A recent study claims that Kindle, Sony and Nook sales of 'ebook blockbusters' are not all they are made out to be, and professional and scholarly works account for three quarters of the ebook market.
What is not clear is the study's definition of 'ebooks' - as an example, Amazon sells hundreds of thousands of PDF/HTML journals, company reports, book summaries etc. but we don't include them in Inkmesh results because we don't think they fall in the ebook category. I wonder if this study includes them in the count.
Excerpt from
http://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2...a-wide-margin/:
Quote:
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According to Greco, book publishing (print and electronic) in the US is a $35 billion dollar industry. This year, he forecasts that ebooks will account for 5% of that revenue, or $1.76 billion. Of that $1.76 billion, trade books account for 8.6%, or $151 million; K-12 accounts for 8.1% ($143 million); higher education accounts for 6.9% ($122 million); and university presses account for 0.4% ($7.7 million). Professional and scholarly publishing titles represent 75.9% of the US ebook market, or $1.33 billion.
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