View Single Post
Old 02-02-2010, 03:34 AM   #42
stustaff
Wizard
stustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it isstustaff knows what time it is
 
Posts: 1,055
Karma: 2110
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Derbyshire UK
Device: sony reader PRS505 and 600
Quote:
Originally Posted by GhostHawk View Post
Currently with hard covers a lot of books go to waste. Stripped and shipped back to the publisher after a few short months. Only a select few very popular books really sell out.

However with Ebooks publishers should be looking at an entirely different model.
They do not have to compete for shelf space. They don't have to recoup all their costs in the first 6 months. They don't have to ship back product that doesn't sell.

The first big publisher who really looks at ebooks, and the market.
Who puts a firm schedule for pricing on ebooks. So that when the hardcover is released, the ebook is in the 8 - 12$ range. When the mass market paperbacks release, it drops below the paperback price point. (Ideally it should be in the 5 - 7$ area)
After that it should drop a dollar a year until the price reaches the 1-2$ range.

Leave it there for a year or 2 then release it, give it away to encourage readers to go buy that authors latest books.

The publisher that does that, with DRM free books, and a pricing structure that I can count on, will sell me books. And he'll sell me a lot of books. And I can buy a lot of books because I can choose when to buy, and at what price point.

The Publisher that try's to get greedy, and jack up prices for something they really didn't think was going to go anywhere. He's going to sell me nothing.

Someone will figure it out, and they will capture the lions share of the ebook market.
Its just a question of who its going to be.
Well thats all nice and we hope it would work like that.

But lets say the authour(a well known one) a King or Rowling is already selling to say 90% of the people who would potentially actually read the Ebook at the price of $15 and dropping the price down to $12 saw an increase to a 100% of that potential market.

All of a sudden they are making less money.

An there is teh risk taht a $12 dollar ebook not only sells to 100% of teh current ebook market for the book but starts to make people who currently buy the HB consider buying Ebook instead so they now satrt to turn $20 into $12 sales.

Now they are making even less money.

Why would they want to do that? where is the incentive in this quarters turnover or this years? How do they sell 'we will lose money' if we do this to the shareholders.

btw I believe in the long run they would be succesful or at least not get caught napping by some smaller company that steal away the ebook market from them. However in the above Im trying to look at it from there point of view.
stustaff is offline   Reply With Quote