book selling expenses - meaning and definition. What is book selling expenses
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What (who) is book selling expenses - definition

BOOK INCLUDED ON A LIST OF TOP-SELLING OR FREQUENTLY-BORROWED TITLES
Best-seller; Best seller; Bestselling; Best-Seller; Best-selling; Best selling book; Best-selling book; International bestseller; Bestselling book; Best Sellers list; Best-selling novels; Bestselling novels; Bestselling novel

Unique selling proposition         
INDIVIDUAL CLAIM THAT DIFFERENTIATES A PRODUCT OR SERVICE
Unique Selling Proposition; Unique selling point; UVP; Unique value proposition; USP (marketing); Selling point; Unique Selling Point
In marketing, the unique selling proposition (USP), also called the unique selling point, or the unique value proposition (UVP) in the business model canvas, is the marketing strategy of informing customers about how one's own brand or product is superior to its competitors (in addition to its other values).
Selling Sickness         
BOOK BY RAY MOYNIHAN
Selling Sickness (book)
Selling Sickness: How the World's Biggest Pharmaceutical Companies are Turning us All into Patients is a 2005 book by Ray Moynihan and Alan Cassels about unnecessary health care.
selling point         
INDIVIDUAL CLAIM THAT DIFFERENTIATES A PRODUCT OR SERVICE
Unique Selling Proposition; Unique selling point; UVP; Unique value proposition; USP (marketing); Selling point; Unique Selling Point
¦ noun a feature of a product for sale that makes it attractive to customers.

Wikipedia

Bestseller

A bestseller is a book or other media noted for its top selling status, with bestseller lists published by newspapers, magazines, and book store chains. Some lists are broken down into classifications and specialties (novel, nonfiction book, cookbook, etc.). An author may also be referred to as a bestseller if their work often appears in a list. Well-known bestseller lists in the U.S. are published by Publishers Weekly, USA Today, The New York Times and The Washington Post. Most of these lists track book sales from national and independent bookstores, as well as sales from major internet retailers such as Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.

In everyday use, the term bestseller is not usually associated with a specified level of sales, and may be used very loosely indeed in publishers' publicity. Books of superior academic value tend not to be bestsellers, although there are exceptions. Lists simply give the highest-selling titles in the category over the stated period. Some books have sold many more copies than current "bestsellers", but over a long period of time.

Blockbusters for films and chart-toppers in recorded music are similar terms, although, in film and music, these measures generally are related to industry sales figures for attendance, requests, broadcast plays, or units sold.

Particularly in the case of novels, a large budget and a chain of literary agents, editors, publishers, reviewers, retailers, librarians, and marketing efforts are involved in "making" bestsellers, that is, trying to increase sales.

Steinberg defined a bestseller as a book for which demand, within a short time of that book's initial publication, vastly exceeds what is then considered to be big sales.