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#61 |
Wizard
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What non-BN/Borders stores are there? I have a Books A Million in the Nation's Capital, don't know if BAMM is owned by BN or Borders.
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#62 | |
New York Editor
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One of the problems for large retail chains is precisely maintaining a community centric approach. Years back, a woman I know managed a bookstore that was part of a small chain. She was in near tears of frustration. Buying decisions for the chain were made at the HQ store, based on what sold well there. Her store had different demographics and the HQ selections didn't match them. She knew what her customers read, but getting that across to HQ was an uphill battle. Square and cube that, and you get the state of places like B&N and Borders. I think there's merit in the approach. I despair of changing the corporate culture and operating practices of a major chain to make it happen. ______ Dennis |
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#63 | |
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Corporate info is here: http://www.booksamillioninc.com/ ______ Dennis |
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#64 | |
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There are smaller bookstores, like the Borders Express outlets in various malls. But smaller stores = less shelf space = smaller selection. Retailing is about sales/sq. ft. Concentration will be on stuff that sells. There's a reason Borders Express stores seem to be mainly best sellers. The problem with what you would like to see (and so would I. for that matter) would be making enough sales of the indie and hard to find content. Location would be critical: I'd want to be in the low-rent district to keep costs manageable, but if I am, I may have fun attracting the customers that will be interested in what I stock. ______ Dennis |
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#65 |
Is that a sandwich?
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I was even thinking smaller. Like mall kiosks in the walkways where you see the various stalls. Entrance to malls outside. Busy street corners 800 sq ft or so. Located near Starbucks or similar. Lease space in supermarkets and department stores. Keep them small and flexible. Short term leases only.
Make books an impulse items. Put the latest books in window displays. Cater to local preferences. Bookstores as "destinations" work for some but not everyone. How far would you drive to go to a bookstore? Too far and people turn to the internet. |
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#66 | |||
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Department stores tend to have book sections, and these may actually be concessions, leasing space as you suggest. Quote:
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Of course, I'm in NYC, so my experience is not broadly applicable. ______ Dennis |
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#67 |
Connoisseur
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You have more bookstores within walking distance than the combined B&N/Borders presence in the state of Maine.
Our local bookstore has a horrible selection. It tries to cover all the same ground as the big chains only with less space and buying power. It ends up with just the top sellers in each category. It seems to have less and less local focus the less competition it has. It almost seems like competition would take some of the strain of being everyone's bookstore off it and let it get some personality back. |
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#68 | ||
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The problem with personality would be "Does it sell?" Retailing is all about sales/sq.ft., so what it's doing is likely what it has to do to remain a going concern. Will they place special orders for stuff they don't have for you? I've seen worse, though. Many years ago I was in Shreveport, LA for a couple of weeks. I found two bookstores. One was what looked like an interesting used book store that was never open when I could go by. The other was a combo card/gift/PB bookstore with a novel shelving practice: books were put in the racks in whatever order they came out of the boxes. It was pure random access. It left me wondering if anyone in Shreveport actually read. ![]() ______ Dennis |
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#69 | |
Is that a sandwich?
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If they were placed more visibly, they may sell a few of them and people will save time and money. |
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#70 | |
Guru
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#71 | |
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I haven't seen supermarkets here in NYC carry books, but discount drugstores like Duane Reade, CVS, and Walgreen's generally have some, along with popular magazines. They are likely supplied by a rack jobber, selected from current popular sellers, and I'd be surprised if the store exercised any selectivity as to what titles were stocked. They are impulse purchase items, grabbed while the shopper is in the store to pick up something else. Supermarkets in NYC not stocking books is likely related to the cost of space. Rents in Manhattan vary from expensive to astronomical, and supermarkets will allocate the most space and give favored placement to relatively high margin items like frozen foods, deli, and gourmet specialties. It's all about sales/sq ft and inventory turnover, and I suspect books simply don't yield enough revenue for the space they occupy. You will find various magazines like Cosmopolitan and People, and scandal sheets like the National Enquirer and the Star as impulse purchase items at the checkout counter, but they space they occupy is low. Things will be different in areas where rental costs are lower and the supermarket has more space to play with. ______ Dennis |
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#72 |
Guru
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I was going to mention that I'm also in NYC, so like Dennis, my view doesn't scale to other areas well. One of the things that I like about B&N's approach to the nook is trying to add in-store features. It's an attempt to address the community-based nature of bookstores with the near-impossible task of stocking everything (or being able to afford the square footage to do so).
I know some publishers are exploring ways to combine products, where one price gets you both the p-book and the e-book, assuming that there is a large enough market with "hybrid tastes" (like me) who are not exclusively p- or e-. The customer gets the e-book immediately and the p-book shipped either to the store or home in a timely fashion. You can stock everything in e-, some things in p-, reduce the square footage, and still build on readings, signings, and other events. |
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#73 | ||
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I'm hybrid as well. I see ebooks as an alternative format, and not a total replacement for print editions. There are classes of ebooks that do not adapt well to electronic publication, and reading printed books is in many respects a different experience. I have about 4,000 ebooks, probably at least as many in paper, and a fair number in both formats. ______ Dennis |
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#74 |
Bookie
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B&N&Borders - Not likely
I was over in Europe on business, so did not catch this story when it came out, but I have to say, it just seems highly unlikely. Interesting conjecture, and never-say-never, but with the two #1 and #2 in Books, I don't think it passes muster with the anti-monopoly laws in the U.S. Granted, those are less and less enforced, but it's a Democratic administration, mergers and buy-outs have a little tougher time passing muster. The only way to get around it would be the convince the government and courts that Amazon/Walmart are the real competition.
As a customer of many bricks & mortar bookstores, I'm not sure how I see this playing out. B&N and Borders did a pretty good job on the little mom & pop type bookstores, I sorely miss those. The B&N and Borders play is about variety and pricing. They build bigger, they price cheaper. I personally prefer B&N, they have a discount card which is handy for frequent buyers, and a wider selection of discounted books. I've found the larger Borders stores to be better in Computer books sections. But if they downsize their stores, then it lets back in the mom & pop operations, not a bad thing to my way of thinking, but just doesn't work. If you're small, the local operations beat you on tailoring to the local environment. Certainly the backend distribution systems would benefit from combination, but local stores could pool (and do). However, any time a book is not in stock (either because they don't stock it, or sold out), I order on-line. Why go through the trouble of ordering at the bookstore, just go on-line, shipped to your door (or eBook reader). There I buy more from Amazon, but I run it through a pricing engine first. But, I have to say I have shifted over my buying, where it makes sense, to eBooks. They're generally cheaper, no need to set foot in a bookstore, point click and purchase, easier to carry with when you travel. Trying to get 100% of my fiction reading there, but am still waiting for a good color + large page eBook reader (the iPad is close) for the rest. Textbooks are somewhere in between. But I tend to be ahead of the curve, I think it will take longer for the average consumer to shift. Their kids will shift, if they're still reading. ![]() |
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#75 | ||||
New York Editor
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There are an assortment of small book retailers near me, but they are specialty places with a niche focus, like Juvenile/YA, travel, and photography. An old friend used to operate an SF/Mysteries specialty shop. He fulminated about how the Association of American Booksellers had misled him about the ability of a single person to run such a shop. (They said it was possible - he discovered he couldn't do it effectively, and my SO worked for his for a while. He closed his doors when the building his storefront was in raised the rent and made it impossible to continue.) Quote:
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______ Dennis |
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