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Neill Denny

Neill Denny is editor-in-chief of The Bookseller. He will be blogging on the book business and on how the print magazine is produced each week.

Plenty more to come from Amazon

Abebooks, Audible and the Kindle: Amazon is on a roll. But as this bookselling superpower emerges, should we praise its success or fear its power?

The first and obvious point is that Amazon looks different depending on where you stand. For publishers, it has been a mixed blessing. On the plus side, it has been a prime mover in the emergence of the long tail: the deep, full-price backlist that is proving a slow-burn goldmine. For another, it has offered speed and flexibility to break authors and track customer demand. The ability to judge what readers will buy next based on previous purchases must have expanded the overall market. The logistical advantages of dealing with Amazon, dispatching all books to a single central point, are also not to be underestimated.

Yet the downside to publishers grows proportionately as Amazon expands. As it sells more books, it drives harder on terms. Every year it goes back to publishers for a little bit more: this year Hachette has pushed back, and a stand-off is under way. In some ways this is the normal warp and weft of commercial life, but there is an underlying fear that Amazon is a new type of retailer, that its demands for special treatment and favourable terms will never end. There is a sense of invincibility about Amazon, about how hard it is to compete against, about how history is on its side because it embodies the internet, and that makes publishers nervous.

For retailers, Amazon is undoubtedly a dangerous competitor. No bookshop can match its range and no retailer can match its customer knowledge. Indies, chains, supermarkets: in different ways, all have failed to compete effectively against Amazon for many years. Borders, Tesco, Blackwell, Waterstone all are now making strenuous efforts to compete online, but Amazon has defined the game and remains a country mile ahead. Perhaps only Play.com and The Book Depository are anywhere near Amazon in terms of cracking the web to sell books.

But for readers, more important ultimately than either publisher or retailer, Amazon has been an undoubted boon. Any home with a computer can potentially now have access to millions of books—it represents a broadening of intellectual horizons in just 10 years that is unprecedented. The web, if not Amazon, can’t be uninvented: retailers and publishers need to find ways to make it work for them or they will face an increasingly difficult future. 

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By Adrian Graham

No one can deny Amazon's success, and credit to them for having the vision. For years Waterstone's didn't have a clue, their Website simply passed you on to Amazon.co.uk. Talk about giving the market away! For a small press Amazon.co.uk is a lot easier to get a book into than a high street shop. It's pretty likely that Amazon is going to be the UK's No: 1 eBook retailer too when they get around to it. But there are issues, online buyers are fickle and Amazon isn't the cheapest ... Play.com offers a superb service and the true cost of buying a book is not hidden in post and packing - there is none! I've just had a look at Amazon's customer reviews system in my blog - they have a valuable dialogue with customers in a way that Waterstone's (etc) doesn't.

08 Aug 08 14:58

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By Steph Dickson

Not sure how The Book Depository get labelled as a competitor to Amazon? Sure, they've got their own website but they seem to hang onto amazon's coat tails through the Amazon marketplace. I've bought things from TBD in the past and they never use my purchasing history to throw new or related titles in my direction - surely this is where Amazon is so incredibly sophisticated in its approach. Amazon makes good margins because it either takes a chunk in postage, or takes 15% from marketplace sellers.

08 Aug 08 19:51

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