Showing posts with label ebooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ebooks. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Google Nearly Ready to Launch Editions, Its Ebook Retailing Platform

If the Wall Street Journal prints it, it must be true. The WSJ says that Google is preparing to launch Google Editions this month.

Here are the most salient points for book publishers and webby consumers, in my opinion:

  • "Google Editions is set to debut in the U.S. by the end of the year and internationally in the first quarter of next year."
  • Editions users will "be able to access their Google accounts on most devices with a Web browser, including personal computers, smartphones and tablets." Google's open approach is welcome. Now you won't have to be tied to Apple or Amazon stores or gadgets to be able to read an enormous number of ebooks. In fact, the lack of a Google ebook reader really opens up the market to any device that has an internet connection. The web isn't dead, Mr. Anderson.
  • "Digital book sales are expected to more than triple to $966 million this year, according to Forrester Research, from $301 million in 2009." 
  • "Google is going to turn every Internet space that talks about a book into a place where you can buy that book," says Dominique Raccah, publisher and owner of Sourcebooks Inc. (Dominique was a keynote speaker at this year's PubWest conference.)
  • "Some independent booksellers that can't afford to open their own e-bookstores believe that Google Editions could be their gateway into the digital marketplace."
  • Google has scanned 10% of the world's 150 million scannable books.
  • "Spurred on by the launch of Apple Inc.'s iPad last April, more than 15 million e-readers and tablets will be sold by the end of 2010 in the U.S., compared with an estimated 2.8 million e-readers sold in 2009, Forrester predicts."
UPDATE 12/6: Annnd it's open! Check out Google's new ebook store. Here's the NYTimes.com analysis.

    Wednesday, November 24, 2010

    David Pogue Offers Food for Thought: Nothing Replaces Anything

    The New York Times technology columnist David Pogue celebrated his 10th anniversary column with a brief reflection on the past decade of technology.

    To me, it's hard to remember what the web looked like in fall 2000, much less digital cameras (did they exist?) and early forms of all the "convergence" gadgets available today that are just beginning to mash up the web and their legacy technologies.

    Pogue identifies some trends that ring of truth and longevity. The trend I found most relevant is this: Nothing replaces anything. Technology simply splinters.

    Pogue means that invention inspires copycats. From one iPod came dozens of competing mp3 players. None has "killed" the iPod. The technology simply splintered.

    There are exceptions, of course, but the ones I can think of without a decade of reflection seem mostly to be data storage formats: BetaMax, HD-DVD, cassette tape, CD, 8-track tape, vinyl, film cameras, etc.

    This should be a relief to purveyors of older standards. As long as your product experience is relevant, your product format can change without destroying your business. Hello? Book publishers?

    Tuesday, March 30, 2010

    Should ebooks Be DRM Protected? HELL YES!

    David Pogue of the New York Times asks, "Should eBooks Be Copy Protected?"

    The answer is heck yeah!
    Pogue comments that "the music companies are still in business." Um, okay, but their revenue has fallen by half and physical music retail has all but disappeared. At least musicians have a lucrative alternative -- people will pay to see them perform live. Who would pay a worthwhile sum to listen to an author read an entire book out loud?
    Convenience and price trump quality. While the paper book presents information better, the ebook is cheaper and "good enough", with enough advantages in portability that it will eventually become the dominant form, just like the mp3.
    Ebook readers will fall in price and paper will become the premium form of the book. People will only pay for paper if they need paper, e.g. a paper book on bike repair in the garage, a copy of a photo-heavy history book on the coffee table, a copy of a law book to help sketch out a contract on paper, or as a gift. 
    The reason books haven't been Napsterized is that it's much more time consuming to scan a book than to rip a CD or DVD. Sure, you can build and operate your own book scanner for under $300, but few people will take the time. The problem is that, just like a CD, once the book is scanned or DRM-cracked once, it's potentially free forever, especially in tightly knit, niche communities.
    As paper retail begins its inevitable slide, indies will disappear. Distributors will claw to claim what little shelf space is left at Barnes & Noble. The returns system will remain as long as Barnes & Noble stays in business. Publishers will distribute ebooks and POD paper books direct to consumer.
    The trouble is timing. Should publishers shoot for first-mover advantage? Should we treat ebooks as seriously as abook sales warrant?
    And pricing... Should we temporarily set extremely low prices to scare off the competition? Should we adopt the $10 price point and then make sure costs are aligned to support this new rate (until Amazon renegotiates)? Is there any profit left in producing quality print books if the market becomes dominated by ebooks?
    The future of book publishing = DRM + fair pricing + easy access (i.e. a good online store with many titles). 

