Archive for the 'Industry News' Category

Apr 02 2008

Amazon.com and Lulu

Published by auria cortes under Industry News

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For those of you following the Amazon.com vs POD situation (click here and here), I was just informed that Lulu wrote the following on their message board: “We would like to assure our users that Lulu continues to have a strong relationship with Amazon.com. As a result, the recent changes Amazon.com has announced should not adversely affect Lulu content listed within Amazon.com in any way.” 

Lulu didn’t comment further and provide details, but for those of you using or thinking of using a POD it won’t hurt to email them and inquire further. 

Btw, if your POD company continues to have a strong relationship with Amazon.com despite the recent announcement, please let me know in the comment section. I’m more than happy to post the information.

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Apr 01 2008

What is Paperspine?

Published by auria cortes under Industry News

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From the website: Paperspine is a subscription-based service for renting books. Pick out the books you want to read and we mail them to you based on availability. You decide which books you want to receive first by prioritizing them in your book Queue. It’s that easy!  When you’re done with the book, mail it back to us in our pre-paid mailing bags. When we receive the returned book, we’ll send out the next available book in your Queue. Sounds as though Paperspine has the same model as Netflix:   

  • Create a list of books you want to read

  • They mail you books from the list

  • Keep the book as long as you want. No late fees.

  • Return the books and they will send you more.

 Plans begin at $9.95 per month. I have to say that I like this idea. Especially for the winter months when I don’t want to leave the house.

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Mar 31 2008

Amazon’s Take on POD

Published by auria cortes under Industry News

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Open letter to interested parties:

We wanted to make sure those who are interested have an opportunity to understand what we’re changing with print on demand and why we’re doing so.

One question that we’ve seen is a simple one.

Is Amazon requiring that print-on-demand books be printed inside Amazon’s own fulfillment centers, and if so why?

Yes. Modern POD printing machines can print and bind a book in less than two hours. If the POD printing machines reside inside our own fulfillment centers, we can more quickly ship the POD book to customers — including in those cases where the POD book needs to be married together with another item. If a customer orders a POD item together with an item that we’re holding in inventory — a common case — we can quickly print and bind the POD item, pick the inventoried item, and ship the two together in one box, and we can do so quickly. If the POD item were to be printed at a third party, we’d have to wait for it to be transhipped to our fulfillment center before it could be married together with the inventoried item.

Speed of shipping is a key customer experience focus for us and it has been for many years. Amazon Prime is an example of a successful and growing program that is driving up our speed of shipment with customers. POD items printed inside our own fulfillment centers can make our Amazon Prime cutoff times. POD items printed outside cannot.

Simply put, we can provide a better, more timely customer experience if the POD titles are printed inside our own fulfillment centers. In addition, printing these titles in our own fulfillment centers saves transportation costs and transportation fuel.

Another question we’ve seen: Do I need to switch completely to having my POD titles printed at Amazon?

No, there is no request for exclusivity. Any publisher can use Amazon’s POD service just for those units that ship from Amazon and continue to use a different POD service provider for distribution through other channels.

Alternatively, you can use a different POD service provider for all your units. In that case, we ask that you pre-produce a small number of copies of each title (typically five copies), and send those to us in advance (Amazon Advantage Program-successfully used by thousands of big and small publishers). We will inventory those copies. That small cache of inventory allows us to provide the same rapid fulfillment capability to our customers that we would have if we were printing the titles ourselves on POD printing machines located inside our fulfillment centers. Unlike POD, this alternative is not completely “inventoryless.” However, as a practical matter, five copies is a small enough quantity that it is economically close to an inventoryless model.Might Amazon reconsider this new policy? Click here to read the rest of their open letter.

Click HERE for more industry news 

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Mar 30 2008

Amazon Says Ef U to POD Publishers

Published by auria cortes under Industry News

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Here’s the lowdown: According to WritersWeekly, Amazon’s has a new policy for writers who print their books through a POD…unless they use BookSurge, an Amazon owned POD company, their books will not be sold through Amazon. The buy button will be turned off on Amazon.com

The article goes on to say the following: “Mr. Clifford [of Amazon/Booksurge] said authors of those books [POD] could participate in the Amazon.com Advantage Program, meaning they would have to pay Amazon $29.95 per year PLUS 55% of the list price of their book, as well as buy and then send those books to Amazon directly for them to warehouse and ship to customers. In addition, their “eventual desire is to have no books from other POD publishers available on Amazon.com.”This decision will directly affect POD writers, including those who printed their books with iUniverse and Lulu.com.  

So if POD is an option you are considering, click here to learn more about how Amazon’s decision will affect your book sales. 

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