The Google e-bookstore is finally open.
After years of planning and months of delays, the search giant Google
started its e-book venture on Monday, creating a potentially robust
competitor in the digital book market to Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Apple.
Google executives described the e-bookstore
as an “open ecosystem” that will offer more than three million books,
including hundreds of thousands for sale and millions free.
More than 4,000 publishers, including large trade book companies like Random House,
Simon & Schuster and Macmillan, have made books available for sale
through Google, many at prices that are identical to those of other
e-bookstores.
“We really think it’s important that the book business have this open
diversity of retail points, just like it does in print,” Tom Turvey, the
director for strategic partnerships at Google, said in an interview.
“We want to make sure we maintain that and support that.”
Customers can set up an account for buying books, store them in a
central online, password-protected library and read them on personal
computers, tablets, smartphones and e-readers. A Web connection will not
be necessary to read a book. However users can use a dedicated app that
can be downloaded to an iPad, iPhone or Android phone.
A typical user could begin reading an e-book on an iPad at home,
continue reading the same book on an Android phone on the subway and
then pick it up again on a Web browser at the office, with the book
opening each time to the place where the user left off.
The Google eBookstore could be a significant benefit to independent
bookstores like Powell’s Books in Portland, Ore., that have signed on to
sell Google e-books on their Web sites through Google — the first
significant entry for independents into the e-book business.
“This levels the playing field,” said Oren Teicher, the chief executive
of the American Booksellers Association. “If you want to buy e-books,
you don’t just have to buy them from the big national outlets.”
It is also an opportunity for independents to learn from past missteps.
They were slow to build Web sites to sell books during the initial
expansion of online retailing in the 1990s, a mistake that led their
customers to turn to Amazon and its deeply discounted selection.
“They were so overwhelmed with the competition that Amazon presented,
they just didn’t know what they could do to be competitive in the
digital arena,” said Peter Osnos, the founder and editor at large of
PublicAffairs, an independent publisher. “Google’s giving them a real
shot at doing that.”
Publishers said they were elated that Amazon would have another serious
e-book retailing force to contend with. Only last year, Amazon nearly
had the e-book market to itself, leading publishers to worry that they
were headed toward an Amazon monopoly.
Since then, a vastly more diversified marketplace has emerged. Last
fall, Barnes & Noble introduced an e-reader, the Nook, and more
recently, an updated color version, the Nook Color. In April, Apple
unveiled the iPad, which the company said in October had sold 7.5
million units.
Perhaps most important, five of the six largest publishers of trade
books switched this year from a traditional wholesale model to what is
known in the publishing industry as an agency model. Under that model
publishers set their own prices for e-books, and a retailer acts as an
agent of the publishers, taking a 30 percent cut of each sale and
leaving 70 percent for the publisher.
A crop of e-readers introduced this year has given consumers more
choices, at prices that are competitive, even less than $100. Google
e-books will be readable on any open-format e-readers, including the
Nook, a development that publishers said would give consumers greater
freedom.
“Consumers have been in a position where they had to claim some kind of
loyalty,” said Maja Thomas, the senior vice president for Hachette
Digital, part of the Hachette Book Group, which publishes authors
including Stacy Schiff and James Patterson. “Now they can buy books
from their local bookstores online, or from Powell’s, or from Google.”
E-books bought through Google are not currently readable on Amazon’s Kindle, a Google spokeswoman said, although Kindle users will be able to read free e-books obtained through Google.
Google executives said that the five large trade publishers using the
agency model would operate under that model with Google, while many
other publishers would use a traditional wholesale model.
Read more : http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/07/business/media/07ebookstore.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&sq=google&st=cse&scp=2
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