    Relatedly, the NYTimes explores the economics of ebooks.

    Tuesday, October 20, 2009

    Barnes & Noble's Kindle Killer Features Adorable Name

    Barnes & Noble unveiled its ebook reader today and it's called... The Nook! It's a great name, I think, giving rise to warm associations like nooks, crannies, cozy little spots to curl up and read... a digital book. The name sounds like book, but perhaps that "n" is for new. It's just a short hop to "I'm reading a nook." Where "Kindle" conjured kindling (and paper book burnings?), Nook sounds nice.

    The LA Times has a great bullet point review of the Nook's features, which you can also read on this Barnes & Noble product spec page.

    The B&N product page offers a side-by-side comparison of the Nook and Kindle 2. Notable Nookish features include:
    • both wireless and wifi connectivity
    • support for the open-source EPUB and eReader formats
    • grayscale e-ink and -- taking a page from the iPod's album cover browser -- a 3.5 inch color touchscreen for browsing your library and navigation
    • USB connectivity for direct file import
    • the ability to "lend" ebooks to any friend with a computer or smartphone for 14 days.

    Combine this with B&N's industry-leading store (over 700K titles), and you've got a pretty compelling device. In fact, the only two features Kindle has over Nook are 4 more days of battery life and the ability to read Word docs.

    Friday, October 16, 2009

    News for Nerds Roundup: Book Publishing Edition

    Google Announces Its Ebook Store
    The world's largest ebook library announced "Google Editions", a 500,000 title ebook store that will launch during the first half of 2010. Reactions to the news varied. Bezos, with his 350,000 ebooks, was overheard muttering "Dang!".* Barnes & Noble's 200,000 non-Google-provided ebooks alternated cheers of "Crap!" and "Yahoo!"*. Manufacturers of the 15 ereader devices expected to launch by mid-2010 cheered for joy* while Kindle owners sighed with disappointment*, victims of their all-too-familiar love of glitzy proprietary formats (ahem, Apple).

    Meanwhile, a Popular Science magazine reader explains How to Build Your Own Kindle
    A Popular Science reader builds an ebook reader that's full color and can read any ebook format. Cost? 1 hour and $100 less than a Kindle. Disclaimer: Okay, the guy just loaded a few ereader software programs onto a tablet PC. Not that cool. Still, the point remains: Kindle is overpriced and underfeatured and, courtesy of Google, about to be out-titled.

    Meanwhile, the RIAA and MPAA learned that they have no hope against BitTorrent.
    Book publishers attending the Frankfurt Book Show this weekend fretted openly at this sign of things to come.*

    Meanwhile, the Association of American Publishers scratched its head*, noting that ebook sales accounted for just 1.6% of the $5.25 billion in U.S. book sales in the first half of 2009.

    *not really

    Friday, July 17, 2009

    Your Two Minutes of Hate, Amazon Edition

    Amazon deleted ebook editions of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm from Kindle users' accounts and their Kindle devices and then refunded their money.

    Amazon Erases Orwell Books From Kindle Devices

    Amazon was right to delete these books from Kindle accounts. (It seems that the irony is the story here!) But this point is really scary: "An Amazon spokesman, Drew Herdener, said in an e-mail message that the books were added to the Kindle store by a company that did not have rights to them, using a self-service function."

    Yet Amazon sold the ebooks anyway because it didn't know any better.

    This lapse demonstrates my leading critique of Amazon--that Amazon has no way to vet any of its content and relies instead on unreliable sources. Any user can suggest changes to an Amazon product page. From a product perspective, Amazon is a dumb database (and from a sales perspective, a pretty smart one). Amazon is the Wikipedia of the retail world.

    Clearly, Amazon's reliance on the goodwill of its users and vendors is flawed. It's fortunate, then, that Amazon can delete its mistakes. Who knew Bezos had the right and ability to push a button and delete books off a Kindle?

    Oh wait--he doesn't have the right. According to the New York Times story cited above, the Kindle terms of service say explicitly that when a user buys an ebook from Amazon, they have bought the right to a permanent copy of the book.

    So what if an unreliable vendor sells an illegal copy on Amazon? Apparently, Amazon is willing to incite the wrath of its Kindle customers to defend a copyright. Nervous, future ebook publishers everywhere are relaxing just a little.

