Planet Money - Inside a BOOK auction
Episode Date: March 21, 2026In the age of TikTok and Polymarket, it can be easy to overlook the humble book. But books are one of the most influential technologies ever invented. From “The Wealth of Nations” to “Das Kapita...l,” books have the power to shape whole economic systems… and everything else in our world. The market for books can determine which ideas make it to the masses. So when Planet Money was approached to make its own book, not only did it present an opportunity to spread the gospel of whimsical economic infotainment to new audiences everywhere, but it also presented an opportunity to get a rare peek behind the curtain of the notoriously opaque world of publishing. On today’s episode, the first chapter in our series on the making of a book: Planet Money sets out to land a book deal. We enter the high stakes, high school drama of the publishing industry, where literary agents try to woo powerful book editors. And we learn what happens when lofty artistic ideals meet the cold logic of the market. It’s a courtship dance with millions of dollars potentially on the line. There will be whale fights, corporate speed dating, and a literary shotgun wedding.Live event info and tickets here. Pre-order the Planet Money book and get a free gift. / Subscribe to Planet Money+Listen free: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, the NPR app or anywhere you get podcasts.Facebook / Instagram / TikTok / Our weekly Newsletter.This episode was produced by Willa Rubin with production help from Sam Yellowhorse Kesler. It was edited by Jess Jiang, fact-checked by Sierra Juarez, and engineered by Robert Rodriguez. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer. Music: NPR Source Audio - “Run Baby Run,” “Lay It Down,” and “Lazy Ringer.”To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Planet Money from NPR.
For a long time, whenever I entered the cozy refuge of an independent bookstore,
I couldn't help but suspect that there was this whole hidden world,
this whole economy lurking behind the bookshelves.
And I know in the era of TikTok and polymarket and video podcasting,
it can be easy to overlook the humble book.
But it is undeniable.
Books are one of the most influential technologies ever.
From the wealth of nations and Das Koppi-Ti-Ti-Ti-Lews.
to the art of the deal or dreams for my father.
Books can make us all lean in one day,
or suddenly everyone you know is finding life-changing magic and tidying up?
Even if you haven't picked up a book in years,
the forces that shape the marketplace for books
have the power to shape everything else in your life.
They shape the ideas that make it to the masses.
So last year, when my boss informed the team in an editorial meeting
that the Planet Money book, which had been in the works for a while,
was now hurtling toward publication,
I found myself leaning in.
The question on my boss's mind was this.
Would anyone on the team like to report out how the book got made,
to see what it might tell us about the business of books?
Would anyone raise their hand?
And when I heard the call to tell the tale of the Planet Money book,
what do you think I did?
Reader? I raised it.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money. I'm Alexei Horowitz-Gazi. We live in a world built by books.
And yet, the economic machine that produces them is shrouded in mystery, the ways in which the invisible hand determines what books actually get made.
Today on the show, the first episode in our series. Planet Money sets out to land a book deal and gets to go backstage to see everything that happens behind the shadowy curtain of the publishing industry.
and we see what happens when lofty artistic ideals meet the cold logic of the market.
There will be whale fights, corporate speed dating, and a literary shotgun wedding.
Okay, so I'd accepted the mission to tell the tale of the Planet Money book.
And in order to figure out where it came from, I started with the man who keeps the Planet Money solar system spinning every week.
I'm Alex Goldmark. I am the executive producer of Planet Money.
And in that role, it is my job to decide on the structure of the big projects we do, the business side of Planet Money.
And I guess for disclosure's sake, we should also say you are my boss.
That is true.
Or you're actually, you're my boss's boss. You're kind of my grand boss.
Oh, ouch, but okay.
Yeah, sure.
I think it's cool.
Longtime listeners may recall Planet Money's habit for participatory projects.
We made a T-shirt and followed all the underlying economic threads around the globe.
We bought a barrel of oil to follow it from the ground all the way to the pump.
We'd resurrected a superhero to make a comic book.
We'd released a record.
We just designed a board game.
As to why our latest project is a book, Alex says you can kind of thank the free market for that.
When did the first twinkle of a Planet Money book enter your eye?
I think, in all honesty, like the first way it got on my radar was when these two literary agents said,
hey, we've been retained by NPR to see if there are any NPR properties that would make for good books,
and we think Planet Money could be one.
Alex was, let's say, lukewarm at first,
because this was kind of the opposite of how Planet Money projects have usually gotten started.
Typically, we pick some part of the economy we want to understand better,
and then dive in to figure out the industry.
In practice, we've often failed to turn a profit,
but that's okay because making money was not the point.
But here with the Planet Money book, NPR seemed to smell an opportunity.
And I think at the time, one of my bosses said, hey, will you talk to these people?
My great, great, grand boss.
