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Editor’s note: Kudos to Florrie Binford Kichler of Patria Press, who sent in the essay below in response to our call for reader contributions. She is president of the Independent Book Publishers Association. Got anything on your mind? Speak up if it’s relevant. No organizational title needed.

That’s what early e-book proponents promised us a decade ago, and while we may get there eventually, my prediction is that it will take another generation to do so. The major sticking point of the e-book readers—including the Kindle—to date is that they have been limited to a proprietary format only available from one vendor. Until a “universal reader” appears that gives equal time to all content file formats and vendors, the reader’s consumption and purchase of electronic books will be restricted—as will the publisher’s profits.

Needed: Conversions to universal e-format

Whether smaller and independent publishers convert their titles to the Kindle format now or wait until the reader proves itself for the long haul is a business decision only they can make. What I would recommend is that they position themselves now for the e-book future. At the very least, convert books to the most universal electronic format available, check older publishing contracts to insure that the electronic rights clause reflects the reality of today’s marketplace, and begin thinking about a new way of marketing where pixels replace paper as the prime method of content delivery.

Excerpt from “Reflections on the Kindle,” from the Independent, newsletter of the Independent Book Publishers Association, May, 2008 issue.

 
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