Thursday 23 April 2009

Sony Ebook Reader at The London Book Fair



This week I attended some sessions on ebook readers, epublishing standards and digital marketing at the London Book Fair (aka The LBF).

Sony were very optimistic about the prospects for their ebook reader and explained how their ability to enter the market successfully - though it's still early days - was as a result of their collaboration with a number of key players including the retailer Waterstones, the International Digital Publishing Forum (idpf), Penguin and Google. Sony is a pioneer and innovator in consumer electronics - it also knows all about making, owning and selling content in the music and film industries - and the thorny issues of IP and copyright, but the book industry represents a departure from their traditional comfort zones and clever partnering is essential.

If Google is an advocate of the Sony reader then that will surely add a lot of weight to the manufacturer’s campaign to succeed in this space. Google may still be persona non grata for some publishers but it’s the readers and consumers who count here and the recent Google Booksearch settlement agreement reached between the search company and the US book publishing industry should encourage publishers to move on and focus efforts and energy on creating new ebook products and services. That is to say once the settlement has cleared the remaining obstacles: opt outs, objections, and a final hearing the deadlines of which have just been extended several months, in the case of the Final Hearing until the week before the Frankfurt Book Fair.

Sony trod carefully given the august LBF audience, and while not wishing to upset those underwhelmed by the propsect of ebooks, they did a good job of making publishers sit up and take note. Graphs, stats and images illustrating the crisis in the newspaper industry paved the way for a discussion about emerging business models for books and content, the inevitability of ebooks as a medium and the opportunities they present for publishers wanting to develop complementary and new sales channels.

According to Sony’s research, users of their ebook reader are buying a lot of books around the key holiday times and are particularly attracted to the device as a way of travelling light but with all the books you want.

They also discussed ebook formats in particular the EPUB format - I shall post on this soon.

Some brave person from the digital community commented on the size of the seminar theatre in the Digital Zone of the LBF - it was approximately the size of a waiting room at a small dental surgery. Says something about the relative importance of digital at the London Book Fair - it's growing but should that be renamed the London eBook Fear..?