Yes, I know, I hate Facebook graphics. I really do … But whether you think it’s the liberal media, corporate media, or whatever, this is a great question to ask.
Take a look at Hillary Clinton’s book, “Hard Choices,” as an example.
Simon & Schuster paid a $14M advance and also made a $5M royalty in 2015, based on 340,000 editions sold in a little less than three years. The book’s list price was $35 – meaning even if every single person paid that price, revenue – not profit – from the book would have been just shy of $12M.
It was on the best seller list for nine weeks meaning that smart, first shoppers – about 175,000 of them in the first week or so – got it at a discount, 20-40%, depending on the store. So the company probably got about $7-$8M in revenue from the book, not $12M.
Again, this is revenue, not profit. In other words, after production costs, marketing, etc, they took a bath on it, to the tune of probably close to $10-$12 million on that one book – and Clinton got $19 million for writing about her “public service” …
It’s kinda funny, actually. Many of the same people – including Clinton supporters – who scream about CEOs that layoff 10,000 people and then get to keep their $X million salary or get a golden parachute would never say boo about this situation, not understanding that it is very similar. How many people lost their jobs at Simon & Schuster (there were “restructuring” strategies and layoffs during the three years that the book has been out)? How many people didn’t get published that have good offerings but they aren’t a Clinton? How many of the other authors at Simon & Schuster got squeezed to make sure Clinton got her $19M?
But you know what? Like the CEO, she negotiated a good contract for herself that the company never should have agreed to and it lost money. So, yes, ask the question, someone, please, and understand the similarity, too.
Here is what I played this week on the Taste the Floor Show: Joy Division: No Love Lost (Substance) Grandpaboy/Paul …