Thursday, May 11, 2006

I attended the annual Booksellers Association conference earlier this week. There were a number of highlights including Richard Dawkins' attack on religion in his new book The God Delusion based on the TV series The Root of all Evil? Go buy the book when it comes out in the Autumn.

There were discussions on whether or not to print prices on books, whether or not the London Book Fair should be in Earl's Court or Docklands, whether all publishers should be buried alive for their iniquitous discount policies or just some of them, and so on.

The most important thing from my point of view related to the future of independent (and not so independent) bookselling in a digital environment.

Nobody doubts that the book has a future and that booksellers will continue to  find a decent market for fiction and popular non-fiction. However, some areas of publishing have already moved to a completely new distribution mechanism which eliminates the role of the traditional bookseller. The first movers were scientific and legal publishers, rapidly followed by business information providers. Schools business could be hugely affected by the BBC's plans for a digital curriculum. Right now reference books and travel guides are moving rapidly to a web-only model. Other areas of non-fiction, particularly high-level academic works, will follow.

One can certainly paint a picture of doom for the small book retailer. But I came away from the conference convinced otherwise. Provided publishers digitise their material and make it available to all at a price. Provided booksellers are willing to take risks and learn new skills. Provided that authors allow fast and effective re-use of their copyright works. I believe the small bookseller can build a profitable and growing business selling traditional books on the web and still serving their local community; building deeper communities of interest among readers; building digital delivery websites for text and audio books. The more book retailers enter this business the more we and our customers will all be protected from the dangers of monopolistic or oligopolistic distribution channels.

In Britain and Ireland we are hugely fortunate in having an organisation which can facilitate this future and who have proved its worth time and time again. Now the BA needs to encourage all its members to seek advice in order to harness the potential of these powerful new digitalia (as a colleague calls it).

5/11/2006 5:55:12 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Richard, I fear that the root of the problem is that many - I hesitate to say most - independent booksellers are fervently anti-web/digital/electronic, so much so that they regard it as the invention of the devil and cannot see that both physical book and electronic transmission can co-exist. So long as this is the attitude, then they will fail and continue to fail. It is very sad. There is a High Moral Ground stance about the printed book. You it, I know it - "I am very pleased to say I read books, I wouldn`t know how to switch ON a computer." Goes with
"Of course, I would never throw any book away."
There are many books I would never throw away - and if I am clearing out I give them to the nearest Oxfam Bookshop. But even they have little use for 1996 Good Food Guides and a four-times read Wordsworth Classics War and Peace with half its pages missing which only cost a quid new. The independents who survive will have shops with unique stock, hand-picked and sometimes quirky, and which make the best use of the wholesalers for next day ordering of anything at all.. and who have an online presence too.
SUSAN HILL
5/12/2006 9:32:48 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Susan is so right. Our online shop is now up and running and we've had a few orders already. It's so important for our web presence to become a real extension of our bricks and mortar. But we can't stop there. We want to develop links with small publishers and even look to publish ourselves, we want to reach into our local community and try to offer some kind of forum for information. We are lucky enough to be close to some large educational establishments too and it is vital to make links with them. We are already supplying the library for one local college. It's going to be tough and hard work but we have to think laterally in this current climate. Waterstone's and Smiths are not our enemies our only competition really is our apathetic selves.
5/12/2006 10:00:31 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Thank God there are people who want to build businesses instead of moaning about the inequities of publishers. Thanks, Adam.