Active Users:227 Time:18/05/2024 06:11:36 AM
E-books could spell the end for hardbacks, warns Hachette chief everynametaken Send a noteboard - 31/08/2009 04:32:35 AM
Hardback books could be killed off if Amazon’s e-books and Google’s digital library force publishers to slash prices, Arnaud Nourry, chief executive of French publishing group Hachette, has warned.

EbooksMr Nourry said unilateral pricing by Google, Amazon and other e-book retailers such as Barnes & Noble could destroy publishers’ profits.

He said publishers were “very hostile” to Amazon’s pricing strategy – over which the online retailer failed to consult publishers – to charge $9.99 for all its e-books in the US. He also pointed to plans by Google to put millions of out-of-copyright books online for public use.

“On the one hand, you have millions of books for free where there is no longer an author to pay and, on the other hand, there are very recent books, bestsellers at $9.99, which means that all the rest will have to be sold at between zero and $9.99,” Mr Nourry said.

There was a real and “muscular” debate in the industry in the US, he added. Retailers were paying publishers more than $9.99 for each e-book, so were selling them at a loss: “That cannot last?.?.?.?Amazon is not in the business of losing money. So, one day, they are going to come to the publishers and say: by the way, we are cutting the price we pay. If that happens, after paying the authors, there will be nothing left for the publishers.”

Some rival publishers have expressed concern in private at Amazon’s fixed $9.99 per title pricing on its Kindle electronic reader. Others note the minimal costs of distributing books electronically mean they can make higher profit margins even with lower prices than in print.

Mr Nourry’s comments come as analysts predict a growth spurt for the still-niche electronic reader market, with wireless devices from Sony, Plastic Logic and others due to compete with the Kindle.

Resistance to the Google books project from European libraries appears to be easing, with the National Library of France confirming this month that it was working with the US internet giant. But European publishers say they are determined to defend their rights.

Mr Nourry said Hachette – the world’s second largest publisher of books by sales – wanted to work with Google because of its formidable online presence. But he called on the group to be “more reasonable” in its dealing with French publishing houses.

Interesting article. Personally, I could see publishers making hard covers something like a special order item or a special edition with some kind of bonus material (an interview or something of the sort maybe?). They'll have to do something, even in the digital age for those who collect and demand hard covers.
Still, I find myself reminiscing about the pre-Internet days when I was a kid, how simpler things were. It truly is a digital age now when paper print sources like newspapers are going Online and now publishers are eyeing the end of hard cover books.
But wine was the great assassin of both tradition and propriety...
-Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings
FT.com
Reply to message
E-books could spell the end for hardbacks, warns Hachette chief - 31/08/2009 04:32:35 AM 888 Views
I wouldn't put too much stock into that anytime soon - 31/08/2009 05:07:02 AM 595 Views
I agree with you very much on that last sentence. - 31/08/2009 05:50:37 AM 520 Views
Re: I agree with you very much on that last sentence. - 31/08/2009 08:27:02 AM 520 Views
Re: I agree with you very much on that last sentence. - 31/08/2009 02:12:37 PM 458 Views
ha! file under trends i have unwittingly become part of... - 31/08/2009 09:18:39 PM 519 Views
I only buy hardcovers and am willing to pay a premium for them - 31/08/2009 05:11:26 AM 500 Views
I like tradepaper backs too. - 31/08/2009 05:17:08 AM 508 Views
Re: I like tradepaper backs too. - 31/08/2009 02:16:25 PM 479 Views
Re: I like tradepaper backs too. - 01/09/2009 05:25:35 AM 513 Views
It was Malazan that introduced me to trade paperback, as well. - 01/09/2009 09:01:24 PM 462 Views
You were one person I was thinking about when I posted this. - 01/09/2009 05:22:33 AM 519 Views
I doubt hardcopy books are doomed. - 31/08/2009 05:13:38 AM 538 Views
I don't see it working for a while - 31/08/2009 05:36:31 AM 452 Views
Re: I doubt hardcopy books are doomed. - 31/08/2009 02:04:47 PM 550 Views
I don't agree with the comparison. *NM* - 01/09/2009 05:31:37 AM 233 Views
I read the majority of my books on a screen these days. - 31/08/2009 08:29:51 AM 538 Views
How long did it take to get used to? *NM* - 31/08/2009 09:48:42 PM 220 Views
Re: I read the majority of my books on a screen these days. - 01/09/2009 05:37:35 AM 449 Views
I imagine that it's paperbacks which are under more of a threat - 31/08/2009 04:26:26 PM 511 Views
Can you write in the margins of academic ebooks? *NM* - 31/08/2009 09:50:12 PM 230 Views
I don't write in the margins of any printed book - 01/09/2009 04:24:11 PM 466 Views
Re: I imagine that it's paperbacks which are under more of a threat - 01/09/2009 05:46:12 AM 469 Views
Someday, I would love to see - 02/09/2009 03:10:39 AM 510 Views
well, i'd say yes, but no... - 31/08/2009 07:22:51 PM 505 Views
Re: well, i'd say yes, but no... - 01/09/2009 06:02:14 AM 478 Views
God, I hope not. I hate reading on screen. *NM* - 01/09/2009 07:08:07 PM 301 Views
Agreed. - 02/09/2009 05:29:18 PM 511 Views
I think the flaw in the logic of most publishing companies... - 02/09/2009 03:05:49 AM 501 Views

Reply to Message