Yes.
And I was like, okay, that sounds potentially fun.
And that is how Alex first met a pair of seasoned literary agents named Laura Nolan and Jane von Maren.
When you were first starting this, like, were you aware that historically Planet Money projects have notoriously lost money?
No.
Alex made a point of not telling us that.
Laura and Jane are a tight-knit duo.
Their minds are melded so closely,
it can be hard to tell where one of Jane's sentences begins
and Laura's ends.
As literary agents, Jane and Laura do not work directly for a publisher.
They help authors sell their book ideas to the publishers.
And when Jane and Laura make a sale, they make a commission,
usually around 15%.
They see themselves as sort of like the spotters
within the publishing industry, peering into the vast swirl of infinite would-be books,
and scooping up the ideas they think they might be able to sell.
We are always thinking, is this idea a book?
Is this article a book?
Is this conversation I'm having with this random cousin of my husband?
A book?
I mean, everything is processed through this lens of, is this a book or not.
And in the case of Planet Money, Laura and Jane had been wondering whether this podcast might be a book,
a while. They'd previously helped NPR make a book about women in music and a wait, wait,
don't tell me crossword book. And they saw potential in Planet Money in part because the show
had recently sold out a live musical based on our superhero series. That made them even
more intrigued by the idea of getting Planet Money between the hardcover. Here's an engaged
audience of people who will go to a theater because of a character that was created by Planet
Money that is actually in a comic book. Was it Microfish?
Microface. Microface, thank you. And we're like, wow, if people are going to pay money to get the comic book and go to the show, this really bodes well for a book.
So Jane and Laura set up a meeting with Alex at the South Street Seaport in Lower Manhattan. What was the point of that first meeting?
We knew we wanted Planet Money to do a book. It was not clear that Planet Money was ready to do a book.
So I think the point of the first meeting was to try and persuade Alex that now is the time.
Seal the deal, I'd say.
Yes, yes, yes.
The agents make their case to Alex.
They explained that making a book would allow Planet Money to spread the show's signature brand of irreverent economic infotainment.
It might even invite new listeners to the podcast by getting into untapped markets.
Being in airport bookstores, being in libraries, being in schools, there were,
ways in which a book could do that in a way that a podcast can't.
Talking with Laura and Jane, Alex starts to see how a Planet Money book might be a good way
to advance the mission of the show. But there was still the question of what kind of book
the show would actually want to make and what would find traction in the crowded marketplace
for books. The three of them start brainstorming possible approaches. And at first, Alex is
throwing out all sorts of concepts. And I think I was like, I want pamphlets and we'll do the first one,
and then we'll add to it.
So, well, over time, we'll have, like, ten different pamphlets
and each one explain in industry or something.
And then, shoot, they were just like, no.
Like, you've got to stop, Alex.
We love the energy.
I think they were like, this is good.
You're very generative.
Let's keep going.
Let's, anything else?
The agents told Alex, his ideas were a little bit too narrow.
The key to selling a big book these days, they say,
is figuring out a broad frame
that would appeal to as many people as possible.
How wide was the spectrum of possible planet money books
we could have gone down.
Is it like, you know, if we're trying to move copies,
like Romanticie is super hot right now.
Maybe we do 50 shades of green.
50 shades of green.
I love that.
That is hilarious.
We'll save that one for later.
I think that's going to be book two.
For book one, however, the broad idea that Alex and the agents finally land on
is a field guide to the global economy.
Just like the show, this book could use a series of vividly reported stories
to bring our daily lives into economic focus.
from how we all work to how we date and pick our mates to how we invest and save for retirement.
This, they explain, is the kind of book that might have a mass market appeal.
So Alex and the agents had a book Idea.
The next thing they needed was a book Proposal.
The proposal gives a sense of what it'll actually be like to read a prospective book.
It lays out the structure of the various chapters,
and it makes a business case for why this book and this author would be a good bet for a publisher.
because a book is not just some collection of interesting stories.
A book is a product.
And book proposals are both the vehicle by which nonfiction books are bought and sold,
and they offer publishers a glimpse of how they might sell the book to readers.
To get the ball rolling, Alex needed someone to actually help write the proposal.
If everything went well, that person could write the actual book.
Around the same time, by total coincidence, a guy named Alex Miyasi reached out and he said,
hey, have you ever thought of doing a Planet Money book?
I would love to write one.
And it was fortuitous.
Fertuitous because Alex Miasia had reported a few Planet Money episodes over the years.
He understood the voice and style of the show.
And he'd also worked on a book for Atlas Obscura about food.
So he knew the bookwriting process.
After talking to some other candidates, my grand boss Alex,
finally popped the question.
Other Alex, he said, do you want to be our writer?
Other Alex said, I do.
And then we had to write the proposal.
