Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Amazon Kindle sales stats easily misinterpreted

You may have seen the headline earlier this week: E-Books Top Hardcovers at Amazon in the New York Times.

Sometimes it is important to dig a bit into a story to see what is hype and what is reality. While the information is true and, amazingly, in just a couple years Kindle sales have skyrocketed resulting in huge e-book sales at Amazon and other online merchants. However book sales consist of several formats and are not all hardcovers. In fact hardcovers are around one third of book sales with other sales divided between trade paper and mass market paperback. Also, Amazon has been selling Kindle versions of bestselling hardcovers at around ten dollars compared to the normal average list price of twenty-five dollars for a print copy. Many decisions for purchasing a Kindle download are made at point of sale. In other words, the customer is shown two choices. They can buy the print version or save a substantial amount by downloading a Kindle copy.

So while this is certainly worthwhile news it is not as earth shattering as what Amazon would like us to believe.

Will e-book sales continue to grow? You bet.

Is the printed book going the way of the dial tone? Not at all.

If one drills down into the statistics they will find that some genre sell extremely well as e-books while others are best suited as print copies.

Let's say you want to read the latest novel from John Grisham. You may be tempted to buy the e-book and load it onto your reading device so you can bring it along on an upcoming trip.

For other books you may want to have them in your library as a reference. In those cases you may prefer to have a printed copy.

Bottom line is that e-books are a great option and we, as consumers, like having choices in how we access our media. Rather than e-books being the way all books will someday be acquired, instead we will have multiple ways to access written content. What is important is that we embrace both future, present and past technologies so that the consumer can receive written content in whatever way they wish.

It would be a mistake to embrace one technology and cast off all others.

Will these changes in how written content is accessed make our lives more complicated. Absolutely. Get used to it.

Today we have so many choices in how to broadcast our intellectual content. From starting a blog to publishing conventionally, and everything in between, there has never been a time when we have had so many opportunities to share information.

Truly a great time to be alive!