I ran out of time yesterday to get this posted. The Wall Street Journal ran an article on Tuesday titled "To Publishers, Megahits Mean Very Big Numbers" [sub. needed]. The piece talks about the growing expectations and dependence publishers have for bestsellers. In the early 90's, 1 million copies sold was a big deal and now the bar is 5 million copies. This has been driven by the likes of The Da Vinci Code, the Harry Potter series, and The Purpose Driven Life.
The article talks a lot about Mitch Albom and The Five People You Meet in Heaven. This month the book is likely to pass the five million book mark. I found the business numbers interesting - "[publisher] Hyperion will generate $50 million in revenue at five-million mark, on which it will earn an estimated $15 million in operating profit.".
Let me just add the biz book perspective. The only titles that have come close to these kind of numbers are Built to Last (3.5 million copies) and Good to Great (>1 million copies).
Posted by Todd S. at November 3, 2004 11:44 AM | TrackBackIt's interesting to read a counter-view of mega-hits in an age of digital, networked media in Wired, Oct 2004 issue, The Long Tail. See http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.10/tail.html
While this is more about digitized media - music, films - perhaps one day it might apply to books as well.
Posted by: Evelyn Rodriguez at November 8, 2004 11:53 AM