Friday, January 02, 2015

Simply Producing More Books Isn't The Answer



What happens when the amount of books available to read exceeds the market’s ability to read them! We have always struggled with more books than buyers. The economics of market forces has always prevailed, choking back on production, shrinking shelf space and reducing the rewards to those who aspire to make fame and fortune from their writing.

It was simple when we only had the physical book. The market was controlled by the shelf space available, the cost of the inventory and the rate of purchases. We still produced more titles and units than could be purchased, but for those who back the right works the rewards were significant and for those with excess inventory there was always the ability to trade this through. Importantly the sales were steady and although unpredictable at title level, they were more predictable at market level. The supply chain was inefficient, but worked and publishers wallpapered stores with their sale or return approach to merchandising. Some aspects still remain, but those heydays are long gone. Many blame the demise of the Net Book Agreement in the UK and the resultant discount wars. The truth is far more complex and one element alone drove the result.

The arrival of the Internet resulted in the virtual shelf and inventory. No longer was shelf space an issue, as warehouse space, distance shopping and customer service prevailed. The back list vied on equal terms with front list and the mid list often found itself squeezed. Those mail order players who were in the market should have won this battle, but were wedded to yesterday, did not understand the new parameters and importantly did not understand virtual inventory and changing consumer demands. The retailers struggled to get the right people and often treated the internet as an adjunct and not an integral part of their business. Amazon won and became a category killer and although some shoots of new business have appeared, the ecommerce game is firmly controlled from Seattle.

The digital book should have been the opportunity to address the ground given away to Amazon, but the market lacked the commitment and ability to work together. It stumbled from one white knight to another, as if it was punch drunk and desperate to hold on to anything that offered anything. We had Sony who promised much but understood little, Google who came to ingest all and were courted, fought and allowed to offer not one but two poor settlements and finally by Apple, who only wanted business on their terms. Some such as Nook and Kobo were spawned from existing players, but these and others lacked the technology clout, investment and global presence to succeed.

However, the biggest change that digital introduced was to lower the barriers to publishing, not only allowing anybody to publish anything, but also giving them channels and virtual shells on which to display their works next to more traditional published works. Suddenly we were awash with books, physical and digital. Self publishing was no longer to be dismissed and looked down on. We were no longer just over producing new books, but effectively bringing back every book ever published, but the consumers were still only buying the same number of books. They may buy more to fill their physical shelves, but why should they buy more to fill a virtual shelf?

The purchase model then came under a new threat – subscription and on demand reading. It was working in music and film so why not in books?

We have to look at music more closely to understand the other changes that had taken place over the same period; the switch from album to single, the migration from physical form to full digital, the high bandwidth and availability of the internet, streaming technology, and the desire to listen on the move. Film is no different and has had many different pressures which make subscription viable.

We now even have the new EU regulations which have resulted in Apple introducing, a no quibble, 14 day return policy. Some will suggest a ‘read for free’ policy. The new EU and Japanese consumption tax changes may result in ebooks costing more, but the extra money goes not to the creators, but to the governments. Both these initiatives will hurt creators’ pockets and may drive more to publish themselves.

So the facts are that we have a glut of content and in the physical world even greater disparity between the successful and the others. In the digital world we have a dominant channel which has understood the overall business, its value chain and targeted elements overlooked by others and integrated them into their offer. The market is no longer controlled by a handful of publishers but by Seattle and yet we continue to stumble forward with more of the same. If we have too many books we can no longer rely on natural selection. The market isn’t suddenly going to grow and will continue to flatline.

There will be increasing pressure to try something new such as subscription.

However, what we are failing to address is the difference between physical and digital. We are failing to create digital content for consumers on the move. We are failing to look inside and see what’s in the locker already and instead we continue to publish the same and expect that a miracle will happen all by itself.


Time is the clue to the market opportunity.

2 comments:

Joel Goldman said...

The problem isn't just a glut of books caused by self-publishing. The vast majority of self-published books sell very few copies because no one can find them, i.e., if a self-published book falls in the forest and no one can discover it, does it make a sound? The real game changer has been Amazon's Kindle Unlimited because it has absorbed a lot of demand that probably would have been satisfied by a wider assortment of titles. BookBub has also contributed by generating demand for free or low cost books which also tend to be self-published. Other subscription services and free or low-cost promoters are also a factor. Bottom line - the major players are driving the market toward low-priced books creating an environment in which fewer and fewer authors can earn a living. At some point, the market may shift back due to the usual supply/demand forces. Whether a counterweight to Kindle Unlimited, BookBub, et al, will emerge is anybody's guess.

Unknown said...

The answer is the same as it always has been. Stop trying to get people to _stop_ reading. People have, and always will buy/read books that *entertain.* The constant downbeat of depressing, "literature" is destroying the desire for people to read. Not every book is, or _should_ be "literature." This insane effort to make it so, is destroying the very market for books.
People read books for two reasons (primarily), and they are simple ones. 1) To be *entertained.* As in to be transported away from every day life. 2) They read to be informed. IOW, they want to learn about something, whether it is history, travel, or other cultures. This *does not* require dull, boring, _tedious_ textbooks. Yes, it does _not_ require textbooks, which are by nature, tedious dull and boring. Yet that is exactly the type of books that are being foisted off on the reading/buying public.
My adopted granddaughter, a very smart young woman, with _both_ parents who are authors, just dropped an "AP English class." It was dedicated to *PhD level dissection and criticism* of a book. If there is any surer method of destroying the desire to read, I don't know what it could be. The problem is that instead of restricting this idiocy to *Master's* level and above college classes, it is is being taught in _high school_.* HS and less than MS level college "criticism" classes are making it "no longer fun to read." Searching for "deep significance in word choices, and characters" _does not belong_ in anything but PhD level classes. There, of necessity, you have to look for nits, riding on the backs of fleas, because all "real content" has been found already. The absurdity of teaching this at intro level college, or HS level classes, should be immediately obvious.
Very rarely does an author write with deeply significant choices in names, characters, or plots. If they do, the book probably dies a well deserved, and hopefully quick, death. It "dies" because it spends so much time pushing a "deep message" that it loses any desire to be worth reading. If it takes more than a paragraph to explain what the book is about, or why you wrote it, *it is crap.* It is a _textbook_, and it should be sold as one, with the appropriate desire to get rid of it as quickly as possible.
I just "self published" my first book, and the "reason is simple." The son of a friend, turned 5 last Summer. I wanted him to see the "Santa Claus's out there," and wonder. "Are any of them "real ones?" When he reads my book, The man Who Was A Santa Claus, he will know that one of them may be. If he "meets" one, he will know it by how he (The Santa) acts.