Forum Moderators: not2easy
I feel confident that I could create a more compelling offer than the other people (better description, sales copy, guarantee, etc.) but I'm still concerned that most people would realize that if they looked hard enough they could probably find them for free (the full text is posted in several places online but it's not necessarily easy to find). I could just avoid mentioning when they were written at all, but that would negate one of the big advantages IMO, the fact that they were written so long ago but are still extremely relevant today.
I guess I'm just interested if anyone else has had success doing something like this. What kinds of things can be done to convince people that your presentation of the book is better than someone else's?
You could add value to your product by adding commentary/notes etc - your notes would be protected by copyright.
But for rare specialist public domain material (and with confidence in the digital rights management system) maybe there is a market?
For example, if you had a comic strip that is now in the public domain, and added the text above it "This is one of my favorites", that would not gain you any copyright protection.
If you write a few paragraphs explaining how it relates to the politics of the time, that new content is protectable, but you gain no protection over the original PD content.
If you are interested in helping put those old works back out there, I think that you should go ahead and do it. Sell them and get whatever money you can from it. But if you are doing it only for the money, I'm afraid that you will be disappointed.
Honestly, if it's in the public domain your not gonna sell more than a handful in a year.This is simply because there are so many sites ther providing public domain material for free.
I agree that is a possibility. However, as I stated, there are not many sites providing this material for free.
You do know about project Gutenberg? I wouldn't want to waste time competing with that.
Gutenburg does not have anywhere close to every public domain work (and indeed it does not have the ones I am referring to).
If you are interested in helping put those old works back out there, I think that you should go ahead and do it. Sell them and get whatever money you can from it.
That honestly was part of the motivation for considering it.
Even if we do provide a downloadable e-book and a hardcopy for sale, we will still leave the online version free. This may be counterintuitive, however, so many of the people who are interested in these subject matters either do not even "do computers" or do not like to read online. I feel that if they can "thumb through" the book online they may want to buy it. If not, oh well, they'll probably tell their friends about it.
In our case, too, it is more about saving the content and making it available. It is not our primary source of income although we do hope to make it a more significant source of income.
The books you have that are copyright after 1922 may or may not be in the public domain. Have you checked to make sure?