Thursday, February 17, 2011

Barnes & Noble Bankruptcy Index: Will B&N follow Borders?

Usually our weekly B&N bankruptcy index is published Wednesday, but since yesterday Borders filed for bankruptcy protection, we delayed it in one day to better digest the sad, although expected news, and see how they reflect on this week's index.

Just a short reminder - As Borders filed for bankruptcy, we look at Barnes & Noble, the nation's largest book chain to see if they will follow Borders and also go into bankruptcy and if so, when exactly.

To do it more analytically we launched 3 weeks ago a new B&N Bankruptcy Index, which is based on 10 parameters, which receive a grade between 1-10 (1 - worst grade, 10 - best grade). Hence we receive a 0-100 point index scale, which we divide into several ranges as follows:

90-100: B&N is in an excellent shape. Couldn't be better!
80-89: B&N is doing great. Bankruptcy is no longer a real threat.
70-79: B&N could do better and has to be cautious of bankruptcy.
60-69: B&N doesn't look too good and bankruptcy is becoming a more realistic threat.
50-59: Bankruptcy is a clear and present danger.
49 and less: Red alert! Bankruptcy is just around the corner and is likely to happen within a short time frame.

We will check the
B&N Bankruptcy Index every Wednesday, updating each one of the parameters included in the index and will analyze the trend. You can follow the weekly changes in the index from the day it was launched on the Barnes and Noble Bankruptcy Index page on our website.

So here's our update for this week (in brackets is last week's grade):

1. Confidence of the stock market in B&N

This parameter will look at the performance of the B&N stock (symbol:
BKS) in the last week. The performance of B&N's stock is an indication of the confidence the market has in the ability of B&N to maintain a viable business.

So let's look at last week's figures:


2/8: $17.11

2/16: $18.77

Change: +9.7%


As you can see, B&N's stock did very well the in the past week. They did much better comparing to both the S&P500 Index (+0.89%) and Amazon (+1.94%). In other words, the markets believe B&N will benefit from Borders' bankruptcy and will get stronger in the post-Borders' bankruptcy era (see for example Alyce Lomax on the Motley Fool).
This week's grade for this parameter is: 9 (8.5)

2. What analysts say on B&N

As mentioned above analysts believe that the bankruptcy of Borders will have a positive impact on B&N: "Although the impact of Borders’s bankruptcy won’t be as great on Barnes & Noble as it would have been five years ago, “the majority of book sales are still physical books,” Michael Souers, an analyst at Standard & Poor’s in New York, said in an interview. “Overall, it’s a benefit for Barnes & Noble.” (Bloomberg)

On the New York Times Michael Souers looked at the bigger picture and was a little less optimistic: “The book retailing industry is very challenging right now. We’ve had significant transformation. Bookstores have gradually been losing their prominence, and the U.S. market is oversaturated in terms of the number of retail stores. So that trend will likely continue as e-books gain more prevalence in the market.”

In all there are no big news from the analysts - it's still about gains in the short-term and structural problems are a threat in the long-term. Therefore this week's grade stays the same: 7 (7)

3. New strategy to regain sales in the brick and mortar stores
Just like Borders, B&N still doesn't have a a clear and comprehensive strategy that will transform their brick and mortar stores from a liability back to an asset.
This week's grade stays the same: 4 (4)

4. What B&N is saying about itself

We haven't find any updates here so this week's week's grade for this parameter stays the same: 6 (6)

5. Steps B&N is taking
This week Barnes and Noble's main action (or at least the one that got most media attention) was to post an open letter to Amazon affiliates, seeking to lure them to the retailer's fold. As PC Magazine reported, B&N's letter to the affiliates was posted online on Monday in response to Amazon's threats to cut off its affiliates in states that charge sales tax (i.e. Texas).