Over the next year or so, Alex and Alex and Jane and Laura
passed this sort of epic Google Doc back and forth over and over.
They come up with some sample writing,
draft an outline for the whole book,
and they lay out a business case for why readers would be clamoring
for just this book at just this moment.
Okay, so at the end of the process, you have...
The proposal.
Oh, there you go.
A very proposal.
old radio tricks.
Once Jane and Laura and the Alexes had that proposal,
it was time to court some publishers.
And for months, Jane and Laura had been seeding the marketplace
by dropping whispers of a Planet Money book
at every power lunch and cocktail hour they could.
You see, the publishing industry is so small and connected, they explain.
It's a bit like a high school with its own set of unwritten rules and etiquette.
And like a high school,
a lot of the most important trade information travels from literary agents to book editors and back through word of mouth.
We will have lunches or breakfasts or drinks. They generally reach out or you reach out to them. I haven't seen you. We should get together. What are you buying lately? What are you interested in?
And that is essential information because each of these editors is a potential buyer representing the publishing house behind them, the Penguin's Random House and Simons & Schuster of the world.
And the first thing to understand about this market is that over the past,
half century or so, it's become more and more concentrated in the hands of a few companies.
Once upon a time, these were all independent publishers, and over the many years,
they all got swallowed by other publishers and swallowed again, and those good people got
swallowed, et cetera. So that's why we are down to what they call the Big Five, which are
major conglomerates that contain inside many, many publishers.
The many, many subsidiary publishers inside a big one are actually known as imprints.
And when you look around the bookstore at all the tiny little symbols at the base of a book spine, a penguin or a campfire or a random little house, those brand markers or colophons, they are signs of all the hundreds of formerly independent publishers that have been gobbled up over the decades.
So if the publishing world is an aquatic ecosystem, there once were thousands of little fish that have been swallowed successively by larger and larger fish until now.
there are five gargantuan publishing houses.
Correct.
And a few others who have managed to grow outside of this conglomeration process.
Yes.
The consolidation of the publishing industry has made the bottom line more important than ever.
And it's changed the kind of books that actually make it to the printing press.
There's increasing pressure for publishers to boost their profits by betting on books that aren't as risky.
Just like how Hollywood has turned more and more to mining familiar IP and cranking out sequels,
publishing has leaned more and more on putting their money behind authors with platforms and built-in audiences.
There are, of course, still more than a hundred small independent presses and academic presses,
but Jane and Laura think the Planet Money book could go big.
As they pointed out in the proposal, the show had already sold nearly 17,000 comic books and over 20,000 t-shirts.
In this era, when publishers are betting on whether a would-be author's audience might actually buy their book,
Jane and Laura were hoping they could lure in one of the biggest fish in the sea of publishers.
We want a whale, ideally.
We do.
I want a big whale that will know how to sell books to every single possible person and get books into every single bookstore.
So a lot of the editors Jane and Laura are casually courting represent a whale in this world.
And one of the people they make sure to tell about the Planet Money book is someone named Tom Mayer.
I was at my desk and I got a call from Laura Nolan and Jane Van Meeren and they said,
we've got something really exciting.
Tom is an executive editor at W.W. Norton.
Now, Norton is not a whale.
They're not one of the big five,
but they are a major publisher
that has managed to stay independent.
Kind of like a literary dolphin.
The house has published fictional sensations
like Fight Club and a clockwork orange
and all sorts of heavy-hitting nonfiction,
like Michael Lewis's Moneyball or The Big Short.
We should say,
Norton, Penguin, Harper Collins,
and several other publishers
are financial supporters of NPR.
But Tom says the basic business model in publishing, whether you're a whale, a dolphin, or a guppy, is generally the same.
Publishers are trying to buy the rights to books based on what they like and what they think will be profitable.
Tom is trying to acquire and edit great works of art, but the publisher needs to keep in mind the commerce of it all.
Because for the publisher, every book is also a financial risk.
So they have to treat each new prospective book like a new prospective investment and check how it would fit into their
overall portfolio. A publisher is kind of like a basket of stocks. You know, we publish 150 books in a
year. Some of them are going to do really well. Some of them are going to do okay. Some of them are not
going to do well. And what you hope to do is generally keep the whole portfolio moving upwards.
But it is a balance. And you have to have diversity. You want to have some mysteries and you want
to have some nonfiction and you want to have academic works of sociology and you want to have
cookbooks. And having a diverse and interesting list of books means that you want to have nonfiction. And you
that there will be successes, even as there are failures.
Publishing is a power law business.
20% of the books make 80% of the money.
Many, many books don't sell.
Are you thinking about risk mitigation in your own annual list of books that you're acquiring sort of thing?
I'm like, okay, well, these ones seem like they might not sell that much.
