Tag Archives: Distribution

Briefly Noted | Perseus Creates New Service for Authors Seeking to Self-Publish – NYTimes.com

The Perseus Books Group has created a distribution and marketing service that will allow authors to self-publish their own e-books, the company said on Sunday.

The new service will give authors an alternative to other self-publishing services and a favorable revenue split that is unusual in the industry: 70 percent to the author and 30 percent to the distributor. Traditional publishers normally provide authors a royalty of about 25 percent for e-books.

via Perseus Creates New Service for Authors Seeking to Self-Publish – NYTimes.com.

Briefly Noted | Borders Succumbs to Digital Era in Books – WSJ.com

Borders Group Inc.s imminent demise marks the first major casualty of the digital era in buying and reading books. But the store closings also will mean fewer opportunities for shoppers to wander the book aisles, a loss that will affect publishers as well as competitors and authors.

The bookseller is expected to ask a bankruptcy judge Thursday to approve plans to start liquidating as soon as Friday. By the end of September, the remaining 399 stores of the second-largest U.S. bookstore chain will be shut down for good.

via Borders Succumbs to Digital Era in Books – WSJ.com.

Amazon Agrees To Acquire The Book Depository

Yahoo Finance today reported that Amazon had agreed to acquire The Book Depository, the online book retailer that offers free delivery worldwide to customers.

The UK based company had £60 million in sales in 2010 and is targeting £120 million in 2011 according to Retail Gazette earlier this year and was founded by Andrew Crawford in 2004.

It would seem to be a case of, ‘How do you know you are doing something right? Amazon acquires you!’ In that regard the team at Book Depository should be congratulated for building such an impressive company relatively quickly.

Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN – News) today announced that it has reached an agreement to acquire The Book Depository International. The Book Depository is an online bookseller offering over six million books for delivery worldwide.

“Customers in more than 100 countries enjoy The Book Depository’s vast selection, convenient delivery and free shipping,” said Greg Greeley, Amazon’s Vice President of European Retail. “The Book Depository is very focused on serving its customers around the world, and we look forward to welcoming them to the Amazon family.”

From Amazon’s perspective It’s hard to know what the play is here. It could be any of:

1) Increasing UK and European exposure
2) Building a better position in Australia
3) Defensive market-share building

Or any number of other things. There must be some worries about competition approval, at least in the UK, with this.

Finally, from Irish readers and book buyers view, the key will be whether Amazon changes the free postage model The Book Depository operates. If so, this could be a bad deal for those who purchase books online, though perhaps a boost to bookshops.

 

Briefly Noted | Are estributors the future of publishing? – TNW Industry

Leaving that line of thought, let’s take another look at publishing from the perspective of a young author looking to break into the ‘big time’ with their first book. For that person, would it not be better for them to attempt to land a big publisher, in hopes that the company would drop ad dollars into their work, giving it a much larger sales potential? The answer is a firm probably not. Over the course of talking to several authors during the last year, the tales that have reached my ears have always been the same: Major publishers are putting nearly no promotional money into first books by new authors, as they feel that there is a better return to be earned by investing that money into sure-fire hits big name authors, books that are tied to movies and brands, etc. One author said that she was assigned to a publicity ‘expert’ who advised her to ‘get on Facebook’ and attempt to push her book there. Then the expert disappeared.

via Are estributors the future of publishing? – TNW Industry.

YBooks Enters Distribution Agreement

YBooks, the recently formed publisher backed by Chenile Keogh and Robert Doran, has signed a distribution agreement with Gill & Macmillan.

 

The company’s launched with Donal MacIntyre’s Hitmen, Gangsters, Cannibals and Me and now has four titles in print with two more to be released in March.

Prior to signing the agreement with Gill & Macmillan their books were available from Argosy and Easons wholesale. The company has also begun selling ebooks early on in its life and sells titles through Amazon, Kobo Books and WH Smiths and others.

Opinion | The Differential Rates Of Change Problem

There’s an issue I’ve been exploring on this blog and elsewhere for some time. It’s about digital change and what it does to large and small markets, especially when the rates of change in these markets differ. I’ve called it the differential rates of digital change problem and I think it is time I put a solid definition on it.

So here it goes. The Differential Rates Of Digital Change Problem occurs:

When a large publishing market undergoes a more rapid shift towards digital delivery and consumption of books than a smaller publishing market.

This change has many significant implications but the three I want to focus on here are:

  • Rights pressure on small market publishers
  • Sales pressure on small market publishers
  • Growing disparity between ACTUAL digital change in small markets and OBSERVABLE digital change

Let’s look at these one by one.

Rights Pressure
I’ve highlighted how larger market publishers increasingly have an incentive to acquire global digital rights in works, whereas, as of yet, smaller market publishers have little incentive to hold on to those rights, though they know that in the future they will need them. I’ve pointed to one possible way to meet both needs here.

Sales Pressure
This is almost a bigger deal for small markets. And it has a few forms.