This week's grade is: 6 (6)

6. Competitors
This parameter will mainly look into Borders and how its problems affect B&N.
This week Borders filed for bankruptcy and announced it will close in the next couple of weeks about 200 stores nationwide. Unlike most analysts, we feel that Borders' bankruptcy can do more harm than good to B&N, but it's really premature and we'll have to wait at least couple more weeks to know more. Our weekly grade for this parameter is: 6 (6)

7. Financial strength
B&N's latest financial report was published on November 2010 for its second quarter, which ended Oct. 30. Yesterday B&N announced the company will report fiscal 2011 third quarter earnings results next Tuesday, February 22nd. So there's no change here from last week and therefore this parameter's grade stays the same: 7.5 (7.5)

8. Strength of the ebook business

No news on this front (maybe we should call it e-front?), although almost every article on Borders reminded the Nook and B&N's online presence as important factors that helps B&N to avoid bankruptcy ("The largest U.S. bookstore chain, Barnes & Noble, has had success with its and online store, allowing it to stay in contention with online book pioneer Amazon.com." - Yahoo! News). This week's grade is: 7.5 (7.5)

9. Sense of urgency
Maybe B&N think they still have time but this is not the case of course and if we can learn something from the Borders' case, it's how fast things go bad when your reach a certain tipping point of financial distress or distrust of your stakeholders (consumers or publishers for example). Therefore this parameter will try to look into B&N's sense of urgency. No news on this front this week and this parameter's grade stays the same: 6 (6)

10. General feeling
This parameter will be an indication of our impression of all the materials read and analyzed for this index. Our feeling this week, after the bankruptcy of Borders is that B&N still doesn't see it as a wake-up call. This week's grade is: 6.5 (6.5)

This week's Barnes & Noble Bankruptcy Index: 65 points (64.5)

As you can see, this week's index is set at 65 points, which translates into the scale of 60-69: B&N
doesn't look too good and bankruptcy is becoming a more realistic threat. Definitely not a good place to be at, but it could definitely get worst as you can learn from the situation at Borders, although we definitely hope it won't! In the meantime, it looks like B&N is still not in immediate trouble. We'll have more information about it next Wednesday after they will publish their quarterly report. See you next Wednesday.

To view the weekly changes in the index visit Barnes and Noble Bankruptcy Index on our website.

You can find more resources on the future of bookstores on our website at www.ecolibris.net/bookstores_future.asp

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Working to green the book industry!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

My article on Triple Pundit on the impact of ebooks on the carbon reduction goals of the book industry

Earlier today, an article I wrote, entitled Will Ebooks Jeopardize the Book Industry’s Carbon Reduction Goals? was published on Triple Pundit. This article is, as the title hints, about the impact of ebooks on the carbon reduction goals of the book industry (20% reduction by 2020).

Here's the first paragraph of the article:

The shift towards ebooks is having a significant influence on every part of the book industry, from publishers working to reinvent their value proposition to brick and mortar bookstores fighting for their future.

But what about the carbon footprint of the book industry? Does this shift represent an opportunity for the industry given the growing number of books sold without even one tree falling down? Or, maybe it is also a potential risk as ebooks can actually hurt the efforts of the industry to reduce its footprint? Well, apparently it can be both.

You can read the whole article at http://www.triplepundit.com/2011/02/will-ebooks-jeopardize-book-industrys-carbon-reduction-goals/

More resources on the ebooks vs. paper books environmental debate can be found on our website at http://www.ecolibris.net/ebooks.asp.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!

Why Barnes & Noble shouldn't be happy about the bankruptcy of Borders? (hint: Waterstone's)

The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that Borders is expected to file for Chapter 11 within days. Some might see it as good news to Barnes & Noble, which we'll be able to increase their market share, but we also see here some important lessons that actually should make B&N worried more than happy.

The upcoming bankruptcy will mean more business for B&N at least in the short term. According to the article, Gary Balter, an analyst at Credit Suisse estimates that B&N could add more than $1 billion in sales if Borders is eventually forced out of business.

Sounds great, right? But the article also includes an history lesson that could be worth even more to B&N, if they get it right.

The article mentions that "Borders already has had some experience: Its U.K. stores were liquidated in 2009 by their owner at the time, Valco Capital Partners, part of U.S.-based firm Hilco Trading LLC. Those stores had approximately 4% of the U.K. market."

What happened then? Philip Downer, the former Borders U.K. chief executive, estimates that half of that market share was redistributed to such retailers as Amazon and HMV Group PLC's bookstore chain Waterstone's. According to the article, HMV Group said last June it expected Borders's U.K. exit to improve Waterstones's net margins by 3% to 4% in the long term. The company said it had seen improvement in the performance of Waterstones following the exit of Borders.

So far so good, but the article is revealing that last month HMV Group said it would close 20 Waterstones stores (TheBookSeller reported last week that 11 Waterstone's stores will close by the end of this week) following a disappointing holiday season. According to the WSJ, the money-losing bookstore chain, the largest in the U.K., has become the subject of takeover speculation.