I should probably try to get some that are more surefire in some way.
Alexi, every time I try to think like a businessman, I fail.
And if I think too hard about, well, I've signed up four music books this year, I can't do another one.
Well, then I'll miss the next great music book.
If I think I've signed up a bunch of debut novels that might or might not work, I'd better sign up, you know, some branded podcast book.
Then I will make a mistake.
Like, I just, if I think too strategically or too programmatically about my investment choices, I will not make good art.
Now, book editors, Tom explains, wear a few different hats.
They are, of course, in the writing trenches with their authors, helping to shape the structure and style of a manuscript.
That is the art side.
But on the business side, and even more importantly for our story, they are also in charge of acquiring new titles for their houses.
These are the buyers that agents like Jane and Laura need to sell on something like a Planet Money book.
But getting Tom's attention on any given book proposal can be difficult.
I did the math a couple years ago, and I discovered that I received 500.
roughly proposals from book agents every year.
Wow.
So that's reputable book agents who have gone through this process of vetting authors and making book proposals.
And out of those 500, I'm excited about 30 or 40.
And I end up buying 10 or 12 a year.
So out of what I'm getting submitted from the entire world that has already been called,
I end up signing up 2% of the things that are sent to me.
And keep in mind, these days, editors like Tom,
generally do not read unsolicited proposals or manuscripts that don't come to them through vetted agents.
Publishing is, in some ways, an industry built on gatekeeping.
And agents are just the first of many.
The way Tom is thinking about it, every time he opens his inbox and gets a proposal from a trusted source,
the thing he's hoping for is the tingly feeling of reading something undeniably great.
I literally don't know what's going to come in my inbox today.
It could be the next Nobel Prize-winning novel.
it could be garbage.
I don't know.
And that feeling of what might it be,
is this going to be the one
that gives me that feeling,
that sparkle,
that sense that this is the best thing
I've ever read?
It might be today.
I might go back to my desk
and find an agent
has emailed me something incredible.
That is a feeling I love.
And it's part of what I love about my job.
And so when agents call
and they say,
I've got something I'm excited about.
I say, great, I know you, agent.
I can't wait to see what it is.
You know I'm chasing that literary high.
I need my next.
Thanks. Give me that good. I want that uncut nonfiction.
When the Planet Money book proposal hit Tom's inbox, he did not read it right away.
It took a few days and a polite reminder from Jane and Laura telling him that other publishers were getting excited before he finally took a look.
But when he did, he says he did notice that telltale tingle.
I immediately said this is a book for Norton. You know, we've published lots of books that explain business and finance and economics to everyday readers.
It's a category of books we know really well.
And we're good at it. Tom knew and liked Planet Money. He knew the show had a big following,
and he knew that NPR listeners generally buy books. And I said, this book is going to be big,
I hope, I expect, I think, and I want to share it with my colleagues right away.
So it was kind of a perfect storm, another famous Norton book. It was a perfect storm of feeling
about why I wanted to proceed. Now, the decision to pursue a book for acquisition isn't solely up to
individual editors like Tom. He has to make the case to all of Norton's other editors and
department heads at a big editorial meeting about why this is a Norton book and why it's a good
bet. And Tom says most of his colleagues were generally on board, but...
Honestly, the biggest challenge is what is the evaluation? You know, plan and money is a household
name. They've got lots of followers. This book will sell more than zero copies. Yeah. Which is the
potential fate of many books. Zero copies sold happens. In reality, Tom says even a total flop will
sell at least a few copies. But Tom's colleagues at Norton wondered how many copies,
would the Planet Money book actually sell?
Tom told them about Planet Money selling t-shirts
and comic books and vinyl records.
The proposal was claiming that Planet Money
would promote the book in all sorts of ways.
They'd talk about it on NPR,
put endless promos in the feed,
maybe even produce a meta-reported series
about the making of the book?
Tom's colleagues pushed back.
Would Planet Money actually do any of that?
And if they did,
would any of it translate to more book sales?
Tom did not know the answer.
answer to those questions, but he still got the green light to push the process forward,
to set up a meeting with the agents, Jane and Laura, and both of the Alexes.
But remember, Tom is not the only editor who Jane and Laura have been courting for this book.
A key part of a literary agent's job is to try to give as many editors as possible a sense of
fomo over the book proposal. Of course, that doesn't always work.
It wasn't clear when we sent it out how many people were going to respond.
If we had one publisher only and everybody else didn't like,
But one publisher loved it.
That's all you need is one.
But in this case, we were getting absolutely just inundated with requests.
Jane and I were then faced with 23 publishers who wanted meanings,
which was probably the largest number I have ever had in my career.
Jane and Laura explained to my grand boss, Alex,
that before the pandemic, when a book proposal was hot,
the book's author and agents might take a fancy black car all over town
to meet all the prospective publishers.