    Tuesday, February 24, 2009

    Trends in Reading

    Turning Page, E-Books Start to Take Hold
    "For a decade, consumers mostly ignored electronic book devices, which were often hard to use and offered few popular items to read. But this year, in part because of the popularity of Amazon.com’s wireless Kindle device, the e-book has started to take hold." Click to continue.

    Fiction Reading Increases for Adults
    "After years of bemoaning the decline of a literary culture in the United States, the National Endowment for the Arts says in a report that it now believes a quarter-century of precipitous decline in fiction reading has reversed." (I can't wait to see how the publishing industry puts a negative spin on this story. Publishing loves nothing more than moaning about the business of making books!) Click to continue.

    Check out the summary report, “Reading on the Rise: A New Chapter in American Literacy".

    Tuesday, January 27, 2009

    Kindle 2.0 on the way, Amazon dropping rival e-book formats

    Amazon has offered yet another indication that it wants to control how books are sold and read; the company announced that it will stop selling e-books in the Microsoft Reader and Adobe formats. Instead, Amazon will only sell e-books in its proprietary Kindle and Mobipocket formats. Fortunately, it seems that many devices are compatible with the Mobipocket format but not Mac and Linux devices.

    A day later, the company announced a release date for its second version of the Kindle.

    Wednesday, December 3, 2008

    Atlantic Records Portends the Future of the Ebook?

    From the old gray lady:

    "Atlantic, a unit of Warner Music Group, says it has reached a milestone that no other major record label has hit: more than half of its music sales in the United States are now from digital products, like downloads on iTunes and ring tones for cellphones."

    Also noted in the article is that, overall, less music is being sold. Chris Anderson is right, everything that becomes digital becomes free, legitimately or not.

    "As a result, the hope that digital revenue will eventually compensate for declining sales of CDs — and usher in overall growth — have largely been dashed." This means that Chris Anderson is also wrong: the web is not spurring sales by making obscure content more findable.

    I like Jeff Zucker's quote, the media industry is "trading analog dollars for digital pennies".

    To counteract the effect of low pricing on digital products, the music industry is focusing on the "experience" of music: concerts, etc. Where mp3s distance the consumer as far as possible from the musician, concerts bring them as close as the stagehands allow.

    Perhaps publishing can learn from this concept of proximity as added-value. If consumers embrace the digital book, maybe the author tour will become more critical.

    There's another lesson, too. Atlantic Records is replacing CD sales with "small bits of revenue from many sources: Atlantic Records’ digital sales include ring tones, ringbacks, satellite radio, iTunes sales and subscription services.". Maybe Nolo is ahead of the curve with its repurposing of non-fiction books into ebooks, books on tape/podcasts, and software.

    Wednesday, November 19, 2008

    Follow the Reader: How publishers and booksellers can reach new readers

    Americans are reading fewer books each year, a fact confronting publishers big and small. Even as publishers continue to ratchet up production, they know that a digital frontier of publishing has arrived, and in order to remain a relevant among the iPhone and Web 2.0 users, they must find new ways to reach their audience. Or as I like to think of it, they have to follow the reader.

    Formal and informal, the studies indicating fewer readers are many. Last November, for example, the National Endowment for the Arts released "To Read or Not To Read: A Question of National Consequence," which concluded that our country is experiencing "a general decline in reading among teenage and adult Americans," and that "both reading ability and the habit of regular reading have greatly declined among college graduates." Though this study built on the NEA's 2004 report, "Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America," the challenge to publishers remains clear: How do they sell books to people who don't read books?

    Or are publishers interpreting the data correctly? At O'Reilly Tools of Change conference in February, Stephen Abram delivered a keynote address entitled "Information 3.0: Will Publishers Matter?" and pointed out a crucial distinction: Americans are not reading less, they're reading differently. To the point, they're reading online, a shift that explains MIT's estimated 25 percent annual growth rate in the number of websites. Abram explained that for today's reader, the Web's authority not only rivals that for printed material-it's beating it. If online information is reliable, convenient, and free, the real question to ask is, how can the printed book compete?

    In his closing keynote at the 2007 PubWest Annual Conference, Andrew Savikas spoke to this issue and maintained that the Internet is "rapidly superseding the function of print publishing." Information that, up until recently, could be found only in print is now available online for free, 24/7. Entire categories of books, for instance cookbooks and travel guides, are under seige from websites like Epicurious and TripAdvisor. According to Savikas, book publishers must expand their model of publishing into one that supports and interfaces with digital media, enabling houses of all sizes to divide and repurpose book content into formats that accommodate readers' new reading patterns. Here are a few steps to consider when following the reader:

    • Every book should be available in multiple formats: print, digital, and online subscription.
    • Publishers should sell chapters individually.
    • Book content should be divisible into articles available online for free, both as separately usable content and as teaser for the complete electronic or printed book.

