Audiobooks are the fastest-growing segment in publishing.
Not eBooks. Not print. Audiobooks.
In 2024, the U.S. audiobook market grew 22.5% year-over-year to $2.4 billion in revenue. Over the past five years, the category has grown 78.1%. Globally, audiobooks exceeded $1 billion for the first time in 2024.
To put this in perspective: eBooks grew 1.5% last year. Print grew roughly 1-3%. Audiobooks grew more than ten times faster than eBooks.
Yet when most authors think about their book launch, audiobooks are an afterthought—a nice-to-have if budget allows, not a core part of the strategy.
This is a mistake.
Here's why audiobooks matter, how the economics work, and what you should actually do about them.
To illustrate scale: audiobook revenue now rivals eBook revenue ($2.1 billion), and both are growing. But audiobooks are growing 15X faster.
Publishing is a mature industry. Most categories grow 1-5% annually. Double-digit growth is rare. Audiobooks are the exception.
When an industry segment grows this fast, it's usually because:
All three are true for audiobooks.
Understanding who listens to audiobooks is critical because audiobook listeners are different from print readers.
Audiobook listeners are often people who wouldn't otherwise buy your book—not because they don't want to read, but because they need content while doing other things.
A business professional who listens to audiobooks during a 45-minute commute might consume 2-3 books per month. That same person might buy one physical book every six months.
Audiobooks expand your addressable market, not just your revenue per existing customer.
Here's something most authors don't realize: audiobooks have better profit potential than eBooks, and often better potential than print.
Print books require printing, warehousing, and physical distribution. Once printed, there's waste if books don't sell.
eBooks have lower upfront investment but lower price points, and compete heavily on Amazon where discounting is common.
Audiobooks have clean digital economics: no waste, higher price points, and a growing listener base actively seeking new content.
The business model is simpler. The demand is growing. The format is sticky (listeners stay with platforms and listen regularly).
If you're going to produce an audiobook, narrator quality is critical.
An audiobook is not just your book read aloud. The narrator's voice becomes inseparable from your book's brand.
On Audible and other platforms, audiobook descriptions prominently feature the narrator's name. Listeners will check: "Who narrated this?"
If you've heard James Marsters narrate a fantasy book or Cassandra Campbell narrate a literary novel, you know the difference a great narrator makes.
You have options:
Professional Narrators
Emerging Narrators
AI Narration
Current reality: Most quality audiobooks use professional or emerging human narrators. AI narration is improving but isn't yet competitive for mainstream books.
Unlike print books (which distribute through Ingram, bookstores, wholesalers), audiobooks have simpler, more concentrated distribution:
Audible (Amazon's audiobook platform)
Apple Books Audiobooks
Google Play Books Audiobooks
Other Platforms (Spotify, Scribd, etc.)
If you produce an audiobook, you'll want it on Audible (market dominance is real), but also diversify to Apple and Google to capture additional listeners and reduce platform dependence.
Most authors use aggregators to handle multi-platform distribution, rather than uploading to each platform manually.
Here's something that often gets overlooked: audiobooks are a marketing tool, not just a revenue stream.
A podcast listener who discovers your audiobook on Audible might then:
Audiobooks aren't siloed. They feed your broader author platform.
When your PR team is pitching you for podcast interviews, audiobook production creates additional angles:
When your audiobook is on Audible's subscription service (which most are), the platform's algorithm recommends it to relevant listeners.
This isn't passive. Audible actively promotes books it thinks will appeal to its subscriber base.
Most authors think: Publish the book, then produce the audiobook later.
Better strategy: Plan audiobook production alongside book production.
Why simultaneous launch matters:
As an author, what's your responsibility with audiobooks?
Audiobook production is surprisingly hands-off for authors. The real work is narrator selection and promotion.
If audiobooks are growing at 22.5% annually and have strong business fundamentals, why aren't more authors prioritizing them?
"Audiobooks are a luxury add-on."
"Only big names succeed with audiobooks."
"I should wait until my book is already successful to do audio."
"I don't have a platform for audio."
If you're planning a book launch, consider audiobooks seriously:
Audiobooks represent the fastest-growing segment of publishing. They reach an audience that might not buy print. They build long-term listener loyalty. And they amplify your broader author platform.
If you're not including audiobooks in your book strategy, you're leaving significant opportunity on the table.
The authors winning in 2025 understand this: audiobooks aren't optional. They're strategic.
Brown Books' publishing packages include audiobook production and distribution. When you work with us, audiobook strategy is part of your overall launch plan from day one—not an afterthought.
The Agency at Brown Books
Book PR Insider is where we share what we're actually seeing work for authors in real time—the media shifts, the campaigns that moved books, the visibility strategies that matter. No playbooks. No generic tips. Just the unfiltered perspective from people working in publishing and PR every single day.
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