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- Xref: sparky rec.arts.books:23387 misc.books.technical:1835
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books,misc.books.technical
- Path: sparky!uunet!techbook!jamesd
- From: jamesd@techbook.com (James Deibele)
- Subject: Re: bookstores on the net
- Message-ID: <Bzzou5.504@techbook.com>
- Organization: TECHbooks --- Public Access UNIX --- (503) 220-0636
- References: <1hltdhINN8f8@nigel.msen.com>
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 21:54:04 GMT
- Lines: 73
-
- emv@msen.com (Edward Vielmetti) writes:
-
- >I am looking for some reasons to recommend that a local used book shop
- >get a connection to the net. The obvious things that come to mind
- >are the on-line library catalogs, the sparkling conversation in
- >rec.arts.books and the science fiction groups, the good sized
- >collection of academic librarians on the net, and a general sense
- >that more literate people on the net is a good thing. A couple of
-
- Sorry. I'd recommend that they not connect to the net, not from a
- business standpoint anyway. There are two basic kinds of used
- bookstores: the antiquarian bookshop, with rare books at possibly high
- prices and the "we trade 2-for-1" used paperback store. Other
- permutations certainly exist, and it actually doesn't matter much which
- category your folks fall into.
-
- The online library catalogs aren't of much good to a book dealer, nor is
- the free services available from dra.com. I haven't investigated what
- services they have beyond the free, but let's assume that they're
- available for $50/month. For that price you can buy a CD series from
- Baker & Taylor (one of the two big industry wholesalers) issued every
- other month (or maybe they've gone monthly by now). It contains every
- book that Baker & Taylor has run across. For more money (approximately
- $1000/year - depends on what associations you belong to, how long you'll
- place a standing order, and what specials Bowker is running), it's
- possible to get "Books in Print" on CD. For slightly more money
- (somewhere around $1400-$1500 list), it's possible to get "Books in
- Print" with reviews from a variety of publications, including
- "Publisher's Weekly", "Library Journal", etc.
-
- The advantage of the CD products is that they allow a bookseller to place
- orders electronically with the distributors. The CD products are
- designed to print to a printer so that the customer can walk off with a
- listing. I suspect that rigging a printer to an online source of
- information is more trouble than your bookstore would care to deal with.
- Another advantage is that CD products don't require a phone line to be
- usable for the customer.
-
- Now for a used bookseller, it might be nice to be able to show a
- customer a list of everything that Louis L'Amour ever wrote, and it
- might be nice to be able to print off a copy for him to take with him.
- If they want to settle for letting him copy off the books he doesn't
- have onto a piece of notebook paper, they can use the bound "Books in
- Print" for about one-third or one-half of the cost of the CD edition.
-
- But for an antiquarian bookseller, they'd probably be more interested in
- the electronic service that the folks who publish "AB Bookman's Weekly"
- run. I have no idea how much it costs, but it's an electronic version
- of the ads the "Weekly" runs: bookseller X lists books she has for sale
- while bookseller Z lists books he is looking for.
-
- The net would lend itself well to cheap and fast communication with
- potential customers, but I'm not sure how many customers there'd be ...
- yet. Services like America Online and eventually Prodigy (when they get
- their promised internet connection) do allow people who don't want to
- invest the time in learning vi to send email ...
-
- Reading newsgroups can be addictive, but that's a strike against it for
- businesspeople, not something to count in favor of it.
-
- I created "biz.books.technical" when there was some concern over another
- bookstore getting too commercial for misc.books.technical. If you
- created biz.books.misc for these folks to publish regular postings, I'd
- carry it. They might get enough business from that to justify spending
- the time and money to navigate the net. Wouldn't bet on it, though.
-
- Otherwise I'd recommend that they spend the money on a subscription to
- "AB Bookmans Weekly", paper and/or electronic.
-
- --
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