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View Poll Results: Does your ebook buying actually cannibalize a hardback sale? | |||
I never bought books at all (borrowed from library, friends etc.) |
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6 | 1.97% |
I bought books, but not full-price hardbacks (remainders, paperbacks, used books) |
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185 | 60.66% |
I did use to buy full-price hardbacks and now boy ebooks (cannibalizing the sales) |
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66 | 21.64% |
Other |
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48 | 15.74% |
Voters: 305. You may not vote on this poll |
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#46 |
Connoisseur
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hungary
Device: PRS-505, Paperwhite
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Never bought hardcovers. Never will. I bought and will buy paperback. Also what I read on my device (mostly English and American books) is not on sale as real book in my country, and what is on sale (Hungarian novels) I can't find in electronic format. So for me this myth is busted
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#47 |
Professional Adventuress
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: The Olympic Peninsula on the OTHER Washington! (the big green clean one on the west coast!)
Device: Kindle, the original! Times Two! and gifting an International Kindle
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wow! thanks for putting it that way! that reflects exactly how I feel about books! way too many have lingered way too long with me. not out of any malicious intent, but knowing that I will be overly challenged to return it. because of this I avoid libraries like an alcoholic avoids the free beer tent!
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#48 |
Groupie
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Device: Android & FBReader
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I bought mostly paperbacks and some hardcover, preferably used from Amazon dealers. Otherwise new if I wanted it bad enough.
I have a full collection of an authors books, mixed paperbacks and hardcover that are 40+ years old and found they were starting to get delicate, one cover came off as I was reading it. It was then I decided to take the plunge and get an ereader. I will ONLY buy ebooks from now on unless the title is just not or WILL not be available. My ereader has made me fall in love with reading again. I slacked off when my mother came to live with us and started up again after she passed away. My reading time was spent taking care of her. |
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#49 |
Literacy = Understanding
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: The World of Books
Device: Nook, Nook Tablet
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Unfortunately, the poll results will be misleading because the choices are skewed. I had to choose Other because none of the other choices fit my buying habits.
In 2009, I bought more than 200 ebooks. Of those ebooks, only 4 were nonfiction and I bought those 4 as an experiment to see if nonfiction ebooks could replace my pbook purchases. They couldn't. In 2009, I also bought approximately 150 hardcover books, of which (approximately) 20 were fiction. None were remaindered; all fiction were new releases generally as released. The nonfiction, largely history, biography, religion, and language genres, were new releases or special orders. Finally, in 2009, I bought more than 60 paperback pbooks for my wife. She doesn't currently read ebooks and finds hardcover books too heavy and bulky to hold. I do not buy "bestsellers" -- no Stephen King, Dan Brown, and the like -- so publishers neither gained nor lost a sale in that regard. So for my buying habits, ebooks have replaced only fiction purchases. But even then they really haven't because the fiction ebooks I buy are from unknown authors (at least unknown to me and to bestseller lists), they are $6 or less in cost, and they are DRM-free. The Baen, Tor, and other fantasy/scifi authors that I discovered via ebooks who I have come to like and want to read, the publishers have lost my ebook purchases and gained my hardcover purchases -- that is, ebooks got me to buy hardcover books by authors that in the past I never would have bought or read, for example, David Weber. Publishers -- and pollsters -- seem to miss the idea that there are several distinct bookbuyer markets that occasionally overlap but for the most part do not. It simply isn't concludable that the sale of a Stephen King ebook means a lost hardcover sale, nor is it concludable that the sale of the hardcover is a lost ebook sale. Without understanding why people buy what they buy in the format they buy it in, it is impossible to draw these conclusions, and no one has really researched the whys. |
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#50 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Europe
Device: pocketbook 360, kindle 4
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Quote:
@rhadin: I took this poll to imply "fiction". There are books that you just have to have in paper form, and maybe specifically hardcover, such as art and photography books, some reference books and of course children books. I don't think anyone is afraid of ebooks of those "cannibalising" hardcover sales, at least for now. |
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#51 |
Professional Adventuress
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Karma: 50260224
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: The Olympic Peninsula on the OTHER Washington! (the big green clean one on the west coast!)