Waterstone's and B&N are not the same, but the lesson of Waterstone's is still too important to be ignored - even if a book chain might benefit in the short-term from the bankruptcy of a competing book chain, there's no guarantee it won't face the same destiny in the near future, especially when it deals with the same risks and threats on its traditional business model.

Author Seth Goldin is quoted in the WSJ article saying that "what's unfolding now is the penultimate step in the demise of bookstores in general. That means what will be published in the future will have less to do with what bookstores carry and more to do with what readers tell each other about new books." Borders learned it, Waterstone's is learning it and there's a very good chance B&N will learn it very soon, unless they start working fast on a strategy that will transform their brick and mortar stores back into assets.

You can find more resources on the future of bookstores on our website at www.ecolibris.net/bookstores_future.asp

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Working to green the book industry!




Monday, February 14, 2011

Friday, February 11, 2011

Watch the Espresso Book Machine at McNally Jackson in action!

We wrote here in the past about the Espresso Book Machine, the machine that brings POD into bookstores, but it's always fun to see it in action. NPR’s Science Friday (a great show by the way) has a great video on their visit at McNally Jackson in New York checking out their Espresso Book Machine.

According to McNally Jackson's website, their new Espresso Book Machine "can print in minutes affordable, library-quality paperbacks. In addition to those books publishers have given us access to, the machine can also print anything in the public domain--increasing the store's inventory by over 4 million potential titles" To search the books available to print, click here.

The video is available at www.sciencefriday.com/arts/2011/02/robot-invades-nyc-bookstore/


More related articles:

The future of bookstores - business as unusual, local solutions and positioning for success

Will Xerox help to further green up the Espresso Book Machine?


Will the new collaboration between Google and On Demand Books green up the book industry?

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Working to green the book industry!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Where readers buy their ebooks? The short answer: Amazon and eBooks.com

We're on the final week of our 10-week ebook experiment. Like all experiments, it began with a (research) question: Where will readers look to buy their ebooks? Following the launch of Google eBookstore, its collaboration with independent bookstores, and when Amazon, B&N, Borders and other bookstores are fighting on their market share, competition on the dollars spent by ebook buyers is getting fierce.

Our assumption is that many readers will look for e-books using a search engine and will buy from one of the first results of their search. So we randomly chose 10 books of
the New York Times’ 100 Notable Books of 2010 and googled each title with the word ebook and wrote down the first two results we got. We redo it every Thursday for 10 weeks and will see if there are any changes in the search results.

Here are the results for week 10.
In brackets you'll see the last week's results. If they were the same we just wrote 'same'. And if you click on the titles, you will be forwarded to the first place on the title's search):


1.
Girl by the Road at Night by David Rabe
1st place: Simon & Schuster
(same)
2nd place: Simon & Schuster (same)


2. The Long Song by Andrea Levy
1st place: Amazon.com
(same)
2nd place: Amazon.com (same)


3. The New Yorker Stories by Ann Beattie
1st place: Amazon.com
(same)
2nd place: Amazon.com (
same)

4.
A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
1st place:
Powell's Books (same)
2nd place: Amazon.com (same)

5.
Big Girls Don't Cry by Rebecca Traister
1st place: Simon & Schuster (same)

2nd place: Simon & Schuster (same
)

6. The Price of Altruism by Oren Harman
1st place: Kobo
(same)
2nd place: Kobo (same)


7. INSECTOPEDIA by Hugh Raffles
1st place: eBookMall (Amazon)

2nd place: Amazon.com (eBookMall)


8. Country Driving by Peter Hessler
1st place: Goodreads
(B&N)
2nd place: Barnes & Noble (iFlow Reader)

9.
The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson
1st place:
eBooks.com (Amazon)
2nd place: Amazon (Random House
)

10.
Hitch 22 by Christopher Hitchens
1st place:
Atheist Movies (same)
2nd place: Amazon.com (
same)

Here's the summary of the results:


Amazon B&N Publishers Others

1st 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 2nd
week 1 6 3 1 2 3 4 0 1
week2 6 4 1 3 3 3 0 0
week3 6 2 1 2 3 4 0 2
week4 6 3 2 1 2 4 0 2
week5 5 4 1 2 2 3 2 1
week6 5 3 0 2 3 3 2 2
week7 4 5 0 2 3 1 3 2
week8 4 6 0 1 2 2 4 1
week9 4 4 1 0 2 3 3 3
week10 2 6 0 1 2 2 6 1


