People told Bill Gates the same thing but that was because he was doing something new that people didn't understand. Print media is a dying format and can is only making money in cases where the publication is sufficiently well known that people will keep buying hard copies of it because that's where news starts. But even then the margins are very small, so the Microsoft comparison suggests a wild misunderstanding of the economics of publishing.
Point taken about Gates, but the old ways of doing print are dying as well. I can launch a print magazine with very little risk on my part. In addition it will also be published on Kindle and possibly other eReader formats. Its not the only part of my plan and I don't plan to become a multi millionaire from it.
If you find a printer who'll print a 3000 copy run at $1 an issue then I'll eat my hat but, leaving that aside, I think that you don't really understand the distribution system on magazines. There is no chance that somewhere like Barnes and Noble would pick you up on Issue 1, especially not a magazine about indie film, and 'Mom&Pop' shops might place an order for 5 copies a month to begin with. Especially when you're starting out you'll need to accept that any retailers who are going to stock your magazine from Issue 1 are going to want it for practically nothing. All magazines take a massive hit at the beginning because they need to establish a readership. How many times have you walked into a shop and spent $4 on a random magazine you've never read or heard of before?
You must have missed the words "example". Price depends on print run, page count, etc. for traditional printers. As far as how many times I've spent money on a random magazine. Lots of times to be honest. I like Indie stuff and new start ups. I still have the King Magazine tester issue they put out before the official first issue.
I know B&N won't pick up a first issue, but they might... I have books listed on their website and they will guaranteed list you on the B&N website even if they don't stock you on their shelves. My book sells much better and faster on Amazon than B&N, but its there. If it does well enough, they will give you a test run on the shelf. Since they order through Ingram or Baker & Taylor, they can order my books directly through them. The magazine will be the same way.
You say that Barnes and Noble...etc is just an example but managing to sell 3000 copies (and that's a very small circulation) a month will be a full time job. A run that size would require a upfront investment of probably $20k to even get the project off the ground. You say this is '1 piece of a much larger puzzle' but I'd worry about working on or with any puzzle where a print publication is not the largest piece.
That's where you are 100% WRONG. I don't need a print run of 3,000 copies and I can tell you that I'd pay $2.18 per copy for 118 pages. If I was going to do a 3,000 copy run, it would cost me $6,540 + shipping to be exact. Just looking at prices on magazines, a 118 page magazine goes for $2.99-$7.99 depending on the publication. In my case, the $4.95 price tag would NET (not gross) $2.02 profit per sale direct to consumer.
I'm using a POD service that is linked to Ingram and Baker & Taylor (not lightning source). A shop order would net me $0.82 per copy. So if I managed to get an order from 100 shops for 5 copies each. That's 500 x .82 = $410 NET. Not a ton of cash, but considering that I'm only investing roughly $40 to get it started, you can see the ROI is pretty nice.
Now with Kindle, based on my book sales, Kindle usually ends up with 3x the sales of print. I'd make $0.70 per sale on a $1.99 price with Kindle. If we use the example of 3 x 500 = 1,500 x .70 = $1,050. Again, just an example. $1,050 + 410 = $1,460 NET for every 2,000 copies that get sold.
Doing my print through POD and Kindle changes the entire business model.
I don't want to sound like I'm intentionally dismissing or doubting your project, I just get the feeling, from what you've written, that you don't really understand the financial and time commitments (not to mention insecurity) that comes with publishing a magazine. The fact that you say it's 'very low financial risk on my part' would be a massive red flag for me and probably anyone else who works in print.
Feel free to poke holes. I actually appreciate it because it makes me look at what I'm doing, reassess, make corrections, fix things, etc.
EDIT: Just seen your other posts. What experience do you have in publishing? You say you have 4 books currently in print that are making money? Who's publishing them (presuming it's not a print-on-demand service like Lulu)?[/QUOTE]
Its print on demand... not LuLu. They are crooks in my opinion. I'm published through Amazon's POD service and they are all making money. Would you like a screen shot of my Kindle sales so far this month? I can also take one of my print sales as well if you want. I don't make millions of dollars, but my royalties for last month across Kindle and Print are roughly $1,200.
If you want to make the argument that major chains don't pick up POD, I'll use my books as an example that they do. Paying for a barcode and the fact that they can order through Ingram or Baker & Taylor masks the fact that its POD.