Device: Kindle, the original! Times Two! and gifting an International Kindle
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[QUOTE=omk3;696223]That's exactly how I feel too. I don't even like borrowing books from friends for the same reason. I need to see the books I've read in my library (physical or digital), and I certainly prefer digital, as I have already had to give away boxes and boxes of books to make room (having first made sure that I have digital versions of them of course).
QUOTE] haha! who knew we were such an odd group! |
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#52 |
Publishers are evil!
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Rhode Island
Device: Various Kindles
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I bought new books from Amazon in the past, and I rarely buy hardback books anymore, so it has definately caused hardback cannibalization in my case. However, I also buy a lot more books now than I did in the past.
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#53 | |
Wizard
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Device: PRS-505
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Quote:
There's certainly profit to be made at the low-end, but it's just not as much on a per-book basis. A lot of Genre fiction goes straight to video and debuts in paperback (this has been true of Genre fiction for decades). The publishers and authors adapt by pumping out large numbers of titles a year, which is easy if you're basically just writing from a template. Some Genre writers manage to produce excellent work despite these conditions, but there's still a lot of formulaic drek. I certainly wouldn't like this to become the norm for the book industry as a whole. |
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#54 | ||
New York Editor
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Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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The author's advance is a cost to the publisher. It's a subsidy to the author.
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People used to talk about "mainstream": and "The Great American Novel", but I don't think the former really exists these days, and in consequence, I don't think the latter is possible. Increasingly, the industry is genres - SF/fantasy, mysteries, thiller, chick lit, paranormal, family saga... There has always been a lot of formulaic drek, with Harlequin Romances as the archetypal example. But there are also enough books that manage to transcend the boundaries of whatever formula they are written to to provide more than enough things worth reading. ______ Dennis |
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#55 |
Evangelist
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: UK canal boat
Device: sony prs505, prs650, kobo Glo HD liseuses
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In my pre-liseuse days, I'd periodically have a pbook buying binge, but was always constrained by a lack of space for my books. For that reason, as well as the cost, I very, very rarely bought hardbacks. Now, publishers are getting a *LOT* more money from me as I'm buying a minimum of three ebooks a month, as well as various free downloads. If I've cannibalized anything, it's the paperback purchases and library loans I'm no longer making. On the other hand, I'm now making more purchases of old 2nd-hand paperbacks, but solely with the intention of making ebooks out of them. On balance, my reading habits have been transformed and I'm able to spend more money on newer titles than before.
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#56 |
Maria Schneider
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Near Austin, Texas
Device: 3g Kindle Keyboard
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I hadn't really thought of it until I read through this thread. I buy probably as many ebooks as used books now. Ebook buying has ramped up in the last year. I never bought hardbacks--I can think of one that I bought at a slight discount when it first came out. Other than that, it was used, paperback (I like the Amazon 4 for 3 deals) and library for me.
