Why set up an online store... virtually by Cally Phillips
My post of 29th May 2014 looked at the ‘how’ of
setting up an online store – but you were possibly left wondering why one would
even attempt such a thing. After all, everyone buys from Amazon don’t they? And
getting ebooks onto your Kindle (because we all use Kindles right?) is as easy
as one click. No brainer. Why on earth would anyone want to set up an online
store. Competing with Amazon? No way.
Is it worth it?
You’ve got to decide if it’s worth the outlay of a couple of
hundred pounds to test it for a year. That’s a personal decision. Hopefully my
comments will help you make a more informed choice of how, when and whether to
take this step.
What do you have to
offer?
If you are selling one ebook this won’t be worth it, but if
you have lots of ebooks or some collaborative/collective framework it is something
you might want to think about it. And
remember just because you’re paying premium for the digital download option,
you can still sell ‘real’ products through the site too. I set up the store
because I’ve got more than 30 ebooks (when I get my act together it’ll be 50+)
ready for sale – and I’m planning to offer second hand books and more ‘real’
products over time. Merchandising
anyone? Mousemat, mug? Think outside the virtual box – what do you have to
sell?
All about file types
Not everyone is totally welded to Amazon. Many people also
have tablets, smartphones (though why you would want to read a book on a
smartphone escapes me) and even trusty pcs.
In my store I can offer people something extra.
You can give buyers the option of type of file at point of
purchase, but I just put up all versions, offering people the opportunity
(which Amazon don’t) of being able to download the same ebook in a number of
formats so that they can read it on a number of devices. No one will pay extra
to have ebooks in a number of formats. If they’re that keen they’ll know how to
‘rip’ them and ‘convert’ them using the likes of Calibre (with a plug in) like
you used to create the files in the first place. So you are saving them the time and effort.
Follow the money
The point of this is not to compete head on with Amazon, it’s
a) to offer choice of format, b) to reach those who are NOT Amazon-friendly and
c) to garner more of the ‘royalty’ yourself.
You have to do the math.
For me, books in my store are predominantly public domain which means
that Amazon take 65% of list price. That means that even taking into account
the paypal transaction fee (small) I can make more money by selling direct from
my store. Nearly twice as much. If you’re on a 70% Royalty from Amazon it may
not work out as prettily for you. And I can offer ‘bundle’ ebooks and a variety
of ‘discounted’ options which make buying the product from me more appealing.
Nothing succeeds like success?
So about this time you’d like me to tell you how well (or
badly) my online store is doing. It’s slow, that’s the truth. I’ve tried a
number of things, all of which teach lessons. The price objection for example.
It’s bogus. I offered books at a fraction of the Amazon cost for a time and
people still seemed more comfortable buying the one-click Amazon download –
even though they were paying more and getting less. So I won’t let ‘price’ be a
barrier in my marketing strategies in the future.
In my opinion people buy from Amazon because
they know it’s there, they trust it, they think it’s more secure and (if I may
say so) there’s a bit of a sheep mentality about people. Or maybe the idea that
clicking a couple of times more and maybe having to ‘sideload’ it onto a Kindle
is just too much technology for people who would rather spend £1 extra for the
one-click experience. Also, maybe,
people don’t think about where their money is going. For me, niche selling is about showing people
there are choices and offering the opportunity to put your money where your
mouth is over issues such as big business tax avoidance.
You can buy one of my books, pay £3.99 to
Amazon and I get about £1 or you can pay £3.99 to my store and I get about
£2.50. Or if I discount to £1.99 you get
it cheaper and I still get what I’d get from Amazon (which is what I try to do
as much as possible) My business ‘model’ such as it is, is set at making £1 per
unit. So I need to sell 300 odd ebooks a
year off my site to break even. That won’t
happen in the first year if the first month figures are replicated, but it’s
not all about the money or the conventional notion of success for me. It’s
about people having the choice to read things they might otherwise not get to
read. After all, if you’ve been paying
attention you’ll note that my ‘products’ are asking you to pay for ebooks you
can get for FREE (sometimes) from Amazon or Project Guthenberg. Although my argument is that having been
copyedited and edited my editions are actually not just a higher quality, but a
different ‘product’ altogether. This idea
has met with some resistance and then, lo and behold The Guardian noted that
free scanned books (the ones I’ve converted/edited) are unreadable, ARTICLE
HERE with words like arse being
substituted for arms etc. I did tell you
so… but then no one listens when I talk, when The Guardian tell them… (I rest
my case). My point is, I’m looking to the future, not trying to make a killing
in the short term.
