Time 7. Rights Sales, Translations and Piracy 8. Promotion 9. Authors and Publishers See also the Department of Economics Working Paper, Book Authors and their Changing Circumstances: Survey Method and Results. These can be downloaded at: http://goto./book-industry 5