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by mhartl
4312 days ago
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My cofounders and I developed Softcover [1] to support the business model used by the Ruby on Rails Tutorial [2], which combines "tech cred" with a profitable product business. I plan to reveal more detailed numbers soon, but I can say that the Rails Tutorial has made an order of magnitude more money than the "solid success" benchmark mentioned in the OP, despite (or perhaps because of) making the book available for free online. (I include revenues from screencasts, which are a lot of work to produce, but are much less work than initially writing the book.) Thus, with a platform like Softcover, authors don't have to choose between making money and building their brand. [1]: http://www.softcover.io/ [2]: http://www.railstutorial.org/, but watch http://news.railstutorial.org/ for an announcement of 3rd edition draft chapters, which I plan to start releasing shortly |
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1) How critical were screencasts in convincing customers to purchase the ebook versions?
2) How dependent is this business model on books which are attached to fast-moving software?
3) Did you make any effort (like Scribd) to prevent scraping of content from the online viewer?
4) Have you had to request DMCA takedowns of ebooks or screencasts?
5) Do you plan to provide guidance or best practices on screencast production?