Sep 11

More readers, more formats, not enough e-book content

Tag: Devices, E-booksEllen Hage @ 8:32 pm

CybookHere we go again.  In the past week we got news about Amazon’s Kindle, Cybook is due anytime now, and a brief peak at the new Sony reader.  Everyone is excited; hopes are high that the e-book is finally coming into its own.  In my opinion we could have ten devices coming out and it still doesn’t change the things that need to be changed.  That’s the prolific proprietary formats, along with availability and price of content.  There are just too many formats and I believe that it is a barrier to new adopters.   The average person picking up a Sony reader doesn’t know this.  Most people don’t know about Project Gutenberg. That’s why Sony can act like they are giving customers a gift buy offering 100 classics for free. It’s not until they get it home and set up that they realize that they are locked into Sony for content and locked out of other sites that sell e-books.  Then they question, “Which format works with what device and why isn’t content available for all devices?”   Format confusion and the fact that you can’t get your books from where you please, are a turn off.  Unless they happen to stumble across user forums to overcome this, the device just may sit on a shelf or find its way to EBay.  Another barrier is pricing.  If a person buys a book for $20, after reading it, he or she could choose to sell it, share it with a friend.  E-books can’t do that, so why must we pay the same price as a hardback?  This must change.  In order for technology acceptance to take place, there has to be perceived usefulness.  There has to be some incentive for the customer to move to digital reading.  After all they just paid the average of $300 for the device and now pay the same price for an e-book as a paper book. Lastly, availability of e-books needs to increase.  I would love to buy older books that are no longer in print as well as new books on release date in e-book format.  When I think back to my first device, it got little use simply because I couldn’t find anything that I wanted to read.  If I didn’t know better, I would think that e-book device makers are setting up their wares for failure. 

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15 Responses to “More readers, more formats, not enough e-book content”

  1. Nikolay
    1

    I totally agree. It’s strange, the price is so high. 6 inch device is not a good book to read in many cases. I’m eager to get a device for me, since i travel a lot. I’m waiting for new generation to come. The Supply is not as wide as i expected to see. that’s why every vendor wants to have it’s own proprietary format.

    Reply to this comment.
  2. Don Slaymaker
    2

    Ellen, I wonder if someone (you may be in an ideal position to influence this) could set up a business to reformat existing ebooks for a fee. Conceptually this would be like someone buying a Ford and customizing it for resell. It would still provide income to the author & publisher but would be a value added service. Admittedly it would probably be a short term career since it wouldn’t be long before the publishers got on that band wagon but it might be a way to jump start the ebook industry. I’m sure there would be some legal ramifications but that could be worked out by enriching some lawyers.

    Reply to this comment.
  3. Bob Martinengo
    3

    I was reading Business Week and came across this article about how Nokia researches a new product - heres a clip from the article and a clip to it:

    “Our process starts with a team of anthropologists and psychologists working in our design group. They spend time with specific types of people around the world to understand how they behave and communicate. This helps us to understand better and to spot early signals of new patterns of behavior that could be harnessed into mobile communication. Our designers often go out into the field to understand the world they are designing for. All of these observations are brought into the design process to inspire and inform our ideas”

    http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/aug2007/id20070810_686743.htm?chan=search

    Now, if Nokia were to design an ebook reader, what do you think their ‘team of anthropologists’ would discover? Probably that not enough people want such a thing to make it worth designing in the first place.

    Reply to this comment.
  4. Rob Preece
    4

    While I agree that high prices are a barrier for eBook adoption (which is one reason I set aggressively low prices for http://www.BooksForABuck.com), I think the issue of book resale is a bit of a red herring. When I take a couple of hundred dollars worth of books to my local used bookstore, I think I’m fortunate if I get ten bucks back. I save more than that in not having to drive to the bookstore to buy the books in the first place.

    Rob Preece
    Publisher, http://www.BooksForABuck.com

    Reply to this comment.
  5. Ellen Hage
    5

    I totally agree. It’s strange, the price is so high. 6 inch device is not a good book to read in many cases. I’m eager to get a device for me, since i travel a lot. I’m waiting for new generation to come. The Supply is not as wide as i expected to see. that’s why every vendor wants to have it’s own proprietary format.

    They want their cake and eat it too. Inspite of diminishing sales, they can’t get their mind around charging less for getting less (no physical copy). As if e-book fans should be extra for the priviledge. They think that proprietary will endear us to them, but it doesn’t. They keep thinking new device not fix formats.

    Ellen

    Reply to this comment.
  6. Ellen Hage
    6

    Ellen, I wonder if someone (you may be in an ideal position to influence this) could set up a business to reformat existing ebooks for a fee. Conceptually this would be like someone buying a Ford and customizing it for resell. It would still provide income to the author & publisher but would be a value added service. Admittedly it would probably be a short term career since it wouldn’t be long before the publishers got on that band wagon but it might be a way to jump start the ebook industry. I’m sure there would be some legal ramifications but that could be worked out by enriching some lawyers.

