I have seen the future saviour of the publishing industry, and it’s not the agents or the executives or the distributors. It’s Starbucks. I was there for the first time today following the roll-out of Canada/USA-wide free wifi at every Starbucks location, and it really hit me how the publishing industry stands to benefit from the growing ubiquity of in-store coffee shops and free public wifi.
A COFFEE SHOP AT EVERY BOOKSTORE
In Canada, the major bookstore chain is Indigo. They are in every mall, in every community, all over the big cities and in every town. And each of them has a Starbucks—and therefore, free wifi.
The one nearest to me is literally half a block away and is located in a mall which is attached to the subway. I am a transit user and don’t drive, so this is on my way home. It is also open until 11 pm and is air-conditioned. This makes is a very pleasant and handy place to hang out if I have nothing better to do.
But is the free wifi something that will draw me into the store when I might not otherwise go? And does its presence actually lead to an increase in media consumption of print books, ebooks or anything else?
A NIGHT IN THE LIFE OF THE WIRED URBAN WARRIOR
Let’s take tonight as a case study. I was out for an hour to tutor a student, and decided to stop at Indigo on my way home. There was a cookbook I had been eying, and I wanted to have another look at it before I took the plunge. By the time I had checked things out to my satisfaction and made my purchase, I was feeling like a snack and thought I would browse my new book over a frappucino.
I was coming from tutoring and had the iPad with me—I have a pay membership at a teaching website which lets me customize and print off PDF stories, reading comprehension activities and worksheets of various types. I typically keep several on the iPad (saves paper that way!) so I always have a backup activity in case my student needs one. And it was a lucky thing I had it tonight because, unlike a paper book, I can use the iPad with one hand (and save the other for the muffin and frothy drink) and if it does get dump or crumbly, I can wipe it off easily. I didn’t want to spill frothy drink on my new paper book, so having it with me tonight definitely incited me to stay and hang at Starbucks when I wouldn’t have otherwise!
Media tally so far:
– 1 purchased e-storybook used while tutoring
– 1 purchased print cookbook from the bookstore
THE WIFI MEDIA EXPERIENCE
I tucked in with my coffee and spent ten minutes or so catching up on the news headlines. While I was reading, I got a ‘new email’ alert. One of the messages was from Zinio informing me that a new issue of a magazine I subscribe to was ready. I immediately quit Safari and opened up the Zinio app. Thanks to the free wifi, I could download the issue on the spot and start reading!
Before I packed up to go home, I opened Google Docs and put the new cookbook purchase into my budget tracker. I use several Google services and have a custom homepage set up which amalgamates some of my stuff into one convenient browser. While I was in there, I saw a reminder on my to-do list about the Smashwords sale going on right now, and I thought why not get that checked off while I was nice and comfy with the frothy drink, air conditioning and free wifi.
So I went on over to Smashwords and checked out the sale books. I passed on many of them—I have become more discriminating lately and no longer download things just because they are there—but there were a few books I sampled on the spot, and two I opted to purchase. Smashwords let me download them to iBooks right from the browser, and it also emailed me a receipt, which will be a handy reminder when I get home so I can find the books again to download onto the Macbook for backup.
Media tally so far:
– 1 purchased e-storybook used while tutoring
– 1 purchased print cookbook from the bookstore
– 3 free (but ad-filled) newspaper articles
– 1 purchased Zinio magazine
– Use of free (but ad-filled) Google services
– 2 purchased books from Smashwords (and several others sampled)
– And it’s not media, but let’s not forget the impulse fancy drink I paid Starbucks for
CONCLUSION: ALL HAIL STARBUCKS, THE SAVIOUR OF PUBLISHING
The Starbucks wifi presence did not necessarily make me purchase new media in and of itself, but it certainly facilitated it. And it definitely facilitated consumption of media I purchased already. After all, I would not have gotten a Zinio subscription in the first place if it wasn’t dead easy to download and get the magazines when they were ready. Yes, I could have waited until I got home. But why should I? Why not enjoy my paid-for new magazine issue over a pleasant treat in book-filled, air-conditioned splendor? Why not have the means to browse the new release table in person and make an informed e-purchase on the spot while the book is fresh in my mind? Why not have the means to impulse-buy at a site like Smashwords so I have something to read over a cup of coffee?
One reason soft drinks are so popular is their availability in every vending machine. One reason chips are a popular snack is their availability in every gas station and corner store. Starbucks can help publishers push books into this category. They already have a book connection in customer’s minds here because of their retail partnership with Indigo (and it is worth noting that purchase number 2 on my media-filled journey tonight was actually a print book from the bricks-and-mortar Indigo store where the Starbucks was located). But now, I can make any Starbucks an Indigo. I can sit there with my coffee and buy books, magazines or anything else I might find at the physical store. Why would this be anything but a win-win situation?
“Smashwords let me download them to iBooks right from the browser” didn’t know iBooks could do that, are you sure it’s not Stanza?
Or you could just have a 3G iPad and not have to bother with the wifi at Starbucks at all. Free hotspots are nice, but very much a stopgap solution in the long run.
Don’t Barnes n Noble sell coffee and snacks, have books, and offer wifi and ebook sales instore with the nook?
Of course, you don’t see B&N stores on every dam’ street corner in every dam’ city on the planet.
A few weeks back I met up with a friend I hadn’t seen in over a year. Because I was expecting email I brought along my Wi-Fi-only iPad and we decided on Starbucks. They had Wi-Fi, right? No, not unless you had an AT&T account I was told. Verizon, T-Mobile, and Sprint customers could go take a hike.
This is a wise change on Starbucks’ part. Too late for people like me, however. Ever since Google rolled out Android 2.2 my Nexus One smartphone has been a portable Wi-Fi hotspot on demand. I can go to reasonably-priced coffee shops now, or a Mexican Grill, or wherever I wish, and have all the connectivity I need no matter which Wi-Fi device I bring along. At no extra charge, it’s all included in the regular T-Mobile plan.
Mi-Fi in your pocket, in a device that you’d be taking along anyway, is the future. No need for Starbucks to browse and buy ebooks when any place you wish is your bookstore.
@asotir: at our barnes & nobles, the coffeeshops are…
Starbucks!
Actually, the coffeeshops in B&N aren’t actually Starbucks; they just serve Starbucks coffee. (That’s why they don’t take Starbucks gift cards as payment.) But B&N has its own free (formerly pay) wifi.
B&N stores vary. Some have no coffee shop, some have a Starbucks attached to them, and some have a B&N Café that serves Starbucks coffee.
If you can order a coffee without paying for your purchases, you’re in a B&N Café. If you have to check out first, you’re going from B&N into Starbucks.
Not that it matters much for this topic. B&N stores do have their own Wi-Fi system, which is recognized by their NOOK readers as special and is treated by the NOOK as the preferred networking option. The NOOKs provide additional features when connected to a B&N Wi-Fi, such as “Read In Store” which allows you to read an e-book you haven’t bought for an hour a day.
Take away from all this: Anyplace that allows you to loiter around for awhile becomes your ebookstore. That’s great… however, some public places are beginning to limit the amount of time you can “loiter,” and are even telling computer users not to hang around. I haven’t seen a Starbucks employee telling anyone to get lost, but you may have to be choosy about where you hang out for too long.
The commuter train’s not bad either… I get an hour to browse and buy, each way, five days a week…