Our agency just finished processing royalty statements from two big publishing houses! Whew! 🙂 We always check our clients’ statements for accuracy and are available to answer our clients’ questions about their statements as well. We have been getting a lot of questions, recently. This is great! We want our clients to be able to understand their reports.
For those of you who aren’t yet published, you’ll want to keep this blog in mind for the future.
Royalty statements vary in readability–some publishing houses have very clear statements and others have statements that are so muddled that they’re nearly impossible to read. It’s important to figure them out so that you are sure that you are getting the money that is due to you. Your agent will be able to help, but here are three areas for you to look for on your report.
The first is your remaining advance or your balance. If this is a negative number, your advance hasn’t earned back. If it’s a positive number, you are most likely due a payment. If you think you should have a payment and you don’t, talk with your agent. The account balance number can grow and shrink depending on book sales and returns.
The second area to look for is your cumulative sales number. This number tells you how many books have sold during the entire time your book has been published. If your statement does not have a cumulative sales number, you will want to track your own life-to-date sales starting when you receive your first royalty report. (Or ask if your agent already is keeping track.) You will need to add and subtract sales and returns from your number to keep track accurately. Even if your royalty report does have a cumulative sales section, it is still a good idea to keep track by adding and subtracting all reported sales so you can easily see if your number and the publisher’s number match on future reports. Most of the reporting is done using computer equations, but these computer systems don’t always work perfectly.
The third thing you should be on the lookout for in your statement is if both physical and digital sales are being reported. Occasionally publishing houses will forget to send a report for one or the other, and this can affect your account balance. Not receiving a report doesn’t mean there weren’t sales. You should receive a report even if the book had zero sales for the royalty period.
I wish I could go into all of the details of reading a statement here, but each statement is unique and we would need many days to discuss them all. If yours is confusing, go ahead and go to your agent for clarification. They should be able to help and can ask the publishing house about it if something looks incorrect.
Great info! Thanks, Rachel!!!
They said I had some money coming,
that the book was selling well,
and so it was kinda numbing,
what that royalty cheque did tell.
They took off their overhead
and their jumbo-office rents,
and after all my royalties fled
I got fifty-seven cents,
but their chickens came to roost
for another author was a lawyer
who, in anger, gave a boost
right into a courtroom fire
in which they were harshly judged
for the ledgers cooked and fudged.
Very nice! I like your take on things. And this poem didn’t even mention the tax man. 🙂