Pricing in publishing is often framed as a technical decision.
Cost. Competition. Market expectations.
Those factors matter. But they don’t explain what actually drives a purchase.
Value does.
In the publishing space—especially with self-published books—pricing conversations tend to drift toward comparison.
What are other authors charging?
What do traditional publishers charge?
What feels “reasonable” to a reader?
Those questions are easy to ask.
They’re also incomplete.
I came across a discussion where a reader hesitated to purchase a self-published book priced higher than two traditionally published titles she had recently purchased.
Her conclusion was simple: the higher price didn’t feel justified.
But the reasoning behind it wasn’t about cost.
It was about perceived value.
This is where many authors get pulled in the wrong direction.
A single comparison—
especially one based on assumptions about “unknown” versus “known” authors—
can lead to a broader conclusion:
That self-published work should be priced lower by default.
That’s not a pricing strategy.
It’s a reaction.
Value is not determined by how a book is published.
Or by the familiarity of the author’s name.
It’s determined by what the reader experiences.
Clarity. Insight. Usefulness. Connection.
If those are present, readers return.
If they’re not, they don’t—regardless of price.
Cost-based, competition-based, and value-based pricing all have a place.
But in publishing, value carries more weight than the others.
Because books are not commodities in the usual sense.
They’re judged after they’re experienced—not before.
The mistake isn’t in considering cost or competition.
It’s in allowing them to override value.
When pricing decisions are anchored in value—and directed toward the right readers—the range of acceptable pricing expands.
And the conversation shifts.
From “What should this cost?” to “What is this worth to the reader it’s meant for?”
That distinction matters.
Because in the end, pricing doesn’t define value.
It reflects it.