We give 2 points for 1st place and 1 point for 2nd place:



Amazon
B&N
Google
Publishers
Others
week 1
15
4
0
10
1
week 2
16
5
0
9
0
week 3
14
4
0
10
2
week 4
15
5
0
8
2
week 5
14
4
0
7
5
week 6
13
2
0
9
6
week 7
13
2
0
7
8
week 8
14
1
0
6
9
week 9
12
2
0
7
9
week 10
10
1
0
6
13

To make sure our results are reliable and since our experiment is based on a list of books that was "new" 10 weeks ago, we decided to check last week's list of bestsellers in the same manner and see if there's any significant difference. So we looked into the New York Times' list of bestselling hardcover fiction and these are the search results we got for the first 10 books:

1. Tick Tock by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge
1st place: Amazon

2nd place: eBooks.com


2.
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson
1st place: eBooks.com

2nd place: Amazon


3. The Inner Circle by Kate Brian
1st place: Simon & Schuster

2nd place: Amazon


4.
Strategic Moves by Stuart Woods
1st place:
eBooks.com
2nd place: Amazon

5.
The Help by Kathryn Stockett
1st place: Amazon

2nd place: eBooks.com


6. Shadowfever by Karen Marie Moning
1st place: Amazon

2nd place: B&N


7. Dead or Alive by Tom Clancy
1st place: eBooks.com

2nd place: Amazon


8.
The Sentry by Robert Crais
1st place: Amazon

2nd place: Amazon

9.
The Confession by John Grisham
1st place:
Amazon
2nd place: B&N

10.
Room by Emma Donoghue
1st place:
Waterstones.com
2nd place: eBooks.com


Here's the summary of the results:

Amazon B&N Publishers Others Google
1st 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 2nd
5 5 0 2 1 0 4 3 0 0

Here we also give 2 points for 1st place and 1 point for 2nd place:


Amazon
B&N
Google
Publishers
Others

15
2
0
2
11

Conclusions? Here we go:

1. Amazon is definitely no. 1 online bookstore when it comes to ebooks. Its reputation and online presence gives Amazon a significant advantage especially with new ebooks. We see though that Amazon's competitors are getting stronger and generating better results with ebooks that are in the market for more than just a couple of weeks.

2. Barnes and Noble? They get poor results that reflect their decline in the book market. If they count on online sales they should do a much better work to regain some lost power.

3. Google eBookstore is nowhere to be seen yet. The masters of online searches are failing in the place where they were supposed to excel. But they're still new in the game, so we'll have to wait and see. Right now it's a big disappointment.

4. Small online players (well relatively small) like eBooks.com or eBookMall can't be ignored any more and some websites like eBooks.com are showing a very strong performance, especially when it comes to new ebooks, are are second many times only to Amazon. This is a force that will only become stronger and if there's any threat to the leading position of Amazon, it's from this side of the map.

5. Independent bookstores - Not surprisingly are not part of the game yet. They're too small and unfortunately lack the resources and expertise to compete even with websites like eBooks.com.

We promise to redo this experiment in 6 months and see if anything has changed. In the meantime,
you can find all the survey results so far at www.ecolibris.net/buying_ebooks.asp

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Are you a bookworm? Got a big library? Try our monthly subscription option!

We would like to remind you with an option that is available on Eco-Libris' website - monthly subscription.

If you have a big library at home and you want to green it up one bookshelf at a time, balancing out 5 or 10 books every month on a regular basis, our subscription option can be a good fit for you.

The process is very easy and similar to one-time purchase: On
the subscription page you choose how many books you want to balance out each month. Then just click on the 'Buy' bottom and complete the payment process on the PayPal page. That's it.

Then, every month we'll work with our planting partners to plant trees in developing countries on your behalf the number of books you chose (10 trees for 10 books each month for example). You will receive a confirmation email from PayPal following each monthly payment, and of course we'll send you our "One tree planted for this book" stickers on monthly basis.

And that's not all - If you're also a member at bookmoocher, you will receive 1 bookmooch point for every 10 books you balance out!

If and when you'll decide you want to suspend your subscription, you will be able to do it easily and quickly on PayPal website.

If you have any questions about the subscription option, please feel free to email us at info [at] ecolibris [dot] net.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Plant a tree for every book you read!