But we get to do it all on Zoom now.
Hooray.
And I think it was like 17 meetings, or maybe it was 27 meetings.
I remember there being a seven in there.
It was actually 23 meetings, but you get the point.
So Jane and Laura set up a sort of speed-dating Zoom gauntlet.
23-half-hour meetings spread out over four days,
where Alex and Company meet their prospective publishers one by one
to pitch each other on why they might be the best fit.
One publisher pitches a sort of glossy, graphics-heavy coffee table version of the book.
Tom and his team at Norton pitched the idea of making college courseware based on the book to get it into classrooms and onto economic syllabi.
But Alex says the whole thing was kind of a blur.
For Jane and Laura, all this interest means one thing.
They've got enough potential buyers to hold an auction.
If they play their cards right, they should be able to turn this hot hand into cold hard cash.
Laura and I were behind the scenes talking and strategizing about,
okay, how are we going to structure this auction?
Because we had created a lot of excitement by having so many meetings,
but we wanted to continue that excitement
and incentivize publishers to jump high.
After the break, Jane and Laura come up with an auction plan,
and this little Planet Money book goes to market.
Nearly a year and a half after book agents Jane and Laura reached out to Planet Money's executive producer Alex about making a book,
it was finally time for all of this careful planning and gamesmanship to come to a head.
It was time to take the proposal to auction.
But Jane and Laura say, you've got to remember, this is a gentle, bookish crowd.
So if you're picturing a dramatic Sotheby-style paddle party or a rowdy cattle auction...
It's not like the auctioneer.
who's like, give me your bid, give me your big, give it.
This is all done by email.
Oh, man.
I know.
I know that fast-talking gavel-touting kind of flavor.
Unfortunately, there's not bad.
Maybe we'll move in that direction.
That can make a lot more entertaining.
Yeah, exactly.
But what we did do was we tried to create a structure and rules that would give us some advantages
to make it a little bit more like that gavel toting situation.
The main thing they're trying to do is to make.
make potential bidders feel motivated by the level of competition without scaring them away.
And a lot of this comes down to a kind of information management. For example, normally Jane and
Laura would keep something like the number of publishers they'd met with a secret. If there are
only a couple of bidders, they don't want to tip their hand. But in the case of the Planet Money
book, there were 23 potential bidders. So Laura and Jane strategically let that number slip. Which,
For Tom Mayer, the book editor who's always chasing the literary dragon, it seems to have had its intended effect.
Oh, my God, everybody in town is bidding.
All the publishers want this book.
What are we going to do next?
The key information Tom needed to come up with a plan for bidding was to know what type of auction format Jane and Laura were going to use to sell the Planet Money book book.
Tom says there are a few classic auction formats you generally see in the world of book publishing.
The first is what's known as a round-robin auction.
It's sort of a classic poker game style of bidding in which each person can top the prior bid in turn.
So one publisher bids $10,000.
The next person says $15,000.
The person after that says 20, and you just go around until the bidding stops.
This produces the most rational price, but it can take a really long time and people's attention can wane.
Agents might prefer this format to push editors to try to one-up each other.
But if the agents want to capitalize on people's limited attention, Tom says there's one particularly intense auction
format known as the one round best bid.
One shot, you put your best foot forward, your best offer, and you just hope you win.
Bitters, they have like almost no information.
You don't know what the baseline price is.
You don't know what anyone else is thinking.
You know nothing.
And this leads to really unpredictable results.
So it's risky for everyone.
It's whiskey for the authors.
It's whiskey for agents.
It's risky for publishers because prices are less rational in that one round low information
bidding environment.
Agents might choose this format if they want to keep the auction quick and
efficient. The one-round best-bid auction forces potential publishers to set aside all the flattery
and small-talk and actually put their money where their mouths are. But luckily for Tom, and also
maybe everyone else, Laura and Jane decide, because there's so much competitive interest for the
Planet Money Book, the kind of auction they will run is something called the two-round best bid,
though there's sometimes a third round. Tom likes to call this one the wedding cake auction,
because there are tiers of bidding, and the pool of bidders get smaller each round, like the layers of a cake.
And in the wedding cake auction, the top four bidders advance to the second round.
And often there will be a third round where the top two bidders advance, and they're sort of sitting on top of the wedding cake, like little cake toppers.
Cute, but very adversarial.
Yeah, a little bit.
Kind of, yeah.
Not unlike marriage.
It's a complicated relationship, Alexi.
And the wedding cake auction also requires a complicated beating strategy.
Now that Tom's gotten word about what kind of auction he's entering,
it's time to do some planning.
And so now I'm thinking, we got to come up with a strategy to get into that second round.
