Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts

Monday, December 3, 2012

investigation digital books e-readers



E-readers, they are new innovation currently taking the publishing world by storm, more and more Americans appear to be jumping on the e-reader bandwagon. On August 2010 poll by Harris Interactive revealed that 8 percent of Americans were using e-readers and about 12 percent planned to do so in the next six months. This is good news for makers of e-readers, which continue to advance the technology by making these devices lighter, faster and smarter. But the booming sales of e-readers don't necessarily translate to a decline in sales of traditional books. For example, Amazon.com's January 2011 news about e-books outselling paperbacks came on top of reports of continued growth in paperback sales. The situation, however, is a bit different for some traditional bookstores. Borders, a national chain of bookstores, declared bankruptcy in February 2011, reporting that it will refocus on e-book and e-reader sales in order to save the company. Considering the growing popularity of e-readers, sales of traditional books may eventually decline. In fact, the entire world of book publishing may be headed for a radical transformation. It's unlikely that traditional books will ever become completely obsolete. They simply need to find a new place alongside their cool new cousin, the e-readers.

Digitization has revolutionized the publishing industry, by allowing readers to have multiple books without lugging around huge amounts of heavy books. It also has increased the amount of books that people read, the average reader of e-books says they have read 24 books in the past 12 months, compared with an average of 15 books by a non-e-book consumer.  But while digitization has been good for part of the publishing industry it is also affecting it. "The book publishing industry has entered a period of long-term decline because of the rising sales of e-book readers," reads an April 28 research note from IHS iSuppli, which predicted a decrease in book revenue at a compound annual rate of three percent through 2014-a reversal from the period between 2005 and 2010, when revenue rose.

For most companies like amazon and Barnes & Noble have capitalized on e-readers and are using the new innovations to help their companies stay afloat in these hard times. They have a major stake in the success of e-readers but at the same time use the paperback sales to help them keep revenue up for the stores. Unlike Borders who had to declare bankruptcy because of the declining sales of books, which is making them rethink and get in on the e book market. These companies will continue to put their money into the success of e-readers and eBooks but at the same time still using paperbacks because books will never stop selling because people value still having hard copies instead of digital ones.

The last focus for E-readers is for the authors. With eBooks,there is no end to the number of copies immediately available, and the venues are fewer, meaning directing your target market to your available book is even simpler, and with the advent of viral internet marketing techniques, becomes possible even without the backing of a corporation. This has affected the publishing industry, by leveling the playing field. Publishing in print is obviously still very important to your success, but proper self-marketing of a novel in eBook form can help make sure that you can show publishing houses that there is, in fact, a real market and demand for your book. Another thing authors can be happy about is that they can post a downloadable electronic book for sale on a major eBook publishing site, and shows that the long tail method works no matter what, there is always still some market for a media text.

 Even those there have been many excuses for why text is better than the digital form e-readers and digital books are slowly taking over. There have been many argue against speed and retention against digital books but has been dis proven time and time again. This may keep some people away from it but with Americas slow but sure conversion to technology the more print will dramatically shift itself and become online material.
 http://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2012/03/21/speed-and-retention-are-e-readers-slower-and-more-forgetful/

Digital Books: A New Balance

     The world of media should be understood as something that constantly evolves to meet expectations that developing conditions create. Digitization has made a splash into the smooth waters of traditional publishing and has since caused quite a ripple effect. Nowadays you can't look left or right without seeing that snobby guy on his iPad or that hipster girl at the coffee shop with her Kindle. Companies such as Apple, Barnes & Noble, and Amazon are all adapting to the digital era by investing in personal and practical products like these tablet-type products


     Does this mean that the world will make a sudden shift from paper to digital? Not yet, however the audience for e-Readers will only increase in coming years. The publishing industry has truly been re-formed due to this new platform of technology, yet e-books haven't served as a single lifeline for any of the major publishing companies. The developing demographic of e-Readers simply functions as an alternate opportunity for delivering content -- besides the internet, mobile, and print. For many people within the publishing industry, e-books are simply viewed "as a promising alternative distribution channel -- and one for which they might actually get paid". The numbers have indeed strongly suggested that digital books offer a huge profit for these companies in the near future.


     In July 2010, online giant Amazon.com announced that the sales of e-books for its Kindle surpassed sales of hardcover books, saying it sold a whopping 140 e-books for every 100 hardcover books. Another publishing power has profited from the future investment of digital e-books despite the financial risks and concerns that come with competing against Apple's powerhouse iPad. Barnes & Noble predicts the sales of e-books rising from around $250 million in 2010 to over $2 billion in 2015. The increase in demand for e-books is re-shaping the publishing industry and creating a new market for our digital pioneers to explore. Colleges and businesses are institutions that are soon predicted to help integrate the younger generations with this new technology. University of Missouri's program director for digital publishing Roger Fidler stated he"wouldn't be surprised to see schools require e-readers at some point," he says-particularly if they can replace heavy textbooks. This concept would help draw in younger demographics to e-readers; while the common Kindle operator is around 40.


     The spectrum of digital and printed books seems to be more balanced than ever before. Interestingly enough e-book readers remain dedicated consumers of print books as well, with 58% of e-book owners stating that they were reading print as well as digital books simultaneously. So for those of you who are worried about losing traditional book styles, take a chill pill. The resurrection of digital e-books has given more agency to the consumer by introducing a new medium. Out of many individuals that were asked it was easy to see how these mediums were preferred according to specific situations.

     One can clearly observe how the process of digitization can affect an industry either for better or for worse. The development of e-Readers does not mean the end of anything. Written books will always be around, however digital copies also provide consumers with advantages such as easy access, simpler storage, and mobility. The question here is not whether or not printed books will survive in today's digitized world. It is instead important to look at book publishing from an updated perspective and observe how these mediums will coexist with one another on an equal spectrum.