4

thumb.php.jpg

A while back I was talking to an Australian who has been in the book publishing biz since Adam was on a skateboard. We were talking about other stuff, and I was bemoaning how it was that one industry (book publishing) didn’t learn from the recent mistakes of a similar industry (music publishing). Off the record (that’s why he doesn’t get a name here) he told me:

“Truth is, I know the major publishers in this country saw the ebook writing on the wall, but they’ve done everything they can to stave off the change. They knew it would come but they figured if they could hold it off for a few extra years, they could bank these massive profits off $30 paperbacks, which would bankroll the costs involved in swapping over to ebooks.”

Just stop and have a think about that. Keep in mind that this person is a straight-shooter and had nothing to gain my making this up.I believe this – not only because I’ve watched the moves (of lack thereof) of the local book industry over the last decade, and they fit. I also believe it because the person who said this clearly believed it, and he/she should know. He/she knows Australian publishing backwards, forwards, and from multiple angles.

Lobbying the government to maintain protectionist legislation, setting prices WAY higher than overseas vendors citing higher freight and other costs, scaremongering about change and the demise of the industry’s ability to “foster local talent” (without doing a hellava lot of, um, fostering local talent). Blind Freddy could see that many – not all – Australian booksellers thought this way.

But to have it spelled out to me as a strategic decision that many major publishers have taken, at the expense of the reading public (it has been demonstrated that at least some of whom, if not all, want to embrace ebooks), well that takes my breath away.

But to quote the great Newman, “There’s karma, Kramer.” Those companies that have sat on their hands and banked the big bikkies while the move to ebooks was something other people did, well they’re reaping what they’ve sewn now. In this country, that’s everyone except Borders, ain’t it, kids?

The industry is fragmenting. The barrier to entry from ebook publishers is miniscule, compared to that of the large-scale printing and distribution of p-books. New micro-publishers are starting up almost daily. Did you hear that? There’s a new one now: Naked Reader. With tiny overheads, you only need to service a tiny publishing niche to survive.

As well as an industry in fragmentation, a few companies – the ones that have planned and worked to embrace ebooks – are consolidating. Like Amazon and it’s various self-publishing portals. Even dead folk are awake to that fact that maybe they don’t need to give 40-70% of their work’s sales price to a publisher if they don’t want to. That’s why Andrew Wylie is the antichrist of publishing, to some. Even if the change-resistant publishers suddenly embrace ebooks tomorrow (stop laughing, please), they’re now too far behind to catch up. Their paper book cash cow is dwindling, and they haven’t got a piece of the growing new action. They’re screwed from both ends.

Old-school publishers, you’d better have made some mad bank in the last five years. You’ve certainly made a bit from me. You’re gonna need it to fight a few little companies you may have  heard of: Apple, Amazon, Google …

Editor’s Note: reprinted, with permission, from journalist Jason Davis’ Book Bee blog.  PB

 
4