"eBooks and eReaders - tipping points, is 26 the magic number and predicting the future"
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Transcript of "eBooks and eReaders - tipping points, is 26 the magic number and predicting the future"
eBooks and eReaders:tipping points,
is 26 the magic number and predicting the future
Terry O’Brien Deputy Librarian
Waterford Institute of Technology
25th March 2011
LIR eBook seminar
Introduction
• Wider picture• Some trends, forecasts and interesting
figures• Consumer market – expectations, changes• Blurring of lines between libraries• eBook, eReader – “Tipping points”• Digital content surge
Context – retail (impending) closures and mass library closures in UK and cuts in US
“Without a doubt, the eBook
is practically the biggest thing that’s hit the
publishing industry since the invention of movable type”
(Philip Ruppel, CEO McGraw-Hill, 2011)
“books are slipping behind an electronic curtain, becoming iBook apps or drab, Kindled, digital versions of what (Charles) Lamb once called “biblia a-biblia” – books which are not books, (but) mere tangible shadows of their old visceral selves”
Klinkenborg, V. (2010), “Book lover’s London”, Travel and Leisure, April p. 48
Information Behaviour of the Researcher of the Future (CIBER, UCL)
“Inexorable rise of the eBook”“A student
population hungry for digested
content”
“Print sales will fall sharply as electronic publishing matures
and consumer demand grows”
“By 2017 eBook will be the default format for textbooks, scholarly books and reference
works”
Low uptake of eBooks
• Too few e-books• High pricing and complex pricing models• Bundling solutions did not meet needs• Complex licensing issues, DRM• Multiple formats and platforms• Uncertain market• Lack of key e-texts• Discoverability - poor marketing by libraries • These constraints are diminishing• eReader is a game changer “paradigm shifting device”
Adoption, usage and discoverability
• Significant growth in eBook adoption by libraries in next couple of years
• eBooks, eReaders are mainstream but not yet ubiquitous
• The consumer market will exacerbate expectations in the academic library sector
• Importance of high quality metadata (JISC, 2010) • MARC records drive usage – Springer white paper• UCL study showed that catalogued books are twice
as likely to be used
Demand drivers
Primary
• Online retailers
• Publishers• Vendors• The Market• Expectation• Technology
Secondary
• Cost• Convenience• Accessibility• Range• Environmental• Space
Tertiary
• Students• Librarians• Faculty• Flexible
learning• Changing
habits
Horizon Reports 2010, 2011
• Dramatic upswing• Move to eBooks is
compelling “transformative technology”
• 2010 constraints for academic libraries disappearing
• Colour screens and display technologies vastly improved
• 2011 eBooks now on “near term horizon”
• “changing our perception of what it means to read ..new kinds of reading experiences”
• “until electronic textbooks are divorced from reader dependant formats, broad adoption will continue to be problematic for universities”
• Seminal Newsweek article 2007• “Device that will change the
way readers read, writers write and publishers publish”
• Last bastion of analogue• Long-form reading going digital• Bezos (2011) sales of eBook
and Kindle have reached a “tipping point”
Tipping point
Amazon & Kindle• More than half of the “best-selling” e-books on the Kindle are available
at no charge, many are free, many cost $0.99 and many are erotica• Neither Kindle nor iPad will let you read borrowed eBooks
i.e. library books cannot be downloaded onto the Kindle• Kindle 3 is best selling product in
Amazon history – estimated 8m sold• 2011 Kindle versions outselling
hardbacks by 3 to 1• Kindle versions now
outselling paperbacks• Kindle 3 costs about £111 now
– 1/3 of original Kindle cost
Tipping point
Some more figures
Internet = growth in all book sales
eTextbooks +400% CourseSmart
eBook sales only represent 1% of
print sales
A mere 10% of new titles will be
available in print alone by 2020 (BL)
eReaders download more books than book buyers buy
(SONY)
Highwire 2009 -50% acquisitions on eBooks by 2015
APA –eBooks 6% of
market
Tablets huge growth - 24m in
2011
Est. sales of iPad 2011 – 30m +
Other sales trends II• Publishers at Digital Book World Conference
predict 2014 will be year when eBooks reach parity with print for the first time
• According to Amazon customers buy 3.3 times as many books after buying a Kindle
• eBook sales up 176% in 2009 say American Association of Publishers
• Men read more eBooks than women• Goldman Sachs estimate that 13% of all book sales will be eBook format
by 2015, representing over £3 billion • Amazon share of overall eBook cake will fall by 50% over next 5 years as
Google and Apple eat into market. Market share currently estimated at around 80%
Tipping point
Bestsellers• Most checked out eBook
and best selling eBook ...