Looking to the future
Setting up an online ebook store is looking to the future. If
you do some research (and if you’re going to spit out a couple of hundred quid
to set up a store you really should!) you’ll see that online book shops are
becoming all the rage. Virtual ebook
stores can’t be far behind - where ebook versions of ‘real’ books are available
it’s surely ‘cream’ to the store. You do
need the ‘tech’ to support the file transfers, and this might be
expensive/daunting to big companies, but for niche market (as you will
inevitably be) it’s just that monthly cost.
Here’s a few examples of online book/ebook stores.
https://www.thegreatbritishbookshop.co.uk/ebooks
This is a printer (who I’ve used for years for short run and print on demand,
now branching out into selling books/ebooks direct from their own store).
http://www.guardianbookshop.co.uk/
Can’t see that they do ebooks yet, but it can only be a matter of time.
http://soka-ebook-store.com/
A niche market site. It may not be your thing but you may see that ‘your’ thing
could be something like this!
https://www.blinkboxbooks.com/
The newest kid on the block who is potentially a big gamechanger/threat to
Amazon.
Why bother?
If you have one to ten ebooks probably not worth it. If you
have one to ten ebooks and physical books, and a desire to ‘build’ a brand or a
‘community’ of any kind it might be. If
you have other things to sell and want to keep all your trading activity under
one virtual roof, it could be very handy. If you can sell enough ‘other’ stuff
(like second hand books or memorabilia or whatever links to your ebook ‘persona’)
to cover the cost for the ebook commerce monthly fees it’s definitely worth
looking at.
If you are not completely wedded to the idea that Amazon
will continue to dominate the market it’s worth considering.
If you are looking at setting up a micro/small/indie publisher with a range of
titles from a number of authors and want to feature ebooks in that mix, I’d say
it’s worth the gamble. A store gives you something to promote yourself with
over and above just your writing/publishing.
Create two, three, many Vietnam’s… that is the watchword.
Che Guevara, said this in his ‘Message to the Tricontinental’ in April
1967. The full speech is here http://www.marxists.org/archive/guevara/1967/04/16.htm
It’s worth reading that by the way, but of course slightly
off topic! I have re-appropriated it for my own purposes to the ebook world and
I say:
‘create two, three,
many Amazon’s’ is what we might think of ourselves as doing (if we see
ourselves as part of a ‘digital’ revolution, not just as confused consumers of
same). I’m not ‘anti’ Amazon. I gave up being ‘anti’ things some years ago. ‘Anti’
is too aggressive and too exhausting a stance. I’m just ‘non’ a lot of
things. I look to the alternative. And
my message is that it’s not necessary to ‘take on’ Amazon – we are unlikely to
ever be more than small minnow/niche markets- BUT it maybe it is time to take the means of production fully
into our own hands and actually sell our work for ourselves, direct to the
customer. If it’s something you care about. If not, go with the flow of the
mighty river and be happy with your life.
I have a dream… (robbed from either Shelley or MLK)
That once customers get used to being able to download other
than from Amazon (and yes, you can sell Kindle format files which can be easily
uploaded to Kindle devices) there may be a tideswell. To date Kobo have been a pretty useless
challenger. iBooks is for people who love Apple the way that others love
Amazon, but Blinkbox are offering the first
real challenge. The Tesco model I suggest understands that readers
fundamentally don’t care what ‘format’ their ebook is in. They just want to be
able to download it easily, cheaply and safely.
It is possible to provide this service with an ecommerce
site now. If you subscribe to the ‘if you build it they will come’ philosophy
in any respect it’s worth thinking about. If you believe ‘you’ve got to be in
it to win it,’ ditto. Or if (like me)
you have a fundamental economic aversion to market capitalism and want to look
at other ways to disseminate information, cutting out the middle man, then it’s
something to think about REALLY seriously.
I rest my case. Time to go shopping?
My virtual bookstore
(which is not as big as Amazon, more a boutique experience but offering good
value for money and the kind of books its hard to find at a decent quality
elsewhere – and if you like these kind of books – is RIGHT
HERE. I hope to see you in-store
sometime soon.
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