Should You Use A Human Actor or AI Text-to-Speech in Creating Your Audiobooks?
Human Actor or AI Text-to-Speech? The replacement of human narrators with AI-generated voices in audiobook production is a highly controversial topic in today’s authoring world.
(This article is part of my Udemy Course, Becoming an Author: The Master Class Series. If you are reading this article as a standalone piece, you might consider joining the course and learning the specific skill of producing Text-to-Voice Narratives. You can also take advantage of the sessions that came before this and those that come after.)
Cost Can Be a Big Factor in Your Decision
As an emerging author, my effort to understand the craft led me to analyze the publishing industry, which became a key factor in my decision to create an authoring system, develop a course on it, and offer it to you on Udemy. If all you want to do is write stories for your own benefit or to share with friends, then any effort is probably sufficient. If you want to make money from your craft, a serious evaluation of your skills, methods, and the various ways to capitalize on your work is essential. The math matters, and decisions will need to be made from a business model perspective.
There are roughly 4.2 million books published every year, and traditional publishers account for only about 10% of those, most of them by authors already under contract. Fewer than 2% of books submitted by new authors are published, and 95% of those submissions are rejected immediately due to poor formatting, grammatical issues, or the lack of a well-developed plot. Even among the polished manuscripts pitched by agents, fewer than 5% are offered a traditional contract. The decisions on the part of agents and publishers regarding whether to accept a book are often made on non-literary grounds. It has long been known that if the author or plot is not from the demographic they want to promote, getting represented is almost impossible. I was even informed by one agency that they didn’t represent people like me. Whatever that meant.
Most self-published authors sell fewer than 100 copies of a book in their lifetime; only 5% sell more than 250. Even if they can be published traditionally, the sales numbers are around 3,000. This means the median income per book is about $6,000 over an author’s lifetime, and most of that is consumed by production costs unrelated to printing and distribution. A human actor typically charges $3,000 to $5,000 to narrate a 100,000-word book. Professional editing can cost between $3,000 and $6,000 for the same book. The result is that editing and audio production can cost an author their expected income, which they pay in advance, with no guarantee of recouping that investment.
The investment discussion is one part of the financial analysis; the cash flow of a book is another. I know that I am not the norm, but I wrote and published nine full-length novels in six years, have seven more in development, and created about a dozen short stories beyond those. In the traditional world, that represents far more than $100,000 in editing and narration costs, and that doesn’t even consider promotional and marketing expenses.
Learning to Use Text-to-Speech Generation is an Investment in a Developing Technology
Other Articles
-
2026 New COVID-19 Vaccine Study Mischief
To those of you who know me, it is no surprise that I never tire of being right. To be fair, there is that occasion when I’m not correct, but it happens so rarely. Take the COVID-19 fiasco, for instance. …
-
The Answer To The Existential Problems Facing Humanity Is:
The post discusses the different approaches humans are taking to solve our world problems.
-
Genesis 2:24 Marriage: One Man and One Woman?
Is it true that Jesus said that marriage is a one man one woman affair? Let's see what scripture says.