That's the most important thing.
Like, how does he make sure he's able to bid enough to make it to the second stage of the auction
without accidentally driving the price to irrational heights?
He's got a confab with the sales team, the marketing folks,
and come up with a model to justify a range of possible bids.
The way they do this is to make sales projections.
And one of the big tools there is called a comp or comparable title.
Basically, they come up with a selection of similar books,
stuffed by the same author on the same subject,
and they use that to estimate the potential demand.
Tom thinks of comps as sort of a necessary evil.
I can't tell you how many books I've been pitched that are like,
just as Michael Lewis did in Liar's Poker, I will do for the whatever industry.
And it's just like, no, it's not going to happen like that.
Michael does his own thing, and his book appeared at a particular moment.
in history and became a phenomenon for its own unique set of reasons.
But, you know, all the institutions involved do need some kind of metrics to think about stuff.
And even though individual comp is anecdotal, you can paint a picture of how big a potential
market might be when you look at 10 similar books in a similar category.
Tom wouldn't say which exact books he used his comps to come up with Norton's bid.
But he did say he looked into books put out by other prominent podcasts.
Scanning Google, that includes things like the,
99% Invisible book, which became a New York Times bestseller. So that is how they come up with
revenue, the money they estimate might come in. Next, they got to think about the cost of publishing
the book. There are, of course, the costs of manufacturing and marketing, but the lion's share of the
bid will be the advance against royalties. Generally, in the publishing world, the advance helps
an author cover their costs while writing the book, and if the book sells enough copies to
pay back that advance, then they can start to accrue royalties on every additional copies sold.
So the bigger the advance, the more copies the publisher needs to sell in order to get back
into the black. And if the book doesn't end up selling well, the author keeps the advance
and the publisher has to eat that loss. So for the first round of bidding for the Planet Money
book, Tom and his team are trying to figure out how big of an advance they should offer. And
in addition to their own calculations, they have to think strategically. Because they know their
competing against as many as 22 other editors who are doing the same math.
Some of them are surely from the Big Five.
And that is daunting because the Big Five publishers have much deeper pockets than Norton.
You know, there's Harper Collins owned by News Corp of Rupert Murdoch fame.
There's Penguin Random House and McMillan, which are each owned by huge German
conglomerates.
And Tom says, unlike those companies, Norton is employee-owned.
We have to be more thoughtful about when we,
make a bet on a book because we're not playing with a conglomerates money or a private equity money,
anything like that. We're not playing with house money. When we are bidding on a book, we're bidding
with literally our own money. So Tom and his team consider all these things. The expected sales,
the possible advances, what the competition might be up to. And they finally come up with a number.
On Tuesday, March 28, 2023, the bidding window set by Jane and Laura finally opens.
Publishers will have until 11 a.m. the next day to submit their bids by
by email. The next morning at an office building near the Flatiron in New York,
Laura and Jane are nervously waiting for the offers to start rolling in. The first one hits
their inbox around 9.45 a.m. And then they just started to trickle in. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
Over the next hour or so, the bids keep coming. But Jane and Laura do receive word that one publisher
has decided to exit the race. They also hear from a few editors that they won't be submitting a bid,
because fellow imprints within the same corporate conglomerate had trumped their own offers.
And as all of this information is trickling in, Jane and Laura are pacing back and forth between their two glass offices in plain sight of all their colleagues.
And it was exciting for everybody, yes, because our colleagues knew that we were having this auction and they could see us.
So they could see it.
And they were like, where are you?
What's happening?
Oh, that's great.
We like that person.
Like they have opinions because they have books with these editors.
So it was good to be able to have them around.
They were rooting for their favorite horses and the rates.
Well, they're shocked.
I can't believe they bid.
I can't believe they dropped out.
They had a lot of feelings, too.
It was pretty dramatic.
When the bidding window closes at 11 a.m.,
Jane and Laura have received 16 bids on the book, which is pretty high for a book auction.
Now they have to tally up the numbers and figure out which bidders would advance to the next round.
They're obviously looking at the top line number, the advance, but each bid is not just the advance.
Each bid is a specifically tailored potential contract that also includes a mix of things like the rights to translate the book or to sell it into different international markets.
And those are based on each publisher's actual strategy for selling the book.
All of which means Jane and Laura have to do some math comparing these different packages.
And when they finish, they find there are roughly enough ties for 10 editors to make it to the next round.
So we went back to those 10 people and said, good news.
You've made it to the second round, and so by 3 p.m., we would like your next bid.
We told them what our top bid was at that point, so they knew where we were, and that is all we said.
We didn't say nine other people have made this place, too.
Oh, so they didn't know how many people had advanced.
And they want to know.
They want to know.
Jane and Laura then turned to letting everybody else know that they've fallen out of the race.
