![]() ![]() The biggest weakness of this model is really the lack of data at high ranks and high sales- there's just the one point fixing the top end of the power law, so adding new data points can swing the total value from the fit by a few hundred copies one way or the other. Which just goes to show you the strong random element involved in the publishing business.) (Interestingly, the UK edition has shipped more than twice the number of copies the US edition did, and has been on one British chain's bestseller list for a while now. This was an amusing way to spend a few hours crunching numbers, though. It's in the right ballpark, at least- it's less than the total number printed and shipped, for example- but beyond that I don't have any useful information. How good an estimate is that? I can't really say, since I don't have BookScan numbers, and my royalty statements only give the number of copies shipped out to stores, not the copies actually sold to consumers. BookScan estimates that it covers about 75% of all sales, so that would put the total at right around 7000. Using 4800 as the estimated number, that extra 10% gets you to 5280 books (one for every foot of a one-mile stretch.). Now, comparing the fit function result with the data I have from Amazon suggests that this estimate is low by about 10% (this works for both the hardcover and the paperback numbers, and for several different subsets of those data). With that caveat, the estimated value looks to be between 40, probably toward the high end of that range. What's the total sales figure? That's a little tough to say, because the fit to the first graph is still fairly sensitive to exactly what data are included-the two fit parameters wander around a little, and because it's a power law spanning a couple of orders of magnitude, small changes in those values can lead to substantial changes in the estimated total. This gives you a rough idea of the number of copies a moderately successful pop-science book sells in the US. The resulting data look more or less like this: So, using that handy formula from the graph above, and the several months of sales ranks from the tracker, what can I say about the number of books sold? Well, after laboriously converting the ranks to approximately the same format as the data from Amazon, I can plug in the average sales rank for the hardcover for every week it was out, and use that to estimate the number of copies sold. I do, however, have reams of data from the nifty Sales Rank tracker Matthew Beckler wrote for me (which stopped working a while ago, but has been supplanted by the Amazon features, anyway. So, anyway, what good is this? Well, I know exactly how many paperbacks have been sold, thanks to Amazon's BookScan numbers, but I don't have the numbers for the hardcover. If you want to go out and buy several hundred paperbacks of How to Teach Physics to Your Dog from Amazon over the next couple of weeks, I'd be thrilled to have the data. This is obviously a little dodgy, given that there's only that one little point floating way up on the left, and to do a better job, I'd need to have lots more points with high ranks and large numbers of copies sold. According to this, to estimate the number of copies the hardcover has sold based on its Sales Rank, you would use the formula: This is a log-log plot, so those straight lines fit to the data are power laws. The one lonely point in the upper left is the sales figure for the first week of the hardcover sales, which a little bird provided for me at some point (I don't have BookScan access outside of the Amazon service). Blue points are the hardcover for How to Teach Physics to Your Dog, brick-red the paperback. the average Amazon Sales Rank for that week. This is a graph of BookScan sales data for each week vs. So, anyway, here's the data I got for How to Teach Physics to Your Dog: You'd have to be some sort of obsessive nerd to make a quantitative comparison between them. ![]() Of course, the BookScan data is very limited, giving you only four weeks, and the Sales Rank data, while available over the full published life of any given book, are presented as a graph only with no way to extract them as a data table. A few months ago- just before the paperback release of How to Teach Physics to Your Dog- Amazon started providing not only their Sales Rank data, but also sales data from Nielsen BookScan. ![]()
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