  1. Digital sales of titles not necessarily available in the smaller market to customers in the smaller market recorded as sales in larger markets (eg Kindle Sales to Irish customers via Amazon.com or .co.uk)
  2. Digital sales of titles available in smaller markets physically AND digitally but made through sites that record those sales in the larger market (eg titles published by local publishers or foreign publishers available on Amazon.com Kindle store)
  3. And of course, if a small market publisher sells global digital rights to a book they publish, then the digital editions of locally published books will sell through the larger market
  4. The quietest form is of course digital sales to residents who have retailer accounts in other territories, ie English Address for Amazon.co.uk Kindle sales (small I’d wager but without the stats who knows)

These sales are starting, slowly but surely, to leak sales from small markets to large markets. The levels are unquantifiable right now in anything but the most sketchy way, but they are surely growing with each Kindle,  Kobo reader, iPad, iPod Touch, iPhone and Android device sold into a small market. The proliferation of devices offering ebooks sold through large market retailers  MUST be driving sales from those markets. When those retailers start sharing their data (and how likely is that) we will know for sure.

Over time the sales impact will become pronounced, especially if the small markets don’t develop a local infrastructure for selling ebooks. Imagine for instance if all digital sales in Ireland were made through Amazon, Apple, Google and Kobo with maybe a small share for the rest? If the system remains as now, no digital sales will ever be recorded and the market for books will shrink dramatically OR at least  it will seem to.

Actual Vs Observable Data
This is a bigger issue than it sounds like and is deeply relevant. As digital change moves on, small markets get a false idea of how rapidly their market is shifting, or at least publishers native to that small market do. If sales are happening in the estores I’ve already highlighted then the local market doesn’t see them. If 20% of the market shifts to digital, but buys its books from foreign retailers, then the market will fall by 20% and it would still look like digital has no presence.

Clearly there are offsets here. For instance, if a local publisher starts putting their titles on those outlets they will start selling books and will realize that the digital shift is ALREADY happening, or perhaps they will realize that even if it isn’t happening, they can sell some of their books to a global customer base.

What’s more, local offices of large publishers (quite a few of which exist in Ireland) will be able to see their rising ebook sales through their corporate parents and will know well enough how quickly digital sales are growing.

But even so, the data for the smaller market as a whole will be fractured and patchy, controlled by outside forces whose good will cannot be relied on and all the time digital will seem, because there is little reliable evidence to the contrary, to be a marginal market.

In this strange  scenario, local publishers remain unwilling to invest in digital because they feel the market is small but equally the market to them remains small because they have not even invested to get a few titles digitized and for sale on these foreign platforms. The only way to see beyond the apparently tiny size of the market is to take the leap and invest a small amount, but companies, in the absence of data, are rightly reluctant to do so.

Conclusion
So there it is, the Differential Rates Of Digital Change Problem. It’s not a problem for larger publishing markets of course and I don’t see any real way of addressing it until figures for digital sales begin to be shared more freely by the large companies like Apple, Amazon and Google who are not really minded to share it.

The only way beyond it is to accept on faith that digital is growing in smaller markets but in hidden ways, then to step beyond that and start offering your products digitally. This doesn’t have to be a huge investment (and if you doubt that, spend some time online reading about ebook creation from text files) but it does need to happen and it needs to happen soon.

Briefly Noted | A fragment of this and a bundle of that | FutureBook

The move from physical to digital distribution is forcing the publishing industry to reconsider how they package their products. By ‘packaging’, I refers not to hardback or paperback, but to bundles, fragments, online subscriptions and access. For example, a set of chapters from 20 different medical books, or a monthly digital-delivery of fiction from one specific author is each a way to package bundles of content.

via A fragment of this and a bundle of that | FutureBook.

Gill & Macmillan To Distribute Liberties Press Books

Gill & Macmillan and Liberties Press have announced that from 1st October 2010, Liberties Press titles will be distributed by Gill & Macmillan.

The move follows the closure of CMD Booksource, which ceases trading at the end of September 2010.

In a statement to Irish Publishing News, John Manning, Director of Gill & Macmillan Distribution, said ‘G&M is delighted to take on responsibility for providing distribution services to Liberties Press. We are confident that our extensive distribution experience will enable us to provide them with a first class service for many years to come.’

Peter O’Connell Sales and Marketing Director at Liberties Press said, ‘we look forward to working with Gill & Macmillan distribution and are grateful for all their assistance in making the move across from CMD Booksource so straightforward.’

Liberties decision to move to Gill & Macmillan comes after Mercier Press’ announcement that it will be distributed by Argosy’s new arm, Irish Book Distribution.

Eason & Son Records €10 Million Loss In 2009

Ireland’s largest bookseller, Eason & Son, lost €10.09 million in the year ending January 31 2010.

The company also experienced a fall in total turnover for all its businesses (including joint ventures and discontinued operations) from €375,355,000 to €313,636,000 or 16.4%.

However the company succeeded in reducing costs in both distribution and administration and had positive cash flow resulting in a €9.5 million cash balance for the year ending 31 January 2010.

At the operating level the company made a small profit of €786,000 and if the loss on discontinued operations is excluded, the firm had an operating profit of €2.3 million on continuing operations.

Although there were exceptional charges in 2009 of €1.65 million associated with the disposal of The British Bookshops Stationers plc, these were considerably lower than the €18.7 million in exceptional charges for 2008.

Among the other details that emerged from their year end accounts is the fact that the deficit of €12.8 million in the pension fund was eliminated by the 2009 rally in stock markets and the fund is now in a modest surplus position of €165,000.

The company also reduced the value of their property assets by €37 million which was the major factor in the value of the assest on the company’s balance sheet falling by 17% to just over €121 million.