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#136 | |
Wizard
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Two weeks later is was back to the old, lower price. I purchased it a week later. It was almost a 10 percent price increase. No idea why it went up and then down. So, yes, they might corner the market and then inflate prices. They CAN do it - just remains if they will do it. |
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#137 | |
Interested Bystander
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There is essentially no unit production cost for an eBook, and almost no floor at which an eBook could not be profitable if you sold enough of them. There seems to be a mindset that we know how many of this book we want to sell, and as long as we hit that number we have succeeded, so we'll set the price that we think will let us hit that sales number. That is almost dismissing the possibility of any real success, just being happy enough to trundle along with your current customer base. |
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#138 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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You seem to reason that the demand is infinite just given the right price. Which seems a strange assumption since the available time for reading books is very limited for most people. |
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#139 | |
Interested Bystander
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Plus each publisher has a monopoly on their authors' works, the fact that something is a sensible business practice for a monopoly doesn't make it particularly palatable to customers. Of course that only really hold true of the major name authors, in genre fiction books might be considered more interchangeable. I do think they are going to struggle to maintain eBook prices at the same level as pBook prices, I simply don't think most people will think that is reasonable. |
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#140 | |
Interested Bystander
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I bought the three Larsson books because they were less than $5 each and I might want to read them at some point. If they had been $10 I wouldn't have bought them, I'd have either got a library copy or waited until I actually wanted to read them and just bought the first. In another thread someone mentioned a different translation of a book I like. It was $10, so I passed. I'm $5 interested, but not $10 interested. Are there people who won't pay $25 for a hardback, but wait and pay $10 for a paperback? Yes, there are, so demand is clearly elastic there. Do people read library books, or borrow books from friends? Yes, they do, so there are clearly more people who want to read the book than pay the current price for it. I don't see any reason for believing that somehow books are special and don't react like other products. |
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#141 | |
New York Editor
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______ Dennis |
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#142 | |
Jeffrey A. Carver
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#143 | |
New York Editor
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There is a unit cost for ebooks. As mentioned previously, 80% or more of the costs of producing a book are incurred before it ever reaches the stage of actual publication. For a printed book, the other 20% of the costs are in printing, binding, warehousing, and distribution. You drop those costs with an ebook, but you don't drop all the other costs that are incurred up to that point. And for printed books, the unit cost varies. The biggest costs in printing/binding are setting up to do it in the first place. The incremental cost of printing/binding more copies is far less, so higher press runs equate to lower unit costs. Ebooks don't tag along free when there is a print version and an electronic version, with an assumption that the print version absorbs the costs and the ebook is gravy. The accounting doesn't work that way. The ebook will be expected to make a contribution to revenue, and be allocated a share of the cost. And what happens if the ebook version is the only version? So there will be a unit cost, in the form of an allocated share of the costs of producing the book, that will decline as more copies are sold but won't simply go away. And any particular book will have a maximum number it can sell. No book will be bought by all readers. How many it will sell will depend upon the book and the author. We can assume a new book by an internationally best selling author will be another best seller, (and the publisher will offer a far higher advance) to get it. We cannot make that assumption for a first book by a new author or another title from a midlist author. The publisher will make their best guess based on prior history on the total market for a particular title, and offer and advance and allocate production costs accordingly. There will be a limit to how much a lower price will spur sales. For most folks, the scarce resource is time to read the book, not money to buy it, and while a lower price might gain some additional sales, there will be a limit on how many. Yes, a title may be a surprise breakout success and go on to become a best seller. That's what the publisher and the author hope for, and if it happens the champagne is broken out and there are smiles all around, but nobody normally makes any bets it will happen. (Publishers do decide a title has best seller potential and make that bet, but it's the exception, not the rule, and there's a hefty downside if they lose the bet.) ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 10-13-2010 at 03:03 PM. |
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#144 | |
TuxSlash
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As far as color diagrams, so insert a color picture. I'm willing to wager the majority of eReading is done on devices that can show color. And eInk devices will get color at some point. My only point is that we should go back to linear textbook formatting, as opposed to having busy pages with an example in one corner, a second picture somewhere else, and margin notes. What's wrong with a paragraph and then an equation/picture/table? Margin notes can simply be hyperlinked endnotes. I guess I just fail to see what is so hard about making a textbook enjoyable to use in a flowable format, other than having to do it differently from the firehose approach of putting as much glitz onto a page as possible in the printed world. |
