Showing posts with label authors' income. Show all posts
Showing posts with label authors' income. Show all posts

Monday, 27 August 2012

Authors' earnings buoyed by movie income

After JK Rowling comes EL
James: does the use of double
initials increase the chance
of being a best-seller?
Earlier this month, the BBC website published some interesting figures concerning the earnings of authors. According to that site:
"Thriller writer James Patterson was the highest-earning author of the past year, according to Forbes magazine. The 65-year-old American earned an estimated $94m (£60.3m) from the 14 new titles he published in 2011 - 2012. The amount dwarfs that of the second author on the list, Stephen King, who earned $39m (£25m) thanks to a new instalment of his Dark Tower series. 
Forbes said its list was based on figures from Nielsen BookScan, authors, agents and publishers.   
Number three was the highest-earning female writer, Janet Evanovich - author of the Stephanie Plan suspense series - with $33m (£21.1m). John Grisham was next at four with $26m (£16.7m). His baseball novel Calico Joe helped prove he could write a bestseller away from his usual legal thrillers. 
Children's author Jeff Kinney was fifth after Cabin Fever, the latest book in his Wimpy Kid series, was the top-selling book of 2011 with 3.3 million copies sold. However part of his $25m (£16m) earnings come from film royalties - the movie version of fourth book Dog Days made $15m (£9.6m) in its opening weekend at the US box office. 
Other authors to feature in the top 15 include Danielle Steel at eight and Hunger Games author Suzanne Collins at nine. With film royalties from the Hollywood blockbuster released earlier this year and two more films still to come, Collins is expected to rise up the list next year. 
Harry Potter author JK Rowling was at 11 on the list with a large portion of her earnings coming from the $8m (£5.1m) advance for her first adult novel, The Casual Vacancy, due for release next month. Twilight writer Stephenie Meyer also features on the list at 13, still riding on the success of the film franchise. 
Forbes said it expected Fifty Shades of Grey author EL James to feature highly on next year's list. The erotic novel sold 20 million copies in the first four months of release and at its peak, the trilogy earned James more than $1m a week. She had also picked up an estimated $5m (£3.3m) for the film rights".
So what, if anything, can we learn from these figures? The death of copyright as we know it and the increasing predilection for legitimate online delivery as well as file-sharing have not resulted in top authors taking home plenty of cash, though film income, marketing and distribution techniques and the "branding" of top authors as bankable commodities in their own right provide a degree of income buoyancy to which most authors of lesser celebrity may never be likely to aspire.

Friday, 3 October 2008

Copyright still viable, at least for top authors

Announcements of the death of copyright may be premature, if the figures cited in an article in today's Daily Telegraph are any indication. In "Harry Potter author JK Rowling earns £3m a week", the paper reports that Harry Potter's creator, Scottish author JK Rowling, earned £3 million (US$5.3 million) a week over the past year.

Right: the one that got away -- Warner failed to stop India's Hari Puttar being screened, though the decision is believed to be under appeal.

The vast bulk of this sum would have been generated by royalty income from the sale of books, DVDs and Potter memorabilia. While Rowling's earnings are not typical in the sector (her weekly income is six times greater than that of the next highest-paid author in the world), they do demonstrate two things: (i) even in the digital age, paper-based products can still generate prodigious income and (ii) the expectation on the part of many young consumers that works should be both free and available on demand does not mean that they are not prepared to pay for works which they desire.

The article cites figures from Forbes magazine this week that list the top ten authors and their annual earnings between 1 June 2007, and 1 June 2008. They are as follows:
(1) JK Rowling £160 million
(2) James Patterson £26.7m
(3) Stephen King £24m
(4) Tom Clancy £18.7m
(5) Danielle Steel £16m
(6) John Grisham £13m
(6) Dean Koontz £13m
(8) Ken Follett £10.6m
(9) Janet Evanovich £9m
(10) Nicholas Sparks £8.5m
The article does not disclose how much was earned by publishers, film production companies and manufacturers of merchandise from the rights licensed to them but it is fair to say that, assuming these authors are on percentages, someone out there is doing very well.