    Don, I believe that publishers already have the capabilities now to do so. I wouldn’t be surprised if they have their stuff already in the more popular formats and are holding out for the ideal time. That would be if there really could be an ipod of e-books. Still it is a good idea for a business. By the time it comes to its height, maybe there would be a buyout deal.

    Ellen

    Reply to this comment.
  7. Ellen Hage
    7

    While I agree that high prices are a barrier for eBook adoption (which is one reason I set aggressively low prices for http://www.BooksForABuck.com), I think the issue of book resale is a bit of a red herring. When I take a couple of hundred dollars worth of books to my local used bookstore, I think I’m fortunate if I get ten bucks back. I save more than that in not having to drive to the bookstore to buy the books in the first place.

    Rob PreecePublisher, http://www.BooksForABuck.com

    The low sell back price is why I never sold my textbooks. Then the school turns around and charges almost full price. Then there are the yard sales and in order to get the book to sell, they are like pennies a piece. But these are the excuses I hear each and every time I tell students about e-books.

    Ellen

    Reply to this comment.
  8. Ellen Hage
    8

    I was reading Business Week and came across this article about how Nokia researches a new product - heres a clip from the article and a clip to it:
    “Our process starts with a team of anthropologists and psychologists working in our design group. They spend time with specific types of people around the world to understand how they behave and communicate. This helps us to understand better and to spot early signals of new patterns of behavior that could be harnessed into mobile communication. Our designers often go out into the field to understand the world they are designing for. All of these observations are brought into the design process to inspire and inform our ideas”
    http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/aug2007/id20070810_686743.htm?chan=search
    Now, if Nokia were to design an ebook reader, what do you think their ‘team of anthropologists’ would discover? Probably that not enough people want such a thing to make it worth designing in the first place.

    Why can’t they just ask consumers what they want? A simple appearance and request/survey on an e-book forum would give them more information than they would ever want. And sadly I think you are right, anthropologists would come back with the human need for tactile contact to absorb abstract and concrete data.

    Ellen

    Reply to this comment.
  9. charlie Tall
    9

    I would love to see older out of print books as e-books. Im now finding ( series ) ebooks starting with book 2 and even 3. Besides the high pricing,secure and non-secure format madness, who ever is running the many dog and pony shows of e-bookland are sure not paying attention to those of us that make it all possible. THE CONSUMER. So how about a good ole 60s boycott? AH THE HECK WITH IT. I would just break weak the minute “George R R Martins” next book comes out. Who am I tryin to kid.

    Reply to this comment.
  10. jorgen
    10

    All true, Ellen, with the small but important modification that you can now re-download your existing multiformat ebooks bought at Fictionwise in Sony Reader format. Lots of good books are in multiformat.

    Reply to this comment.
  11. Ellen Hage
    11
    Author Comment

    Jorgen,
    Thanks for reminding me. I have a few multi-format books. Mostly Warren Adler. I really like his books. Now he’s a great example of a successful author that understands and endorses ebooks without DRM. I have rarely seen any of his books in pirate form. There’s no need to. I need to take the time and give multi-format authors a chance.

    thanks,

    Ellen

    Reply to this comment.
  12. Ellen Hage
    12
    Author Comment

    I would love to see older out of print books as e-books. Im now finding ( series ) ebooks starting with book 2 and even 3. Besides the high pricing,secure and non-secure format madness, who ever is running the many dog and pony shows of e-bookland are sure not paying attention to those of us that make it all possible. THE CONSUMER. So how about a good ole 60s boycott? AH THE HECK WITH IT. I would just break weak the minute “George R R Martins” next book comes out. Who am I tryin to kid.

    I feel you. It’s just not publishers who have forgotten who their bosses really are. I find that most product and service providers act as though they are doing us a favor.

    Ellen

    Reply to this comment.
  13. charlie Tall
    13

    I would love to see older out of print books as e-books. Im now finding ( series ) ebooks starting with book 2 and even 3. Besides the high pricing,secure and non-secure format madness, who ever is running the many dog and pony shows of e-bookland are sure not paying attention to those of us that make it all possible. THE CONSUMER. So how about a good ole 60s boycott? AH THE HECK WITH IT. I would just break weak the minute “George R R Martins” next book comes out. Who am I tryin to kid.

    I feel you. It’s just not publishers who have forgotten who their bosses really are. I find that most product and service providers act as though they are doing us a favor.
    Ellen

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    Reply to this comment.
  14. charlie Tall
    14

    Just read a blog at MobileRead,ePUB, newly approved IDPF standard.Dare we hope? Charlie

    Reply to this comment.

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