Amanda Hocking is now
the world's bestselling
eBook author, selling more
than 450,000 titles last
monthTipping point
Google Book Project•Google eBookstore launched December 2010•Mass digitization•“meeting customer at point of web search not at point of searching the bookstore”•Located in The Cloud, gives publishers huge reach•With over 3m free titles may have a major impact on eBooks access•Practically all formats and platforms accommodated –not Kindle (AZW) but open to discussion•9/10 of university presses are accessible compared with just over 3/10 in Kindle format
The Google Effect• Nicholas Carr (2008) seminal
article “Is Google making us stoopid?”
• “harmful impact of digital technologies on our cognitive capacities”
• Modern screen enables multitasking preventing immersive reading
• The Shallows or ‘what the internet is doing to our brains’ cultural critique of the intellectual consequences of the Internet
• NY Times (2010) “yes, people read but now its social”
Big players
Amazon•Kindle•Publisher relationships•Critical mass•Sales•Established•Pioneers
Google•Reach•Global presence•Trusted•Resources•The Cloud•Formats
Apple•Brand•Innovators•Loyal customer base•iTunes (iBooks)•The iPad•Hardware
How eBooks are used and who is using them
• Undergraduates and academic staff • Appeals to digital consumers and students who prefer bite
size chunks of information (CIBER)• Men greater users, business students more likely to use (JISC,
2009) • ‘support learning activities in certain subjects where
information is structured in relatively discrete blocks and where a premium is placed on currency’ e.g. business, law, computer science (UCG, eBook seminar, May 2010)
• eBooks are not read sequentially “dipping” for ‘use’ (specific) more than ‘read’ (cover to cover)
What we know about user behaviours
• Academic mainstream• Age and gender important
predictors of uptake• Importance of library catalogue • Convenience factor• Confusion about formats• High quality metadata very
important for discovery• Log analysis shows power
browsing, quick usage• Skimming is endemic• Print circulations have not really
decreased
Student response• “Kindles yet to woo university
users” – Princeton• “Why aren’t eBooks gaining more
ground in academic libraries” (Slater, JWebLib, 2010)
• Abdullah & Gibb (2008) familiarity high, but 57% did not know library had eBooks
• eBrary not knowing how or where to find big factor in lack of usage
• ITHAKA S+R survey (2010) eBooks only an important research tool for 13% of 3,000 respondents
• Berget at al (JAL, 2010) “more research needed to better understand users interactions”, “students understand conventions of print books but unclear about structure and functionality of eBooks” (e.g. index)
• “students still refer print when it comes to using, reading, absorbing” (Roy, 2009)
• students prefer many of the low tech elements of print and paper
• Cengage Eduventures survey (2010) students not warming to eBooks
To consider ...
