King Brandon Does it Again

In yet another definitive win for him—and Neopatronage—Fantasy King Brandon Sanderson has shattered a second crowdfunding record.

Brandon Sanderson, the bestselling author known for his epic fantasy novels, has already raised more than $16 million on crowdfunding platform BackerKit since launching it earlier this week.

Brandon Sanderson New Secret Project
Image: Dragonsteel Books

Related: Neopatron Brandon

It should be noted that the Publishers Weekly article cited above was written last month.

King Brandon’s latest crwodfunder has since reached its triumphant conclusion, and the astounding results speak for themselves.

Dragonsteel Backerkit
Screen cap: Backerkit

Related: Sanderson’s Neopatronage Masterclass

As many readers will know, King Brandon just set the all-time high score on Kickstarter with his $40 million + campaign. Going on to raise more than half as much on a platform with a fraction of Kickstarter’s traffic might be an even more impressive achievenement. So what did his patrons trip over themselves to give him money for?

The campaign is to fund a leatherbound edition of Words of Radiance, the second book in Sanderson’s fantasy series, The Stormlight Archive. The leatherbound edition will feature premium materials and illustrations, as well as a new “secret project,” Sanderson has teased. Add-ons include an audiobook, which Sanderson says will also be available on Audible, suggesting he has come to an agreement with the audiobook giant .

Brandon Sanderson WoR Leather
Photo: Dragonsteel Books

Related: Audible Bows the Knee to King Brandon

Sanderson’s BackerKit campaign, which has 55,000 backers and runs through March 30, is the most successful fundraising effort on the platform thus far. This follows Sanderson’s previous record-breaking Kickstarter campaign in March 2022, which raised $41.7 million from 185,341 backers, setting a new record for the most funded Kickstarter in the platform’s history. That campaign supported the release of four books.

Yeah, it’s a cliché, but it’s true: The debate is indeed over. King Brandon just told us twice. Struggling to get validation from a Big 5 publisher and earn out a $1500 advance $1.25 at a time has been a dead end for years. Running yourself ragged to crank out a book a month and make back your $5K Amazon ad spend at 3 bucks a pop is obsolete. And here’s why:

Sanderson Earnings

Related: Sanderson’s Neopatronage Masterclass

Brandon Sanderson 5x’ed his annual income thanks to a single Kickstarter. And he’s now proven it wasn’t a fluke.

That ratio isn’t just due to the size of King Brandon’s brand, either. I’ve been crowdfunding my novels since 2018, and those campaigns consistently outperform my Amazon royalties by 5-10x. What that tells us is that the Neopatroange model scales.

Neopatronage Model

Related: No Gatekeepers Where There Are No Walls

The reason Neopatroange works, even for first-timers, has to do with its revenue model. Marketers have long recognized three main segments of the earnings curve: the blockbuster, the middle market, and the long tail. Blockbusters give you the biggest payday, but over the shortest time. Long tail channels provide a small but steady drip pretty much forever. Middle markets are—as the name implies—midway between the two.

According to the former common wisdom, which track you got on mostly depended upon your product. Your publisher/studio/record label decided which sales channel your work belonged in and threw it out there to sink or swim—maybe with some ad spend that was a black box to everybody. The marketing wisdom further held that products couldn’t change lanes. If they went for a blockbuster and came up short, the product was an unsalvageable flop. Sometimes you had a mid-market sleeper that broke out and hit the big time, but it never worked in reverse.

Showgirls
Screen cap: NYT

What Sanderson has figured out—and with all humility, what I figured out first—is that the revenue curve isn’t strictly product-dependent. Everybody just thought it was due to the artificial bottlenecks maintained by 20th century media cartels. Since then, advances like KDP, Kickstarter, and even Fiverr have let creators eliminate the middleman to reach audiences directly. And it turns out doing so lets them plug the same product into all three segments. You crowdfund your project for a big capital infusion up front. You give subcribers exclusive access to the work-in-progress, then you offer it on Amazon to keep earning forever.

