Thursday, November 3, 2011

Amazon Lending Books - good or bad for the author?

Change is difficult. I'm sure we're going to see a lot of chatter about this one...I'm not so quick to say lending books is bad. Bad for who? Not for Amazon. Maybe not for the publishing company. They are being compensated. Amazon has been working a deal with them. Not all companies are participating, yet. I predict all the big ones will! 
Question: what does it mean for the author?

Think about Apple's iTunes. The music industry was against it. Now look. Buying a single song for $0.99 works. Artists, record labels, everyone is benefiting.
Think Netflix. Streaming movies...brilliant!
Are we surprised books are next? Shouldn't be. It just how does everyone in the supply chain get compensated. 

...so here's the article from Fox News.

As the e-reader and tablet wars heat up, Amazon.com Inc. is launching a digital-book lending library that will be available only to owners of its Kindle and Kindle Fire devices who are also subscribers to its Amazon Prime program.
The program will be limited, at least at the beginning, in what is available to borrow. Amazon will initially offer slightly more than 5,000 titles in the library, including more than 100 current and former national bestsellers, such as Stephen R. Covey's "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People."

None of the six largest publishers in the US are participating. Several senior publishing executives said recently they were concerned that a digital-lending program of the sort contemplated by Amazon would harm future sales of their older titles or damage ties to other book retailers.

Moreover, Amazon will restrict borrowers to one title at a time, one per month. Borrowers can keep a book for as long as they like, but when they borrow a new title, the previously borrowed book automatically disappears from their device.
The new program, called Kindle Owners' Lending Library, cannot be accessed via apps on other devices, which means it won't work on Apple Inc.'s iPad or iPhone, even though people can read Kindle books on both devices. This restriction is intended to drive Kindle device sales, says Amazon.

The program, which is effective Thursday, comes a few weeks before Amazon ships the Kindle Fire tablet on Nov. 15, which is a direct competitor with the iPad.
The lending library reflects a broader effort by Amazon to lure consumers to Prime, a service that costs $79 a year.

Amazon Prime began as a membership plan to offer package-shipping perks. Then, earlier this year Prime added a video-streaming feature to the subscription. Nearly 13,000 movies and TV shows are now available under the streaming feature.
Amazon, the market leader in e-readers, made Kindle titles available to libraries beginning in September and libraries said the impact already has been significant.

At the Seattle public-library system, e-book borrowing rose 32 percent in the month after Kindle books became available, said Seattle's electronic-resources librarian Kirk Blankenship. E-book borrowing had typically been rising 10 percent or 15 percent a month, he said.

Norm Applegate author of:

2 comments:

  1. All the way around bad for publisher and authors. Mainly because Amazon doesn't give a publisher a choice about whether they want their books given away for free. They say they can opt out of the program, and who wouldn't want to if their books are going to be given away for free, but no author I know of as ever been able to get that link to work before the window of opportunity closed on them. No big deal. B&N does the same thing with their lending library. Not sure how they get away with it. But alas they do. That's why I'll never put a nook on B&N or kindle on Amazon. You can buy a nook or kindle of my books all day long from my publisher. Instantly downloadable and everything. Amazon and B&N are simply using their lending/stealing library to sell their nook and kindle readers. Not with this authors books they won't. You want my stories. You'll pay for them. ;)

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  2. I look forward to your thoughts Sue. We may differ in opinion but I always welcome your insight and posts. I suspect there are a number of authors, publishers and readers who share your perspective. Thank you for sharing with us.

    P.S. Sue Dent is the author of Electric Angel and can be found at:
    http://www.suedent.net/

    all the best
    Norm

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