Thursday, February 5, 2009

The Importance of Foreign Rights to the Bottom Line of an Independent Publisher - Part II

What is the market? Simply stated, there are tens of thousands of foreign publishers in nearly 400 countries. They are looking for books that will “travel”, meaning that the content will be applicable in their country as well as the United States. Too many references to American people, places, institutions, culture, etc. will not mean much to a reader in a foreign country. Books under 250 pages are perfect. A 250 page book in most European countries would swell to more than 330 pages, thus negatively affecting the production costs, retail price, and ultimately reducing potential sales. Conversely, a 250 page book in most Asian languages will shrink to under 175 pages because of the efficiency of the languages. The hottest categories always seem to be business, psychology/self help and other nonfiction subjects. But the foreign publishers are looking for books with specificity in those subjects, not just another “ho-hum, me-too” book. And not books that are obviously purely for the author’s self-gratification. It’s not enough for a business book to say “managing your business is a good idea”, the book needs to say specifically how to do it, and preferably with a unique angle. The countries that seem to be the most active recently are, but not limited to: China, Russia, Korea, Japan, Indonesia, Thailand, India and most of the eastern European nations.


You must make a commitment to foreign rights as an integral part of your publishing program. It doesn’t work to simply put your toe in the water once and decide if you like the temperature or not. I like to say that “it’s a marathon, not a sprint.” It’s not your one attempt, or your one deal, that creates a successful foreign rights program and consequently maximizing your investment. It’s the aggregate of frequent attempts and the many deals that will result from those attempts. I have clients in my annual Frankfurt/Foreign Rights Program (http://www.bob-erdmann.com/foreign-rights.html) who, after only two or three years participating, have contracts with 8 or 10 or 14 different foreign publishers for a single book. Any one deal is nice, but multiply that one book times 8 or 10 or 14 and the additional revenue from that asset is quite significant.

The Frankfurt International Book Fair is acknowledged as the world’s main and most important venue for foreign rights. It’s the granddaddy of them all! If you had to choose only one book fair for your book(s) for foreign rights sales, Frankfurt would be the well-informed, unanimous choice. Housed in ten buildings (many three stories tall) it’s thirty times larger than the London Book Fair and almost fifteen times larger than BookExpoAmerica. And most important, it’s one-stop shopping. The nearly 400,000 publishing people from every corner of the world who attend the Frankfurt Book Fair are there for one reason only….to buy or sell foreign rights.


How much revenue can you expect? That, of course, varies. It could be a little or a lot and you must be realistic in your expectations. The value will vary from country to country and from book to book. And the long-term value depends on how well it sells in a given country, just like in America. I have represented books in my Frankfurt/Foreign Rights Program (http://www.bob-erdmann.com/foreign-rights.html) that have proven to be huge successes. An exceptional success I like to mention is the time one of my clients, a self-published author, received his first royalty check for $750,000 for the initial six month period from a Korean publisher. The other extreme is that I have had books in my Program that earned no royalty beyond the advance. Again, just like in America, it depends on how well your book sells. The foreign publisher wants your book to be successful, perhaps even more than you do. He will make every effort to accomplish that goal since he will have a substantial financial investment in his edition of your book since he will have already paid you an advance and incurred production, printing and marketing costs.


So treat your book as a financial asset, diversify your investment to protect your interests, and search for those other potential revenue streams. Why not begin with a risk-free, minimal cost, foreign rights effort.


Publishing consultant Bob Erdmann is a four-decade veteran of book publishing and foreign rights guru. He served two terms as president of Publishers Marketing Association (PMA - now Independent Book Publishers Association - IBPA) where he created many of its current popular programs. He has successfully negotiated more than 3,500 foreign rights sales for participants in his annual Frankfurt/Foreign Rights Program. For information go to (http://www.bob-erdmann.com/foreign-rights.html), email bob@bob-erdmann.com, or call (209) 586-1566.


Bob will be our Expert interviewed at www.PublishingProsperity.com today, Thursday, February 5.


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What expectations are realistic for you to factor into your bottom-line plans for foreign rights of your books, booklets, audio programs or any other intellectual property this year?


Until next time,

Paulette - who continues exploring more foreign rights opportunities years later


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