That’s Neopatronage. And it answers the question that’s been on every author’s mind: Why does Brandon keep working with publishers when he earns 5x more on KS?

Brandon Sanderson
Photo: Jeffrey D. Allred

Related: Sanderson Is  Not in Audible

The reason is simple. Tor Books and the other New York houses he still works with are Sanderson’s long tail. To put it in perspective, if you land a new job that pays $40M a year, why quit your old job that pays $10M and requires zero additional work? It’s free money at that point.

For new authors, the takeaway is that playing the last-century game of tossing your work out there and hoping for a blockbuster is just gambling. That’s true of oldpub and newpub … on their own. But embracing the Neopatronage model removes a massive chunk of the risk and minimizes the element of chance. You still need the work ethic to deliver on your promises and the talent to please your readers. But giving them the chance to become your patrons lets them support—and even commission—the entertainment they want without go-betweens getting the lion’s share.

Thanks to King Brandon, Neopatroange has gone from theory to indie entertainment’s biggest open secret. The new model has now matured to the level that self-publishing had reached ca. 2014, but without a glut of creators flooding the scene. That lessened volatility and concurrent greater stability suggest that Neopatronge will be around for a while.

 

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9 Comments

  1. BayouBomber

    The process along with the ins & outs of neopatronage were thoughtfully outlined. It does give me hope I can earn a little something off my art in the future. The biggest problem I have to tackle is how to apply that framework to animation. That’s a bridge to cross later.

    Jumping into the neopatronage scene is just another thing to look forward to when I’m done with school.

    • As I mentioned elsewhere, the Neopatronage revenue framework isn’t self-generating. It’s still necessary to find folks who want to patronize you. What Neopatronage does is multiply each patron’s contribution.

      So the work ahead of you is finding where people who want your art spend their time. I respect how difficult that task is; then again, I never claimed to be selling get-rich-quick schemes.

      • BayouBomber

        Neopartonage is no different than being a business owner. There’s nothing guaranteed in being a business owner. I’ve failed enough in this field to know.

  2. Sarah

    This has many interesting points, but I’m still not convinced the model is that much different than old pub, in that your chances of striking it big are pretty low. Why is it easier to convince backers to shell out money for an unfinished product than to induce folks to sign up for your newsletter? Or take a chance on a finished work that’s already on Amazon? In other words, if your name isn’t Sanderson and they don’t know you exist or aren’t already buying in those venues, why would they become patrons?

    • Neopatronage is better than oldpub because for one thing, it’s not dead.

      Read the court transcripts from the Penguin Random House-Simon & Schuster trial. Officers of the major NY publishing houses admitted under oath that they don’t do jack for new authors. Instead, oldpub operates like angel investors that fund established celebrities’ books hoping for a cut if turns a profit. Which it does less than half the time.

      Most oldpub authors sell fewer than 1000 copies, which isn’t enough to earn out their $1500 average advance. So you can work for years on one book that earns you $1500 lifetime. Or you can make that much or more in one month on Kickstarter, then start earning pure profit forever when you launch on Amazon.

      That’s the difference between oldpub and Neopatroange. And to be honest, it’s so vast there’s no comparison.

      • Luke West

        I mean, I knew it was bad. I didn’t know it was *that* bad.

        • That’s why we call it oldpub. It’s already lying in the casket and waiting to be lowered in the grave.

    • How to find patrons willing to fund your projects? Market research. Identify your audience. Find out where they spend time online. Go there and get in front of them.

      Neopatronage is a functioning revenue model that replaces dead oldpub and broken newpub. What it’s not is a get-rich-quick scheme. Nothing can replace showing up and doing the work.

      Oldpub only signs authors that have already built large followings anyway. So learning how to market is a nonnegotiable for all authors regardless. You can do all that work to earn 12.5% with oldpub or 90% with Neopatronage. Simple as.

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