Showing posts with label independent publishers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label independent publishers. Show all posts

Sunday, March 6, 2016

The Eight Reasons Why Consumers Buy Books

In an article published on the Digital Book World blog, blogger Andrew Rhomberg reported on some observations made by Jellybooks about the reasons why people buy books and mentioned the eight reasons:

1. To be entertained - now.  Readers want to escape into imaginary worlds to do things that they would never do except between the pages of their latest guilty pleasure. These books are not read over a few days but over a few hours but unfortunately, are not books that are recommended to but a few within their circle.

2.  To be entertained in the future.  These are books that are stockpiled for future enjoyment using Kindle Countdowns, Bookbub and other price promotions. These treasures, bought or downloaded en masse, are often forgotten (hey, I'm guilty of it too!) and are generally not recommended to anyone.

3.  To be informed. Usually works of non-fiction, these books are purchased for a specific purpose or topic, are rarely completed. Think business books, we read enough to get what we need and move on to the next one.  Good for non-fiction, terrible for fiction.

4.  Obligated to Read.  These books are generally textbooks assigned for class work and/or are books purchased to enhance or build upon a skill. I am thinking that this would be the row upon row of Communication Theory books that I purchased during my days in Grad School!

5.  Social Pressure to Read.  Oh, the dreaded "everybody is reading it" but would you have read the book otherwise?  We may finish the book but not really get into it (no judgment, it just is what it is, right?).  We skip through the talking points in order to "keep up" in conversations about "the book".

6.  Reading the book makes us look smart.  Think Pulitzer Prize winners, books that you would never "hide the title" when reading the book in public. In fact, you want to be seen reading this book.  These are generally big physical books that feel good and look good in our hands as we read them riding mass transit or sitting on park benches. They are also books purchased in large numbers - and are sometimes never read.

7.  Purchased as a gift. Generally purchased around summer reading and Christmas seasons, books are always the perfect gift and this particular purchase is usually physical books rather than ebooks.

8.  Impulse purchases.  Deep discounts, author readings, seminars, whatever is going on at that time gets you all excited and the next thing you know, you're leaving the event with a bag full of whatever the speaker was selling.  Hey, again, no judgment, I've done it too!  And like other impulse buyers, most of my purchases, once the glow has faded, have gone unread.

So, there you have it.  Now, it's time for me to go read some of the books that I've stockpiled.

To read the complete article, go on over to Andrew's article at dbw.

Let's read something good!



Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Join the ebook movement! Let your voice be ... read!

Big gains on the ebook front! 

According to figures released today by BookStats, the joint AAP, BISG program developed to create an analysis of industrywide sales, total book publishing revenue rose 3.1% in 2010 to $27.9 billion and posted a two-year growth of 5.6%, this gain was due almost entirely to increases in digital products which offset the decline in all print formats. 

Ebook sales across all catagories rose 38.9% in 2010 to $1.62 billion.  Within the trade segment, ebook sales soared 1,274.1% to $878 million in the 2008-2010 period $203% in 2010 compared to 2009). 

According to BookStats, regular ebook (text only) sales rose 201% last year to $863.7 million and enhanced ebook sales increased 255.1% to $14.3 million. Unit sales of ebooks rose 215.5% in 2010 to 111.9 million.

Isn't it time that you got yourself into the market?  What's stopping you?

Keep writing!  Stay Independent!

Monday, July 18, 2011

New Website is up and running!

Exciting news for BBP Co!  The new website address http://www.brainybpublishinghouse.com/ is officially up and running!  This new interface will allow indie authors to check out our new and upcoming titles as well as check out issues of This Midlife Thing Magazine.

Also, should new indie authors wish to join with us in making their publishing dreams come true, we would be happy to have you aboard!

Check us out! http://www.brainybpublishinghouse.com/

Monday, July 11, 2011

Become a fear-less writer!

Self Publishing Superstar, Seth Godin, published an amazing blog entry today titled “Waiting for the fear to subside”.  Seth Godin has written 12 bestsellers that have been translated into 33 languages including “Poke the Box” and “Linchpin-Are You Indispensible”. 
According to Seth, there are two problems with the strategy of waiting for the fear to subside.  He states, “by the time the fear subsides, it will be too late. By the time you're not afraid of what you were planning to start/say/do, someone else will have already done it, it will already be said or it will be irrelevant”.  

Haven’t you ever read an article or release about an upcoming title and said to yourself “Hey, that was my idea!” or thought that you could have done a better job with the subject?  Well, why don’t you just do it?  Now?  Are we afraid, as Seth says that something might happen?  Something good? 

Seth states that the “fear certainly helps you do it better. The fear-less one might sleep better, but sleeping well doesn't always lead to your best work. The fear can be your compass; it can set you on the right path and actually improve the quality of what you do”.  Fear can serve as a catalyst to the independent writer.  A motivator to move us in the right direction, fear as a motivator can force us to make our own publishing dream an independently published reality.

Lastly, Seth urges us to listen to our fear but do not obey it.  I say we go one better, we kick fear to the curb.  Oh, believe me, it will stick its head up repeatedly, but we will have to fight it back every time.

That is the “blessing” in being an independent writer, as we are willing to “go it on our own”, we give the boot to the fear of “oh, no one will like it, “ or “there’s no market for this type of work” or the whole mess of negativity that has previously kept us from publishing our life’s work. 

Become a fear-less writer! Fearlessly send your work out into the world! Stay Independent!