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#145 | |
New York Editor
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As a somewhat extreme example, an old friend is a dance historian. She writes on the topic, holds workshops where she teaches historical dances, and serves as dance caller at historic dance events. She estimates there are perhaps 25 people in the world qualified to discuss the subject at her level. If she writes a book on the topic, how large a market do you think it might have? We can assume people interested in the topic but not at her level might buy the book, because they want to learn more and get to her level, but we are still talking about a total market measured in hundreds of copies, and an arch typical example of a "niche" market. How much do you think pricing will affect sales? As another example, a late friend was a railroad fan, and a lifetime subscriber to Trains magazine. He commented that the market for books on that topic was largely not price sensitive. If a book was published on a particular topic, people with an interest in that topic would buy it. (Like, say, a volume on the motive power used by the Nickle Plate Road. Nickle Plate fans would consider that book a must have, and the only question would be when it would fit in the budget.) How elastic the demand is depends on book, author, and subject, and may not be as elastic as you'd like to believe. ______ Dennis |
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#146 | |
Is that a sandwich?
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Once someone there buys a kindle, Amazon has them probably for a long time especially if their library doesnt have Overdrive. Are Waterstones and WH Smith unhappy with the higher costs of Sony and PB products? I wonder if the epub retailers should subsidize the Sonys and PBs by a special promotion somehow to gain future customers. |
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#147 | |||
New York Editor
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My usual reading device does color because it's a multi-function device, but I don't assume I'm representative. Quote:
There are several promising low-power consumption color technologies out there, but they aren't eInk. Quote:
But the fundamental issue is making best use of the capabilities of an electronic device. This requires a different format from the one used to produce the printed book. Even if you simplify the design of the printed book to be single column with in line illustrations and the like, it will still be different, and there will be additional costs involved in maintaining both formats. The trick is reducing the additional costs to a reasonable level, which is where I think XML can help. ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 10-13-2010 at 03:39 PM. |
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#148 | ||
Interested Bystander
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'Printing' an extra 1000 eBooks does not cost you a measureable amount of money. Quote:
The amount allocated to each copy will change, but the overall amount will not. It does not cost you more money to sell more copies, unlike with physical objects. Therefore there is not the measureable minimum price that there is with a physical object where it can be sold to break even. |
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#149 | ||
New York Editor
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Consider the devices we use to read ebooks. Semi-conductor electronics is a prime example of a capital intensive business. The biggest cost involved is the cost of building the factory to make the devices, and an allocated share of that cost becomes the biggest part of the unit cost of any device. This is where economies of scale come in. The more devices you make, the wider a base over which you can spread that fixed cost, and the cheaper you can price each one. That cost will never drop to zero - there will be a bill of materials for each device with the costs of the components that go into the device, and labor costs for the construction, among others. But the biggest single portion of the cost is setting up to make the things in the first place, and the more you make of a device, the lower the percentage of the cost it becomes, and the cheaper you can make the device. Quote:
There is certainly a measurable minimum cost. It will be what you must charge to cover your costs and make enough to remain in business. How large that number is depends upon what your total cost is and how many of whatever you are making that you expect to sell. If your total cost is $100,000, and you expect to sell 1,000 of whatever it is, you must charge $100 per copy simply to cover your costs, and will probably have to charge twice that to make enough money to remain in business. If you expect to sell 10,000, your minimum cost drops proportionately. But you will have an ultimate limitation on how far your price can drop based on the total number of copies you can sell. All books don't have equal sales potential. A few will become bestsellers. Somewhat more will sell enough to justify publishing more books by that author. Most won't sell enough to make back their costs. This will be true regardless of whether the book is a paper book or an electronic one. ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 10-14-2010 at 01:39 AM. |
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#150 | ||||
New York Editor
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There are certainly folks with more than one reader (and I suspect the majority hang out on MobileRead), but for them it's a hobby thing, and they simply enjoy having and playing with more than one device. Quote:
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______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 10-13-2010 at 09:56 PM. |
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