And they have to do this delicately, because Jane and Laura are in this high school dance
for the long haul.
They need to maintain their reputation
so they can pitch the same editors
a different book next week.
So they reached out to the editors
no longer in the running.
And said, we're really sorry.
We're so grateful your interest
and support, blah, blah, blah,
but you did not make the second round.
What were their responses?
There were a couple of people
who were literally shocked.
They were shocked.
Yeah, shocked
that they had not made the second round.
Because they had offered
what they thought was a very big amount.
So that's, you know.
That's book business, baby.
What are you going to do?
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
As for Tom Mayer over at Norton?
At the end of the first round, Jane and Laura called me and they said, you made the second round.
And I said, yes.
Wow.
All right.
Oh, my God, now what?
Especially because not only had Norton advanced, Tom learned that the amount of money he'd offered in the first round was actually the highest bid, setting, setting the new floor for the next round of the auction.
Which is both a cool feeling and a scary feeling.
Because you're like, yeah, we're winning.
But also, like, oh, my God, did I pay too much?
Yeah.
The fear that Tom is describing here has a name in economics.
It's called The Winner's Curse.
The idea is that the winner of an auction
will often overpay for something,
especially if there's a lot of competition
and the object in question is difficult to put a value on.
With the specter of the winner's curse on their minds,
Tom and his competing editors all have to come up with their bid
for the second round of the auction.
Norton's bid from the first round had set the new minimum bid
that all the publishers now had to beat,
so all 10 competing editors are now going back
and double-checking their models
to figure out exactly how many more clams
they're willing to shell out.
And for all involved, including Jane and Laura
and the Alex's, the stakes are high.
But for the editors like Tom
who are putting so much on the line,
this moment is especially emotionally fraught.
If you're thinking about what's going to happen,
if I win, I'm going to be doing this project for three years.
I'm really emotionally attached to it,
but if I lose goodbye, I never see them again.
So you have this, like, very heightened sense of emotions
around the moment.
It does feel a little bit like,
getting in a bidding war over a house and you have to somehow figure out how to make emotional
peace with either outcome. Yeah, if you win, you win. Oh my God. The bottom falls out of your
stomach. What have I done? What have I bought? I've just spent all this money on this thing.
Or, nope, somebody else bought it and actually, no, you don't live here. Devastating. It can be really
devastating. Every editor has memories of books that they've lost. And there are books that you lose
that fail miserably, and you think, whoo, dodged a bullet.
And then there are books that you lose that go on to sell really well,
and you're kicking yourself for the rest of your life.
So with all that emotional and financial baggage in tow,
that same day, Tom and the other editors in the auction
put the rest of their chips on the table,
hoping their pile would be just tall enough
to beat out their competing editors, their comp editors, if you will.
And as it turned out, things were then very close
again at the end of the next round, because everyone had improved their bid by roughly the same amount.
And that's when the beauty contest began.
The beauty contest.
The beauty contest is what happens at the very end.
It's the end game of a book auction, where the numbers are basically the same.
And you go back to that value in the chemistry.
Did the author like you?
Is your plan better than somebody else?
Is your vision and strategy more compelling to them than not?
In the case of the Planet Money book, the last round of the auction, the beauty contest, came down to two
final contestants. Tom's team at Norton, the dolphin, and one of the Big Five publishers, a whale.
The Big Five publisher only offered to print a two-color version of the book, but they also offered
more actual money up front, a full-court publicity press, and a tried and true way of getting
the book into airport and indie bookstores around the country. This was the closest thing to a sure
bet you can ask for, the opportunity to ride a whale. Potentially, all the way to the top of the
bestseller list. Norton, on the other hand, was offering slightly less money, but they did offer
full color, and the thing that was really different about their pitch was this gambit. In addition to
their normal retail book business, Norton is also a big player in the world of textbooks. So they
were offering to get the Planet Money Book, a retail book, into educational courseware and textbooks.
This could potentially mean more sales in the long run, but it wasn't something Norton had really
tried before, so there were a lot of unknowns. At the end of the day, it was up to Planet Money's
executive producer, Alex, to make the decision. Jane and Laura explained the last offers in their
competing visions for the Planet Money book, and Alex says he was racked with indecision. Norton's
educational pitch was compelling. We really liked that because, like, we have an educational
mission, right? We want, like, as many people as possible to understand the economy, and so
doing it directly like that was really appealing.
But there was no apples to apples to make.
It was like, I don't know what that's worth.
How much is that equal to in advance?
Basically, Alex's decision was between going with Norton and gambling on selling textbooks to the students of tomorrow, or taking more money up front and going with the whale.
When was the moment that you knew the auction was over.
When Alex Goldmark told us.
Yeah, when Alex Goldmark said, I want to do this.