• In academic libraries, computers remain primary tool for downloading, storing, retrieving
• eReaders represent what students in future will expect - portability, cost-effective, access at any point in time, flexible not static content
• The eReader consumer market (leisure, recreation etc.) has exacerbated user expectations but requirements of academic libraries and their users is different (i.e. research and study purposes) to the commercial market
• HarperCollins – placing limits on usage
• eBooks can only be loaned out 26 times
• Self-destruct• Impacts on suppliers and
eBook vendors like Overdrive
• Macmillan and Simon & Schuster—do not allow eBooks to be circulated in libraries at all
DRM & Licence restrictions
26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26
26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26
DRM
"selling e-books to libraries in perpetuity, if left unchanged, would
undermine the emerging e-book eco-system, hurt the growing e-book channel, place additional
pressure on physical bookstores, and in the end lead to a decrease in
book sales and royalties paid to authors “
(HarperCollins in response, 2011)
DRM - The commercial perspective
• Publishers Association – “if libraries had the ability to lend eBooks freely .. It would have serious consequences for the commercial world” - buying an eBook means buying a license to view a file
• According to Schuster and Macmillan if too easy to Borrow – turns eBook buyers into eBook borrowers
• Amazon (US) allows limited ‘loan’ by owner (purchaser)• ‘Kindlegate’ –– hidden aspects of DRM - Amazon retain
control of your copy after purchase• SpringerBook – no DRM, allow ILLs, no restrictions on
usage, full ownership
Digital Rights Management
• Remains major issue and barrier across all library types• What does ownership mean, concept changing for
libraries• Perpetuity, platform fees, subscription fees• If library ceases paying a platform fee do they lose rights
of access• License versus ownership – danger of putting publishers
in charge of preservation• American Library Association task force 2011• In the bustle for market share and ‘ownership’, libraries
are being squeezed
Other developments
• Sharing electronic books - Kindle lending club, LendMe for the Nook, Booklends
• eBookFling– virtual eBook swap website – Netflix style book rental service
• eBook lending for libraries Internet Archive• Open Library project, exclusive in library lending among
virtual consortium 150 libraries www.openlibrary.org.• Project MUSE and University Press e-book Consortium
launching service in 2012 to make eBooks from 60-70 university presses available
EU involvement
• “Agency model” publishers accused of price-fixing in selling of eBooks - retailer not allowed to set the price
• According to EU could potentially "violate EU anti-trust rules that prohibit cartels and other restrictive business practices“
• Publishers want to deal with Apple• Amazon unsurprisingly against this model – setting
own prices ($9.99)• Important because eBooks are sold across borders
What might all this mean for libraries
• “the strange case of academic libraries and eBooks nobody reads … large and very expensive collections that nobody reads …not only unread but many in format already obsolete .. Enormous collections that can only (primarily) be read on computer screens”
• Can libraries embrace the platform for the content (we don’t have the control) – can Kindles or iPads work seamlessly with existing eBook collections
• Quandary for libraries “proprietary eBook files that only work on limited devices, or non-proprietary file formats supported by a number of eReaders”
(Dan D’Agostino teleread.com, 2010)
Libraries
• “the resource sharing that we have enjoyed in the world of analogue books is very much in question”
(Roy, 2009) • There are also implications
for information literacy• Collection development
fragmentation and usage uncertainty
• Can content from Academic eBook providers be easily downloaded to portable devices
• Need to address traditional library-publisher relationships
• Willingness to embrace but frustration at exclusion from decisions (Library Journal, 2010)
Forrester Research 2011
• A very altered publishing world is about to emerge• “the next five years will see an explosion of the
eReader textbook market, and in 10 years, the market will be driven by businesses going green in government, education, health, and other sectors”
• Device convergence could shorten eReaders' lifespan• Paper books as niche product?• Wired “The overall e-book market is still a 90-pound
weakling next to the Asiatic elephant of print publishing”
eBook trends that will change publishing?
Philip Ruppel, President McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing (2011)
• Enhanced eBooks coming and will only get better
• The device war is nearly over – nobody wants to own the next betamax for books
• The $9.99 eBook won’t last forever
• Publishers will remain important despite self-publishing
• “Contextual upsell” will be a business model to watch
Michael Hyatt, CEO, Thomas Nelson Publishers (2011)
• Bundled books• Social reading• eBook clubs• e-first publishing• Free e-readers –
incentivisation • Monetization experiments – in
book advertising, sponsored links etc.
