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If we look back to the beginning of the agency model in ebooks, which began a little more than one year ago, we can find the publishers’ claimed rationale for changing models (which occurred with a mighty push from Apple): to protect ebooks from becoming mere commodities and to prevent consumers from establishing a mindset that $9.99 is the right price point. Okay, that was the rationale, coupled with a fear of Amazon becoming too powerful, that was bandied about. The question is: Were publishers successful in preventing the commoditization of books?

The reports from the Agency 6 indicate that ebooks are rapidly becoming a significant source of revenue for publishers, perhaps even their primary growth area. Latest reports show growth in ebook sales (Barnes & Noble reports 140% rise in digital sales; Hachette reports ebooks as 20% of U.S. sales and 5% of worldwide sales; Penguin and Simon & Schuster report digital as 14% and 15% of revenue, respectively; Bertelsmann/Random House reports digital sales in the first six months of 2011 as exceeding all digital sales in 2010);  and a significant decline in mass market paperbacks (down 14%). Profits are up slightly, even though volume appears to be down somewhat. All of which seems to favor the notion that the publishers did the right thing.

What we don’t know, of course, is how the sales are breaking down by price point. I can relate anecdotal evidence that the agency pricing scheme is a failure on several levels, but no data has been released that enables a careful analysis.

I’ve mentioned it before, yet it is still true: Whereas before agency pricing I bought a lot of hardcover books and ebooks from the Big 6 publishers, my purchases have declined since the institution of agency. Whereas I used to visit my local Barnes & Noble at least once a week and buy a few books each time, it has been nearly five months since I last visited the store and bought an Agency 6-published book.

If the Agency 6 intended by their action to make me accept spending more than $9.99 for an ebook, they have failed — and failed miserably – because I am pretty unwilling to accept even $9.99, let alone a higher price point, as the sweet price point. Instead, I’ve gotten used to the indie author price points of $5 and less, with less being the dominant word.

I still occasionally “buy” an Agency 6 book, when they offer it for less than $5 or offer a bundle, such as three ebooks for $9.99, but more often when they offer an ebook for free. Agency pricing has backfired not only with me but with nearly all of my acquaintances who buy ebooks. The principal hurdle for the Agency 6 to overcome is the lack of physicality of the ebook.

Even though I and my friends have transitioned to ebooks and much prefer reading on our electronic devices to reading the pbook version, we have not made the price transition, and it is that transition that the publishers need (want?) us to make. Yet it is the publishers who have made the problem worse.

Publishers do not accept the idea that a book is a book is a book, regardless of whether it is electronic or print. In contrast, consumers like me have always thought that a book is a book is a book, regardless of form. We understand the difference between a hardcover and a paperback because we can both see and feel those differences; consequently, over decades we have become accustomed to paying more for a hardcover than for a paperback, perceiving — rightly or wrongly — greater value in a hardcover than in a paperback. (In fact, it was this perceived disparity that brought about the rise of the trade paperback. The trade paperback is perceived by consumers as offering less physical quality than a hardcover but more than a mass market paperback, and thus worth a price between the two.) But we continue to have difficulty wrapping our heads around the idea that, even though it lacks physicality, the ebook is worth more than the paperback and the hardcover (ever note how many times the ebook price is higher than the hardcover price or so close to it that there is little price differential?) at worst, and worth more than the paperback and only slightly less than the hardcover at best, or that it is worth the same as the trade paperback.

Because we have difficulty wrapping our heads around the agency pricing continuum, we have spent more time and money buying indie books, which seem to be priced more logically. Thus, I suspect that our experience is the experience of many ebookers; that is, we buy more indie ebooks than agency ebooks (with some exception).

The Agency 6, however, can point to the rise in revenues, and sometimes even in net income, they are experiencing, which is occurring even in the face of declining volume numbers and is attributable to increased ebook sales at the higher agency price. It is mixing, I think, apples and oranges in the sense that I suspect the biggest growth in volume and dollars is occurring in the indie/non-Agency 6 ebook market, not in the Agency 6 market. So the question not being asked or answered is this: What would the Agency 6 ebook sales volume and profits be if they had let the market do the pricing? Would their growth be significantly higher than what is being reported and would their net income be more marginal?

Also not asked and answered is what effect the commoditization has on consumer buying habits. Ultimately, will this cause even hardcover sales to decline significantly? This takes us back to the questions raised earlier in Clashing Perspectives: Coming Home to Roost and leaves us in the same place.

I used to “revere” books that I purchased. After all, I paid a lot of money for a hardcover and I treated it reverently. Take one off my library shelf and it appears in virtually the same condition as when I bought it. I wouldn’t let my children borrow one of the books until they learned how to handle them gently and carefully. None of this matters with my ebooks. Even if an ebook is accidentally deleted and the bits and bytes written over, I can replace it for free from my backup and have it in the same condition as when I bought it. There is no need to be reverent. Thus, the ebook is viewed as a commodity — a book is a book is a book.

Via An American Editor

7 COMMENTS

  1. Since when have books not been commodities? Only when they were being written by hand. As soon as the printing press came along, they became commodities. But that’s the market. For the individual reader, a book may be something else entirely, hence the arguments about feel and smell, and how a book looks. Until it falls into your hands, your pristine hardcover is no less a commodity than any other book, including an ebook. To me, the book I just wrote isn’t a commodity. When it hits the marketplace, it is, and has to compete, just like any other commodity. What the big 6 don’t get is that they now have to compete for readers, not just with each other, but with thousands like me.

  2. In my case, since I bought my first ereader, I’ve switched from print to digital. I will never go back to print. I’ve always bought a lot of books, but price has always been a consideration. I rarely bought hardbacks due to price. Now, I only buy print books when my book club selects a book that either isn’t available in digital form or the digital edition is too expensive. I’m not going to spend $15 for a book when I can get a used copy for a penny plus $3.99 postage. Before agency pricing, I spent a lot of money on ebooks each month. With the rise in prices, I started visiting my local downloadable library. There’s usually a waiting list for best sellers, but I have more than enough to read. I’ve been keeping a list of the ebooks I checked out of the library. At current prices, I’ve saved almost $600.

  3. ‘If the Agency 6 intended by their action to make me accept spending more than $9.99 for an ebook, they have failed — and failed miserably – because I am pretty unwilling to accept even $9.99, let alone a higher price point, as the sweet price point. Instead, I’ve gotten used to the indie author price points of $5 and less, with less being the dominant word’ Me, too! Before agency I paid $9.99 for ebooks without much thought. Since agency I have turned to the library for Big 6 books because I don’t want to wait for them to come down to $9.99 (if they every do!) Not wanting to haul physical books around all the time, I still buy many indie ebooks, and their lower prices have reset my highest acceptable price point to $7. So I must thank those folks willing to pay high agency prices – they keep the bestselling authors writing while folks like me keep the indie authors in business and I get to pick from them all.

  4. I have decided to only purchase free books for a year and then see how it goes. Well at this point I have about 60 books to read and there are more coming every day. So my new price point it free. I am sure the big 6 are happy about that…

  5. I won’t buy ebooks that cost more that the cheapest new print version. I don’t like spending more than £5/$8 on an ebook. Only in exceptional circumstances would I pay more. And often I’ll only buy ebooks during some kind of promotion or sale. The result is that the mean price I’ve paid for the (numerous) non-free ebooks I’ve read since the beginning of 2010 is $3.35 (maximum $10.83, minimum $0.51, median $3.40, mode $3.75) The only time I’d pay (say) $15 for an ebook is if it’s an early release (before hardback) of a book in a series or from an author that I really like. And I’ve only done that a couple of times.

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