I want to go, I want to marry this publisher.
Right.
After several days of going back and forth, Alex finally made the call.
I remember going, okay, okay, we're going with Norton.
And it felt like this huge thing that I didn't know if it was going to be good or not.
Like, I didn't know if it was right or not.
It felt right, but it felt great to just have made that decision.
Laura and Jane called Tom to deliver the news.
And I said, heck, yeah, I was so excited.
I mean, you know, we wanted to publish this book.
We put so much work into bidding on it and getting excited and making our offers.
and the auction had been so tense.
So we celebrated.
You know, everybody got together.
We were like, yeah, we did it.
We won.
That's great.
You'd made it through the gauntlet of the wedding cake and Planet Money said I do.
Yeah, they said I do, and we popped the champagne.
And what was the bid?
I'm not going to talk about numbers.
It's like a corporate secret.
Yeah, in general.
There are ways in book publishing that people signal how much they paid for things.
Yeah.
Like, there's publishers marketplace is a clearinghouse.
of deals where you can post a deal and you know you can say it was a big deal, a major deal,
a, you know, there's various adjectives that like indicate levels of advance.
As a policy, we don't talk about how much we've paid.
In this publishing house, we believe every deal is a major deal.
Yes, sir.
Yeah, so publishers are generally not in the habit of disclosing how much they've paid for
their books, which makes it difficult to know exactly what an average advance might be for a major
book deal. But there are self-reported surveys of authors on the internet that estimate the average
advance for a major deal may be somewhere around $60,000. Still, I wanted to know what the Planet
Money book had sold for. So I put the question to the agents, Laura and Jane. So what was the winning
bid? We cannot tell you. We can't talk about money? No. No, let your imagination.
Agents don't really kiss and tell when it comes to how they do these things. Well, it's not our
information to share. That's right. It's my client's information. I'll run it by my grand boss.
You do. You're afraid to ask whomever you want to. We're not what we can say. Right. Sorry.
Finally, I did put the question to my grand boss. There was only slightly less evasive.
We got a lot of money, Alexi. It was seven figures, as Norton put in a press release around
the time of buying the book. More than a million dollars. But less than two? Yeah, I think we could say
less than two, yes.
Yes.
Maybe book two.
Maybe it'll do so well.
We'll get that for book two.
Once we shop and auction off 50 shades of green, we're going to be rolling in the dough.
Once Alex signed on the dotted line, Planet Money's agents, Jane and Laura, got the first
installment of their commission, and it was time for them to hand off the baton, to pass the
Planet Money book onto the next stage.
It's like you give the bride or the groom, whomever, to the other person and let them go
down the path.
Yeah.
Up until we sell the book, we've kind of been driving the process, and then afterwards, it is the editor who becomes the leader.
With that, Planet Money's agents had successfully walked my grand boss, Alex, down the aisle to put a contractual ring on the finger of Tom Mayer of House W.W. Norton, emerging of two humble dynasties.
How similar or dissimilar was it to the feeling of proposing or getting proposed to for marriage?
Way faster and more like a shotgun wedding kind of situation, right?
Because I'd only met these people like a week earlier.
Right.
Nevertheless, Planet Money had sealed the coveted book deal.
But now, for the hard part, that's just it.
Guess what?
Then the next day you pick up the phone and you say,
hey, let's have a meeting to talk about how we're going to write this book.
Like, suddenly you have to do the whole thing.
And so then it was like a kickoff meeting where it's like,
you know, the first day you sort of enter your new home after your wedding, and everybody else is gone,
and you just have, like, confetti on the floor and a mess?
And you're like, what do we do now?
Like, how do you actually make a book?
Yeah, how do you actually make a book?
That's next week on Planet Money.
One thing I should mention, my grand boss, Alex, will have a connipion if I don't remind you all.
For all of this to work out, for that big advance to be worth it, people need to actually
buy the book. And so, Alex has come up with some incentives. First one, if you pre-order the book
before April 7th, you'll get a free poster based on our Laws of the Office episode. Or if you'd prefer
a more personal touch, you can come see Planet Money live on stage around the country. We'll get a
copy of the book, a tote bag, and see us do our thing IRL. I'll be doing a show and tell about
the anatomy of a book in Albuquerque and Boulder for all my high desert real ones.
And I'll be sharing some pictures and video I took while reporting this series.
To pre-order the book or get ticket info, go to planetmoneybook.com or check out the show knows.
This episode was produced by Willa Rubin with help from Sam Yellow Horse Kessler.
It was edited by Jess Jang, fact-checked by Sierra Juarez, and engineered by Robert Rodriguez.
Alex Goldmark, my grand boss, is our executive producer.
I'm Alexei Horowitz-Gazi. This is NPR. Thanks for listening.