    However, publishers should not move to the Web without care, WIRED magazine's Chris Anderson, best known in publishing for his "long tail" concept, describes the pressures facing digital content in the March 2008 issue in this way: "Anything that becomes digital becomes free."

    Many in the industry believe that the printed book will continue to hold value for readers long after publishing has transitioned into the digital era. They also believe there will continue to be a need for distribution, and for the bookstore. Arsen Kashkashian, buyer for the Boulder Book Store in Boulder, CO, is a believer but says that reaching or creating new readers poses a "vexing problem" for independent bookstores. Kashkashian follows his readers by focusing his efforts on retaining his best customers and rewarding frequent buyers for their repeat business. He has also designed the store to be welcoming and comfortable, like "a living room and not a library". To encourage reading, the Boulder Book Store donates pallets of children's books to local schools and schedules a wide range of events intended to appeal to nontraditional book readers.

    Kashkashian believes the decline in reading is simply a cultural phenomenon, and feels the problem is exaggerated. "We didn't run around in 1957 fretting about how many people were reading," he says. "Some people were reading and passionate about books, and the publishing industry catered to them. Today, the problems facing bookstores and publishers are ones of competition, with websites and stores both offering an endless array of titles being published in an already cluttered marketplace. Perhaps the anomaly is the explosion of mega-stores, the number of published titles, and the commoditization of books, and not how many people are reading.

    The Web is both threat and opportunity. Traditional print-only publishing faces an inevitable decline as the supply of information overwhelms the demand of a book-averse public. Yet the Web offers publishers an opportunity to serve (and follow) readers in new ways. While the Web's short history has shown that digital content eventually becomes free (think Google), the Web brings readers closer to publishers than ever before-and at close quarters, it promises to teach us how to stay connected to our readers.

    This article was originally published in the fall 2007 issue of The Endsheet, the newsletter of the Publishers Association of the West.

    Monday, October 20, 2008

    I got to play with a Kindle

    I was sitting on the plane last weekend when the late 30-something woman to my left opened her purse, took out a Moleskine notebook, and opened it. I instantly pegged her as an English nerd. I didn't realize how right I'd be; it wasn't a Moleskine, it was a Kindle.

    I blurted, "So
    howww do you like it!?".

    "I love it!", she said. "Would you like to check it out?"

    "Yes, yes I would."

    She gave me the walkthrough, beginning with her list of books, one of which was some sex counseling thing -- little awkward.

    After a minute of Kindle network connection troubles, she let me buy Friday's
    New York Times, which took seconds to download. All the while, she gave me Amazon's party line on battery life, usability, etc. I never thought to ask her if she worked for Amazon, though I did confess to working for a publisher.

    I flipped through some pages, noting the reassuring heft of this machine. The screen clarity really is amazon, er, amazing. I found the refresh rate to be a little slow. The screen going black as it refreshes unsuspended my disbelief, and I can see this being a problem for the ebook reading experience. Perhaps one gets used to it as we're all used to flipping pages.

    I held the Kindle with both hands, one on either side. I asked her if she accidentally flipped pages.

    She admitted to such frequent unintentional page turns that she used the Kindle's "placemark" feature about every five pages just to avoid...something. I'm not sure what, though. Maybe you can fast-forward a Kindle? Either way, it sounds as if the page turn bars could use more than a little fine tuning.

    The scroll bar, just right of the right thumb in this photo, needs work as well. The scroll bar is the main navigation device when the Kindle is not in a book. In other words, you choose what book to read, what chapter to open, what newspaper to purchase, etc. using the scroll bar, which you thumb up or down. To make a selection, you press down onto the scroll bar. Many times during my 15 minutes with this Kindle, I accidentally scrolled when I meant to select.

    An exacerbating flaw is the slow processor speed. Pages "turn" with reasonable speed, but to do anything other than turn a page -- to navigate between books or to browse the Amazon Kindle store -- the page takes more time to load. So with every click of the scroll bar, I had to wait to see if I'd clicked or scrolled. If I'd accidentally scrolled-then-clicked, I had to navigate back to where I was and try again. The speed is definitely not as quick as, say, browsing the web on a computer. I found it a little tedious.

    So hopefully Amazon will eliminate these flaws in the Kindle 2, which seems to be imminent.