By
Ted Rall -
Maui Time Weekly | February 15, 2012
Why E-Books Need Print to Thrive
Borders and Barnes & Noble killed independent bookstores. Amazon killed Borders. Now Barnes & Noble, which sells more than 20 percent of pulp-and-ink books in the U.S., is under siege.
If B&N collapses: the death of books. Cultural apocalypse. Neo-feudalism.
You may remember such classics as "How the Internet Slaughtered Newspapers" and "How Napster Decimated the Music Business." It's always the same story: Digitalization destroys profits.
Whether it's newspapers, magazines, CDs or books ("pBooks," they call them now), the electronic assault on tangible media follows a familiar pattern.
First: Pricing is set too low; margins get squeezed.
I pay $43 a month to get The New York Times delivered; new digital-only subscribers get the app for $5. In the book biz per-unit net to publishers is actually a few cents higher for e-books. But that margin is deceptive. "If e-book sales start to replace some hardcover sales, the publishers say, they will still have many of the fixed costs associated with print editions, like warehouse space, but they will be spread among fewer print copies," notes the Times. E-books also eliminate paperback editions, a big second chance for publishers to break into the black.
Second: Piracy runs rampant.
Piracy of print media was virtually unheard of. But digitalization makes piracy tough for even the most honest consumer to resist. It's easy and it's fast. E-book knock-offs look and feel exactly the same as the real thing. As of the end of 2011 an estimated 20 percent of all e-books downloaded onto Kindles, Nooks and iPads were pirated. That's a 20 percent pay cut to authors, agents and publishers—a number that will only go up.
And "legal piratization" is on the horizon. On February 6th a federal court in New York City ruled that ReDigi, an online marketplace for "pre-owned" MP3 files, can continue to operate pending the outcome of a lawsuit by Capitol Records. And public libraries are already "lending" e-books to multiple "borrowers" with the click of a mouse—the same process as buying them. But free.
Third: à la carte sales whittle down revenues.
Twenty years ago if you liked a song you heard on the radio you paid $14 for a CD that had 14 songs on it—13 of which might be filler. iTunes' 99-cent songs brought back the single—but cheaper. (45s used to cost $3.) The result: the collapse of the music biz. According to Forrester Research, total U.S. music sales and licensing revenues fell from $14.6 billion in 1999 to $6.3 billion in 2009—a decline of 57 percent in a decade. People still liked music. They just didn't have to pay for it anymore.
There are already apps that sell e-books by the chapter. Some publishers give away free chapters as samples. Why should a college student assigned to read chapter two pay $40 for the whole thing? À la carte book sales will further depress profits.
Why should you care if traditional publishers go under? What about the democratizing effect of the Internet, which allows anyone—not just big-name authors hooked-up with fancy well-connected agents—to publish a book?
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