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Books Businesses

Bookstores Are Struggling. Is a New E-Commerce Site the Answer? (nytimes.com) 29

The rapid rise of Bookshop.org during the shutdown has been hailed as a boon for independent stores. But some booksellers worry it could become another competitor for online business. From a report: In January, when Andy Hunter, the publisher of a small press, started an online bookstore that he pitched as the indie alternative to Amazon, many in the book business had their doubts. Earlier efforts to create a portal for independent booksellers had done little to chip away at Amazon's market share, and even retailers like Barnes & Noble have struggled to compete. Mr. Hunter felt there was an unexploited opportunity. Seizing even a fraction of Amazon's sales would be a windfall for independent stores, which would receive a cut of the site's profits. Mr. Hunter told investors that within two years, his site, Bookshop, could reach $30 million in annual sales, a projection that struck some as wildly optimistic. Then, in March, the coronavirus pandemic forced bookstores across the United States to shut their doors. Hundreds of bookstore owners, many of whom couldn't enter their stores to fulfill online or phone orders, joined the new site.

Now Bookshop is on track to exceed $40 million in sales this year, blowing past the sum that Mr. Hunter initially hoped to reach by 2022. The site sold some $4.5 million of books in May, and more than $7 million in the first two weeks of June. More than 750 bookstores have joined, and Bookshop has generated more than $3.6 million for stores. The company is preparing to expand its operations to Britain later this year, where it plans to partner with the book wholesaler Gardners. "There were a number of skeptics about whether this would work," said Bradley Graham, co-owner of Politics & Prose in Washington. "Bookshop has certainly worked better than anybody anticipated, because nobody anticipated a pandemic." Some wonder whether Bookshop will remain a viable player in the online retail ecosystem as stores begin to reopen, and customers who turned to the site during the shutdown revert to in-store and curbside shopping. Meanwhile, Amazon, which accounts for some 70 percent of online book sales, has strengthened its position as the world's largest online retailer. The company reported $75.5 billion in sales during its most recent fiscal quarter, a 26 percent increase from the year-ago quarter.

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Bookstores Are Struggling. Is a New E-Commerce Site the Answer?

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  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday June 16, 2020 @03:21PM (#60190080)

    Bookstores didn't provide a useful enough service, so people switched to Amazon.

    • Bookstores didn't provide a useful enough service, so people switched to Amazon.

      No. People switched to Amazon to save money.

      However, the savings is not that great. Go ahead and shop for that paperback you want, after S&H, it is not cheap.

      Amazon like all e-retailers, use shipping and handling as a profit center. That is why when you buy enough for free shipping, Amazon sits on the order but when you PAY for faster shipping, you get it sooner - even though it IS coming out of the SAME distribution center. Here in Atlanta, we would get free 2-day shipping when we hit the $25 for an

      • Bookstores didn't provide a useful enough service, so people switched to Amazon.

        No. People switched to Amazon to save money.

        No, we switched away from B&N largely because they decided that locking us into a Nook (app or device) was the way to go.

        Unfortunately, we have other options for our ebooks, so we not only won't buy ebooks from them, we won't buy paper books from them either....

        • The Nook is an extremely good eBook reader.
          And there is no lock whatsoever, it mounts as an USB drive on PCs an Macs.
          (Facepalm)

          • Historical note: Nook originally did try DRM, and it lost them market share, so CrimsonAvenger is right. But Nook then reversed direction and pioneered the abandonment of DRM for ereaders. So angel'o'sphere is right.
    • I think Bookstores, Record Stores and what were Movie Rentals, etc... Seemed to have an image problem. Snooty owners who loved their products so much, that they get snotty at you for buying the Pop-Culture Crap, while not taking an interest at the real Gems (in their opinion). Oh I see you getting "Harry Potter", You really should get the "Chronicles of Narnia" Trust me the movies doesn't give it justice you will enjoy it better.

      It is like going to the Apple Store saying wanting to know how much is the Wi

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        What is really happening is people are drifting to more active content on the internet, rather than passive content. I used a read a lot, a book a day and now, none. I get it all from the internet, the bit of passive content and lots of interactive content.

        Fiction books are competing with all other available content and they are not winning. Games, blogs, forums all interactive even schools are starting to get there, build interactive content for children to play with after hours, social building content, s

    • Books are one of my main hobbies.
      The discovery process is completely different - Amazon is like a fire hose, you need to be careful how to drink from it.
      No one can emulate the smell of old books in a local store, or the cheap prices - there are often deals for $0.50-2, but selection vary.
      I think the two are going to co-exist for a while.
  • DRMed files that require fragile technology that becomes obsolete within half a decade are damn convenient, but centuries from now, our descendants will curse us and our bitrotted culture.

    • I think there is a better chance they won't be able to read the physical storage, than they won't be able to break the DRM, with their newest technology.
      Remember what Enigma was used for?
  • It really is!

  • "Sir, our business plan won't work in the current economic environment."
    "Then we'll have to change the environment. I have a friend who does bat research..."

    NOTE There is zero evidence that the coronavirus was human-made or deliberately distributed. There is, in fact, evidence to the contrary. This post is strictly an attempt at humor, not an endorsement of anyone's crackpot coronavirus conspiracy theories.
  • But some booksellers worry it could become another competitor for online business

    I understand, why booksellers worry about competition, but I don't get, why TFA implies, the rest of us should share the concern.

    Competition among retailers, manufacturers, and service-providers is a good thing for us, the consumers.

  • I read a huge number of books on my kindle, mostly but not limited to kindle unlimited. It is easy to find new books, instant downloading, and the kindle itself does not strain my eyes. I am very unhappy about the lock-in, inability to load my own audio content even though you can use audible audiobooks, and so on. I would be a prime customer if these guys would sell digital and they could do it like this:
    Make recommendations about book readers for example if I want to buy PDF magazines I will need a large

  • Now everything is online. Even CD stores are suffering because people can just download. Same with books. Instead of buying, people can download e-book on kindle.
  • So 750 stores share $3.600,000. That works out to only $4800 per store. is that really going to help independent bookstores stay in business? Even if that were $4800 per month I'm not so sure it would help too many stores stay in business.

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