Some possibilities – where do we fit in
Site licenses for texts
“Content unifying” Self-publishing Direct rental
The rise of the APP
Patron Driven Acquisition
Legislative change - enforced
Pilot programmes – commercial and
academic
Course materials fees
Print on demand on campus and commercially
Netflix type model
- Mass market benefitting more
than the academic
- New business models
emerging- Proprietary
formats still an issue
- Book and eBook brilliant pieces of technology
- eReader is a game changer - Big benefit of eBook is
searchability by keyword
- DRM remains a major issue - Amazon figures need further
analysis - Consumer expectations effect
academic libraries
- Library important role
to play - Long-term impact and changes in
reading habits (Soule, 2009)
- “eBook saga .. Long way to go
with this” (Bradley, 2011)More questions
than answers
References• “10 Reading Revolutions before
eBooks”, Tim Carmody, The Atlantic, Aug 25, 2010 http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2010/08/10-reading-revolutions-before-e-books/62004/
• Klinkenborg, V. (2010), “Literary Guide to London”, Travel and Leisure, April p. 48
• “Information behaviour of the researcher of the future” (2008) - A CIBER briefing paper (University College London) http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/programmes/reppres/gg_final_keynote_11012008.pdf
• “The Digital Information Seeker Report of findings from selected OCLC,RIN and JISC user behaviour projects”, (2010) L. Connaway et al http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/publications/reports/2010/digitalinformationseekerreport.pdf
• The Horizon Report 2010 Edition (The New Media Consortium and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative) http://www.nmc.org/pdf/2010-Horizon-Report.pdf
• SuperBook Project University College London (2008)
References II• The Horizon Report 2011 Edition (The
New Media Consortium and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative) http://wp.nmc.org/horizon2011/
• “The future of reading” Steven Levy, Newsweek, Nov. 17, 2007
• HighWire Press 2009 Librarian eBook Survey
• Association of American Publishers http://www.publishers.org
• Digital Book World 2011http://www.digitalbookworld.com
• Springer White paper on eBooks www.springer.com/ebooks
• The Shallows, what the internet is doing to our brains - Nicholas Carr, (Norton, 2010)
• Slater, R (2011) “Why Aren’t E-Books Gaining More Ground in Academic Libraries? E-Book Use and Perceptions A Review of Published Literature and Research“, Journal of web librarianship (1932-2909), 4 (4), p. 305
• “Is Google making us stupid? What the internet is doing to our brains”, N. Carr, The Atlantic, July/Aug, 2008
• “Amazon sells more kindle eBooks than hardcovers”, 20th July, 2010 WIRED magazine
References III• Abdullah, N. & Gibb, F. (2008)
“Students' attitudes towards e-books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1”, Library Review, vol. 57, no. 8, pgs. 593-605
• Kindles yet to woo university users, Daily Princetonian, Sept 2009
• Ebrary‘s global eBook survey• Ithaka S+R Library Survey 2010
http://www.ithaka.org/ithaka-s-r/research/ithaka-s-r-library-survey-2010
• Instructors and students: technology use, engagement and learning outcomes (2010) CENGAGE and Eduventures
• eBookfling http://www.eBookfling.com
• BookSwim http://www.bookswim.com
• Open Library http://www.openlibrary.org
• Internet Archive http://www.archive.org
• Netflix https://www.netflix.com/ • The strange case of academic librar
ies and e-books nobody reads [accessed online 25/8/10] Dan D’Agostini teleread.com , Jan 72010
• Forrester Research http://www.forrester.com
References IV• Roy, M. (2009), “The dream of a single
library”, available at: http://blogs.middlebury.edu/mikeroy/2009/06/04/the-dream–a-single-library/ [accessed online 6 September 2010]
• Medeiros, N. (2009) “The Killer Kindle”, OCLC Systems & Services, Vol. 25, No. 4, pps. 225-227
• Library Journal 1st Oct. 2010• “E-readers as a marketing tool for the
digital library 2009-2010” Norwegian University of Science and Technology
• “Publishers Struggle to Get Professors to Use Latest E-Textbook Features” The Chronicle of Higher Education , (Wired Campus, Ben Wieder) Feb. 10, 2011
• “5 E-Book trends that will change the future of publishing”, Philip Ruppel, McGraw-Hill Publishing [accessed online 23rd Feb. 2010]
• “6 E-Book trends to watch in 2011”, Michael Hyatt, CEO Thomas Nelson Publishers [accessed online 23rd Feb. 2010]
• Abdullah, N. & Gibb, F. (2006) A survey of e-book awareness and usage amongst students in an academic library. In: Proceedings of International Conference of Multidisciplinary Information Sciences and Technologies, Merida, 25-28 October, 2006, Spain.
Thanks for your attention
Terry O’Brien,Deputy Librarian,
WIT Libraries.
Contact me at [email protected] 00353 51 302845
Visit WIT Libraries at www.wit.ie/library
Follow us at #witlibraries