14 December 2009
The rise and rise of Amazon: prepare for the battle
In the past few days several US publishers have announced they will be delaying the release of e-book versions of major releases. So what does Amazon do? Well, instead of selling for the already loss-leading price of US$9.99, let's take it even lower to $7.99!!! Let's show the publishers exactly who is in charge of this ebook market. Let's offer Under the Dome by Stephen King and Going Rogue by Sarah Palin for $7.99. The hardcover for the latter is listed on Amazon as US$28.99 slashed 50% to US$14.50. Slash it by half again if you want the ebook. Bestsellers are being slashed - Stephenie Meyer's first two Twilight books for US$4.25, Stieg Larsson's The Girl Who Played with Fire at US$7.99. Slash Slash and Slash again.
What happens next? Well surprise surprise, Barnes and Noble cut their ebook prices to match. I'm now waiting to see what Sony does. They've already admitted the US$9.99 price is NOT PROFITABLE. You can read the full article here. Yet I'm taking bets as to when they'll slash their prices! Any takers?
But back to the giant that is Amazon. I know some publishers are trying to wrestle control away from them so they can control their own ebook destinies. Can't everyone see these price points are DEVALUING the product and the whole reading experience? And what about profitability folks? It's already fragile in the bookselling and publishing industry.
It's no use discussing what percentage Amazon, Sony, Scribd etc take on ebook sales. We already know Amazon is using their pricing strategies to make the Kindle the ereader of choice, to build market share and customer loyalty. Sony has pretty much admited the same. They invest in the technology, they need people to buy it.
While publishers benefit from the lower ebook prices in the short term (through higher sales), according to Mike Shatzkin they "don't trust Amazon to keep things that way. From their perspective, Amazon is building a consumer expectation of an under-$10 price point while they are building up their audience of captive Kindle consumers. How long can it be, publishers figure, before Amazon says 'sorry, now you have to sell me these for under ten dollars?'" Mike also shared his thoughts on the possible war over the issue, including publishers not supplying or selling e-books through Amazon, Amazon suppressing the sale of their printed books, and more.
So when and where will the battle lines be drawn? It's a'comin, folks. Wait and see...
Labels:
Amazon,
book,
debate,
digital,
discussion,
e-book,
e-book reader,
e-reader,
ebook,
ebook reader,
ebooks,
industry,
Mike Shatzkin,
publishing,
readers,
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Stephenie Meyer
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Really interesting post.
ReplyDeleteThe logical next step for Amazon is surely to ramp up its publishing activities. That way it could cut out the publishers completely and split the revenue directly with authors. It already owns BookSurge and it has Digital Text Platform for self-publishing for the Kindle.
Check out a response to this post on Pub Date Critical from the wonderfully insightful Peter Donoghue, ex MD of Wiley.
ReplyDeleteThis whole blogging experience has been new for me so to have someone's blog fully referencing mine has been interesting and educational - afterall it means someone's reading it in the first place!!! (Mind you, I've linked Rachael's Ramble to my Facebook page so all my friends see them there instead and that's where Peter saw it originally)
http://peterdonoughue.blogspot.com/2009/12/amazon-and-ebooks-dialogue.html