What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? California
My friend and I are in self-publishing (he's in music, I'm in books) and we got so tired of the rejection by all the agents and major publishing houses that we resolved to launch an employee-operated group for nothing but self-publishers. The idea is that anyone who self-publishes and joins our group would be eligible to have copies of their work offered for sale to the buying public through the group's online catalog or various indie bookstores.
With a traditional publishing and distribution house, if you're lucky you'll get 4 to 10 cents on the dollar for every copy of your work sold. Under the model my friend and I are planning, only the costs of maintaining the online catalog, booking the trade shows, etc., are deducted as percentages from all the group members' sales of their titles, and the rest is theirs to keep and declare as income. So far so good.
The problem I foresee arises from the way the contemporary copy distribution system is set up. For our titles to be available, we had to assign ISBN numbers to them. What happens if someone walks into a Borders or a Barnes & Noble store and orders a copy of one of my books or my friend's songbooks? To me this would be like walking into a Ford dealership and asking for a Chevy. No business operator wants to undermine himself by distributing his competitor's products when the competitor doesn't distribute in kind. The business model my friend and I have planned may be fine and dandy, but I think we'll get into a very ugly knock-down, drag-out legal battle with the traditional publishing houses because of the way the commercial distribution apparatus is set up.
What can my friend and I expect if we go ahead and our idea succeeds? Is there any legal precedent for this? As a music composer, my friend is all too aware of what happened between the major record labels and the indie musicians.
My friend and I are in self-publishing (he's in music, I'm in books) and we got so tired of the rejection by all the agents and major publishing houses that we resolved to launch an employee-operated group for nothing but self-publishers. The idea is that anyone who self-publishes and joins our group would be eligible to have copies of their work offered for sale to the buying public through the group's online catalog or various indie bookstores.
With a traditional publishing and distribution house, if you're lucky you'll get 4 to 10 cents on the dollar for every copy of your work sold. Under the model my friend and I are planning, only the costs of maintaining the online catalog, booking the trade shows, etc., are deducted as percentages from all the group members' sales of their titles, and the rest is theirs to keep and declare as income. So far so good.
The problem I foresee arises from the way the contemporary copy distribution system is set up. For our titles to be available, we had to assign ISBN numbers to them. What happens if someone walks into a Borders or a Barnes & Noble store and orders a copy of one of my books or my friend's songbooks? To me this would be like walking into a Ford dealership and asking for a Chevy. No business operator wants to undermine himself by distributing his competitor's products when the competitor doesn't distribute in kind. The business model my friend and I have planned may be fine and dandy, but I think we'll get into a very ugly knock-down, drag-out legal battle with the traditional publishing houses because of the way the commercial distribution apparatus is set up.
What can my friend and I expect if we go ahead and our idea succeeds? Is there any legal precedent for this? As a music composer, my friend is all too aware of what happened between the major record labels and the indie musicians.