Royalties means payment A claim owner usually receives a percentage of what an operation finds on his claim A grubstaker may also receive a percentage These payments are often referred to as "royalties"
a percentage of the proceeds from the sale of each copy of the book Royalties can range from 3% - 15%, depending on the type of book, amount of experience author has, etc Authors and illustrators are both paid in royalties unless a flat fee arrangement has been made
Money paid to an author by a publisher on the basis of books sold It may be a percentage of the list price, which is the price for which the book supposedly will be sold to a consumer, or of the net price, which is what the publisher actually receives (often 40 percent to 50 percent less than the net price)
payments to a playwright for the right to perform a show; they have lapsed in the case of the Scottish Play
percentage of the sales price earned by the author on sold copies These are generally charged against the advance until it is earned out
The percentage of the cover price you get for every copy of one of your books sold by a publisher For books in print, this may vary from 7-15 percent; for e-books, royalties of 25-50 percent are common
Fees that an exporter receives for allowing a company in a foreign company to manufacture or market the exporters products
A payment by a lease holder of minerals to the owner of minerals, usually expressed as a percentage of the production sold Royalties are paid on metallic minerals and are collected by the Crown on behalf of the band
A percentage of the proceeds from the sale of each copy of a book Royalties generally range from 3% to 15%, depending on the type of book, amount of experience the author has, its perceived market potential, etc Authors and illustrators are both paid in royalties unless a flat fee arrangement has been made
- An ongoing fee paid to the company by the franchisee on a regular basis, usually calculated as a percentage of sales, but some types of franchises particularly in a service business may establish a set monthly fee This fee compensates the franchisor for providing ongoing support, research & development, head office expenses and is the primary source of profit for the company Therefore the franchisor has a reason to work with each franchisee to make their business as successful as possible as each party benefits