Sunday 20 December 2009

eBook Survey Findings - The Bookseller's Digital Conference


Some interesting responses below to a survey conducted for the The Bookseller’s Digital Conference Futurebook in December ’09.

These provide some more pointers on where the industry thinks pricing is going - it concluded that cheaper ebooks and an Apple ebook reader / ereader will be the key factors driving digital publishing forward – these two points appear to be mainstream now, never mind that the latter point relies on the supposition that Apple will bring out an e-reader.. even if it does.. improvements to iPhones and iPods might mean that we’re using these devices for reading as much as for music, browsing and communications. An Apple eReader would help capture a market of readers with a dedicated content channel while expecting those readers/consumers eventually to end up using one device for multiple purposes.

Another finding worth commenting on is the expectation that high street bookshops in their current guise have the most to lose, but that they have the opportunity to exploit the shift in the market by changing their role to that of a service provider to owners of eReaders and continuing to promote reading, authors, events..and yes, even selling a few printed books too.

Key findings of the survey:

· More than 88% of respondents thought bookshops would lose out from the growth in digital sales, while 55% said they did not support the revised Google Settlement.
· 44% had read a digital book but only 19% had purchased one. 30%said that e-books should be same price as a paperback book, or cheaper (53.6%).
· Parity pricing of print / ebooks was seen as a hindrance to ebooks sales growth.
· Low priced e-books could devalue other editions (and the work that goes into writing, editing and producing a book).
· The dilemma: consumer expects to pay less for a digital product – like a downloaded album.
· The publishing industry would undergo huge changes with the emergence of new digital products. More than 67% said that book trade professionals should re-skill to take advantage of digital media.
· High street bookshops have most to lose from the increased use of digital content but there are potential gains for all by making reading more accessible and through appeal to younger audiences - ie mobile.
· High street bookshops should provide range of services for readers - technology, some printed books (e.g. children's books, maps, art books), advice, author readings, seminars, learning centres, event hosts, etc
· Quality of content will suffer – more does not mean better.
· Importance of interoperable e-book formats and devices.
· Mobile phones: despite the emergence of mobile phone apps, 42% said that most people would read e-books on a dedicated e-reader in the future.
· Apple would emerge as leader in the e-reader market, with Amazon second, with Sony third.
· Google Settlement still a problem - 55% did not support the revised Settlement, and 58% thought this version would be approved anyway by the US court.
· By 2025 16% said that more than half of sales would be from digital content, and just 5% said the electronic market would be less than 10% of total sales.

More than 50% of the respondents were publishers, the rest booksellers, librarians, agents and authors.

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