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#57 | |||
New York Editor
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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Quote:
Well, when you place bets, sometimes you lose. In publishing, you lose more often than not, but you are making a larger bet that you will win big enough on the winning bets to cover the loses on the losing ones. Unlike films, publishers don't normally go belly up if they make wrong bets. Films are so extraordinarily expensive to make that a studio can go out of business if they have too many bombs. The last publisher I recall doing that was Lyle Stuart. They published "unauthorized biographies", exposes and the like, printed a lot of them, and promoted them heavily, gambling that a few would become bestsellers and cover the losses on the ones that tanked. They got away with it for years, but finally hit a bad patch where none of their picks sold and had to fold. The CEO of Thomas Nelson had me chuckling bitterly not that long ago, wondering why no one was upset at all the authors ripping off publishers because their books didn't earn out their advances? Gee, fella - it's not like someone held a gun to your head in contract negotiations. Why did you offer advances that high? Don't blame the author for your bad bet... Quote:
The "however long it remains on the shelf" is the sticky part. Shelf space is finite, and older books must be cleared to make room to hold new titles. Generally, unless they fly off the shelves, MMPB editions are not reordered. the initial order is it. The shelf space is needed for newer titles. Another issue bedeviling publishing is that it has traditionally been a "100% returns" industry. Unsold books can be returned for full credit. Hardcovers are actually returned. Paperbacks have the covers stripped off and returned while the body of the book is (theoretically) thrown out in the trash to become landfill. (Many such volumes actually wind up being sold by enterprising street vendors at a fraction of the retail price, to folks who just want to read the book, and don't care about the missing cover.) It's like the issue of "too many books chasing too few readers". Everyone knew too many books were being published, but no one wanted to be the first to trim their lines. They were all afraid they'd lose display space. Likewise, everyone is aware that 100% returns is deadly, and the retailer really should be expected to know their market and accept some responsibility fo0r how much of what they order, but no one wanted to be the first to try to change the terms. Now we are seeing publishers offering deeper discounts to retailers in exchange for not being able to return unsold copies. Quote:
The underlying question is "How do you add value to an ebook to provide something the reader will pay a higher price for?" What I mentioned is a possible approach. ______ Dennis |
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#58 |
Wizard
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Karma: 1121709
Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: Amazon Kindle 1
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I didn't buy many books period, and seldom every a hardcover unless it was in the hardcover aisle. Not worth the price otherwise for something I'll probably only read once.
I buy more e-books since they're cheaper and I don't have to hassle with storing them or selling/donating them etc. |
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#59 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Norfolk, England
Device: Kindle Oasis
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Quote:
Say: Advance of £5,000 Say RRP of £15, with 10% royalty Print run of 5,000, costing £15,000 Final sales of 3,000, at 50% wholesale margin. The unsold 2,000 copies are remaindered at half printing cost - £3,000 or £1.50 each. Author royalties: £4500, didn't quite earn-out. Publisher income: £22,500 + £3,000 = £25,500 Publisher costs: £5,000 + £15,000 = £20,000 Publisher's profit: £5,500 (These figures are made up, but aren't far off what might actually happen.) |
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#60 |
curmudgeon
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Redwood City, CA USA
Device: Kobo Aura HD, (ex)nook, (ex)PRS-700, (ex)PRS-500
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I voted "other." In what follows, I'm talking about buying fiction; eBooks have not yet invaded my non-fiction purchases (especially professional reading), because the formatting, displays, and UIs are not good enough for seriously non-linear use of the books. For fiction, on the other hand...
Before eBooks, I used to buy a few new hardcovers -- only new books from my very most beloved authors. For everything else I waited for the paperback, checked it out from the library, or bought it used. I bought roughly one hardcover a month, and a dozen or so paperbacks. Since eBooks, I still buy about the same number of hardcovers for exactly the same reasons. I prefer buying eBooks ahead of paperback, however, and would gladly stop buying them. In fact, eBooks have entirely supplanted my purchasing of paperbacks from Baen (who wind up making more money from my eBook sales anyway!). I buy paperbacks only when the eBook is either unavailable, available at a totally unreasonable price -- that is it costs as much as the paperback or more -- or when the eBook comes with DRM that I cannot remove. I've also tripled my spending on books. All of the extra money is spent on eBooks, not paperbacks. Note that I happily purchase the eBook of as well as the hardcover for those few hardcover purchases -- hardcover for keeping and reading at home, ebook for all the rest. For me, the net effect of the move to delay the e-versions is simply to delay my purchase of the book (always assuming that I still remember to buy it four months later, that is). It certainly WILL NOT cause me to buy a hardcover that I would otherwise not have purchased. So they won't get more money from me, what they do get will come later, and they risk my forgetting to buy the ebook at all because I've forgotten that I ever wanted it. Not a good way to get a share of my book-buying budget. As always, your mileage may vary. Xenophon |
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