Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: NYT Bestseller List
Episode Date: January 10, 2024What kind of black magic goes into deciding who makes the NYT Bestseller List? Well you probably don't know the whole story unless you work there.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Hey, and welcome to the short stuff.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck.
Well, it's just Josh and Chuck.
And that's cool because we know what we're doing.
We're professionals.
We've been doing this for a while.
Haven't we, Chuck? Yeah, we're also we're doing. We're professionals. We've been doing this for a while. Haven't we Chuck?
Yeah, we're also New York Times best-selling authors.
In that nuts?
That's one of the nicer feathers in our professional caps, I think.
Yeah, and I mean, I knew that was a big deal.
And I'm very proud of it and have been since it happened.
But after researching this, I'm like,
Wow, this is a really, really big deal,
especially considering that we were on there for four weeks. That's a big deal. I'm pretty proud
of us for it, Chuck. Yeah, for sure. And the reason we mentioned that is because not just a brag,
humbly or otherwise, but because we're talking about the New York Times best seller list, which is,
but because we're talking about the New York Times best seller list, which is basically the industry standard for how good your book is doing and how hot you are as an author
in a snapshot of time or over time.
Big thanks to Howstuffworks.com for some of this.
Sophie Versho from Esquire magazine who wrote a great article about
just sort of the mysterious black magic that goes into compiling the New York Times list
even though the New York Times will say, it's just how many books are selling?
Yeah, they're very, they publish their methodology. So you know kind of what's going on, but you don't really
know exactly what's going on.
And there's a lot of people in the publishing world that are very suspicious of the New
York Times and their bestseller list.
Even though the New York Times goes to great pains to point out that the New York Times bestseller
list desk is independent of the editorial desk advertising business culture. Even the
book review desk, it's a separate department. The reason that they point that out is because
they're saying our bestseller list is insulated from pressure from anybody who might be like
this publisher is a huge advertiser with the times. Why not you just you know bump this
one up from 11 to 10 so it can be on the best seller list.
They're saying that they are immune to that kind of thing and that their list is, like
you said, it's a numbers game and it's not curated or editorialized.
That's what they say about it.
Yeah, and we'll get more into that stuff.
But nuts and bolts wise, the list has multiple categories, and they all measure different sales types.
There are 11 weekly lists, seven monthly lists,
and they are separated, fussly.
You have three categories of books,
fiction, nonfiction, and children's books.
And then those are all subdivided as well.
Fiction and nonfiction are broken down
into hardcover, paperback, and then printed
digital combined. And then nonfiction is broken down into, there's another subcategory for
how-to books because I guess they just want us to live by themselves.
Well, that's our list.
Where are we, how-to?
We were advice how-to and miscellaneous. I needed a teacher that says that. And then kids books are divided into middle grade hardcover, which is all one category.
Picture books, series, and young adult hardcover.
And then you got your monthly list and that's where you can find like audio books, graphic
novels, manga, stuff like that.
Yeah, mass market paperbacks, which I was like, what's the difference between mass market
paperbacks and market paperbacks, which I was like, what's the difference between mass market paperbacks and regular paperbacks?
Mass market paperbacks are printed cheaply and they're distributed like magazines.
They're kind of like their own separate thing. That kind of you find in like a little spinner rack at the airport. That's a mass market paperback.
All right, so they say the New York Times says, all right, we have data sources.
We keep them confidential because they want to quote,
circumvent potential pressure on the booksellers
and prevent people from trying to game their way onto the list. We'll talk a lot about the fact that that still happens
probably after the break, but they keep their data sources confidential. They say that they don't use
data aggregators and that they are just getting this data from booksellers. But people in the publishing industry say,
I just don't see how that's possible. They've got to use aggregators, but they say they don't.
Yeah, they say that every week thousands of book retailers, digital and brick and mortar, send them their sales for hundreds of thousands
of books, and that they weight them differently.
Like indie bookstores might get slightly more consideration than say like a Barnes and
Noble.
That's like the details of the formula that no one knows about.
But they say that that's where they get their numbers from.
That's where they get their data from.
And yeah, like you said, some people are just like, that's just not possible or something
called reader link.
There's something called book scan.
These are huge aggregating tools that there's no way the New York Times bestseller list
is just completely ignoring those.
Yeah, but I mean, they say they don't.
So it's kind of one of those things where they won't reveal all their methodology. I mean, they print their methodology, but like they don't tell you,'s kind of one of those things where they they won't reveal all their methodology.
I mean, they print their methodology, but like they don't tell you, I saw I likened to like,
we kind of know what the formula for Coke is, but not the exact recipe. Yeah. And that's basically
what's going on because there are plenty of instances where people can point to raw sales data
and say, well, hey, the number eight book sold more books than the number
four book, how can that be? And the New York Times will say sales data is just one factor. And the
rest is Nanya. Yeah, it's like an impenetrable fortress. And they're really, really good on leaks.
Like you don't leave the New York Times bestseller desk. And if you do, you probably turn up dead within a week or two in your apartment.
It's in a body bag. All right, should we take a break? Sure. All right, we'll take a break and
we'll talk about gaming the system right after this. The more you get, the more you get.
The more you get, the more you get.
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So Chuck, we're back and you've mentioned people gaming the system. It's actually quite possible.
It's been done before and as we'll see, it's apparently routinely done from everybody
from, you know, insidious actors, bad actors to entire publishing houses their entire publicity department that people have just figured out how to how to if not
Directly game the New York Times bestseller list to get on it at the very least tip the odds in their favor as much as they can
Yeah, and one, you know legitimate way you can tip the odds in your favor is
Something that we did and basically everybody does now. It's called pre-orders.
And that's why you hear authors hammering home,
pre-ordering is really big deal.
Like we really love you to pre-order
because all of those pre-orders get rolled up
into the week one sales.
So the goal of any author is to just,
is to land on that list,
even if it's just that one week.
And pre-orders are actually one reason why
a lot of people are sort of one week and out. We did do pre-orders so it's not like anything
untoward, everyone does it, but we were on for four weeks, so I felt like we had some sustained
sales which made me feel pretty good. That's one of the things that I turned up in this research
that made me feel good about what we did.
So yeah.
So that's one way to game sales.
Another way to do it is it involves and pre-orders.
We did giveaways.
Some people do like speaking engagements.
If you ever go see an author and you get a book,
like the price of admission gets you a book,
that's done to game pre-orders too,
because if you do, you know, X number of speaking engagements and, you know, you sell 100 books at
each one, those count toward that first week, and that can add up significantly and help get you
on that bestseller list too. There's other ways to do it that are much more and serious and ham-fisted.
Yeah, like there are companies,
and they're not gonna advertise this on their website,
but apparently there have been some, you know,
Washington Post wrote about some of the stuff
and in the New York Times, there's one company called
Book Highlight that people, you know,
publishing insider say, here's what you can do with a company like that,light that people, publishing Insider say, here's
what you can do with a company like that, is you can, as an author, say, here's 20 grand,
I want you to go out and buy, however many copies of books that that can buy through various
independent booksellers, spread it out, buy them in small, small enough chunks. So it looks like
organic sales. It's basically book laundering, really. For sure. And then all of a sudden, you're
rolled up into a week one, you know, bestseller list debut, which is what you're really after,
because just being on the list means you're going to sell more books. Right. And authors would hire
book highlight, because the author ends
up owning those books and they can either give them away, they can turn around and sell them if they
want to. But like you said, it's a business, it's a business investment. It's a shady, unethical
business investment that that tricks people into thinking your book is very popular, but it's something that can be done.
And it has been done before.
That's definitely an insidious way
to kind of game the system.
And the reason that you said they would go out
and buy small amounts of books
at a number of different booksellers
is because the New York Times pays attention
to bulk purchases.
Yeah. They factor that in because the New York Times pays attention to bulk purchases.
They factor that in.
So where if you have like a thousand book purchase
from like Amazon or something for your book
and that gets reported in your weekly sales,
they take that into consideration.
They basically say you're trying to game the system.
But rather than not include those people, because again, the mission of the New York Times
Bessiller list is to reflect what the average reader out there in the United States is organically
buying on their own, going to a retailer, online, or in person, and buying a book, rather
than disinclude those people who are gaming the system by both purchases, they
just put like a little dagger, a little cross-next to their name.
And the thing is, to that author, and almost everybody who doesn't follow the New York
Times bestseller list methodology, they're a New York Times bestseller.
And so critics are like, don't even put those people on the list.
You're still legitimizing what they're doing, even though you know they're gaming the system.
Yeah, I also saw though where the dagger which is essentially an asterisk
is sort of a kiss of death.
Oh really?
Yeah, like if you're an author who got the dagger on the list then
everybody in publishing knows the deal.
Right, right. Yeah, yeah. If you're an author, but like if you're, I saw that it's, I think,
Sophie Vershaw said, or Vershbao said it's most often used by business authors. They don't care
about the publishing world. They care about their larger public facing brand. Yeah, they said,
like, health and wellness books, self-help books, diet books,
and books authored by CEOs. Those are some of the biggest abusers and and dagger getters
that are gaming the system. So if you see some dumb diet book or some self-help book that
all of a sudden is like number two on the list and you're like, how in the world is that
selling more than whatever the Harry Potter book is?
It's probably because they've gained the system
and look for that dagger.
That dagger's probably there.
Another few people that have been daggered recently,
and this is another way you can do it,
is Donald Trump Jr., the RNC bought $100,000
worth of his books in week one.
And Jared Kushner, there was a pro-Trump pack that bought $158,000 worth of his books
in week one.
So they got the dagger, multiple CEOs, Howard Schultz of Starbucks.
He got a dagger.
All these daggers around.
And like you said, I think for the ego of some of them, they
don't care.
No, they don't care. And also they don't care about the publishing world. They're just
stepping into it to use the publishing world to boost their larger brand, right? And so
that's the big criticism is people who do bulk purchasing. It's like the New York Times
bestseller. Let's shouldn't even include them. Yeah. Because not only is it, it's rewarding somebody who's gaming the system,
you're also leaving off people who are actual like authors,
that's their job.
So being on the New York Times bestseller
list is a really big deal for them
and being left off in favor of somebody
who's game the system is that much more bitter.
Yeah, absolutely. One thing I do know, stuff you should know much more bitter. Yeah, absolutely.
One thing I do know, stuff you should know, no dagger.
No, no dagger, we did not give the system.
We did not.
You got anything else?
No, I mean, thank you for everyone who bought books
and helped us accomplish that goal
because it's not like we did it.
No, we definitely did not.
We did not.
I didn't buy any of them, I got mine for free. Did you buy any?
I bought a couple of gifts, but I don't think that had much of an impact.
Yeah, there's two push-d it over the edge.
You got anything else? I have nothing else, sir.
Okay, everybody, short stuff. Is that...
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