Sentences with phrase «ebook subscription company»

Entitle is the only eBook subscription company to secure content deals with more than one of the major corporate publishers, and has titles such as Doctor Sleep, Life of Pi, Duck Dynasty's Si - ology 101, Beautiful Ruins, Miracles and Massacres, The Perks of Being A Wallflower, The Storyteller, The Bully Pulpit, Happy, Happy, Happy, Remy, Beautiful Beginning, The Light Between Oceans, A House in the Sky, Hero, Brain on Fire, Hyperbole and a Half and City of Bones.
Much of the digital money for authors in Denmark is from Mofibo, the ebook subscription company where I work.
Likely, if they are signed to a major publisher, they already have agreements to get it from the ebook subscription companies?

Not exact matches

Draft2Digital will now offer distribution to Oyster, an ebook company best known for its leading subscription service for ebooks.
«A one - year subscription to Storia School Edition grants a school access to a carefully curated library of 2,000 well - known fiction and nonfiction ebooks for Pre-K-Grade 6,» the company stated in a press release.
3) You don't think there should be any force that determines a good book or a bad book but the public 4) You have built a company based on submitting user generation content to all major online bookstores, libraries and eBook subscription sites.
Scribd is a company that used to abide by the unlimited subscription model with audiobooks and eBooks, but in recent years, they have scaled back.
Scribd has lined up a treat for owners of the Kindle Fire range of tablet devices; the company's online ebook subscription service which has now been extended to include to the Kindle Fire tablets.
At this year's BookExpo event, two companies were featuring their children's ebook subscription services.
Children's ebook subscription platform FarFaria exhibited at this year's BookExpo event to demonstrate the powerful effects of their product, but also to ensure that attendees know about the company's pro-teacher initiative.
The first site, Artist's Network eBooks Book Club, the Company's art community ebook subscription site, http://ebooks.artistsnetwork.com, features more than 100 full - color art instruction titles from the Company's celebrated art community.
For ebook reading consumers, we came across brand - new or limited edition devices from four different companies today, including Bookeen, Imcosys, Tolio, and txtr; txrt actually spoke at length about pending plans for a subscription - based reading service, highlighting several features that their platform will offer that the slow - to - adoption subscription reading market has lacked.
One the most elusive models in digital publishing has to be subscription - based ebooks, with companies around the world all seeking to be the Netflix or Spotify of reading.
Oyster is one of the few companies in the world that has been a subscription based eBook service actually work.
Oyster and Scribd are the only two companies to really make the entire eBook subscription service a viable business model.
Oyster isn't exactly the first company to offer subscription - based ebooks.
Other companies, such asBookboard and Speakaboo, sell subscriptions to ebooks for children.
«Launching enthusiast ebook subscription sites is a natural progression for the Company and a valuable addition to our portfolio,» said Chad Phelps, Chief Digital Officer.
Legimi is the largest ebook subscription service in Poland and the company has ironed out an agreement with Pocketbook to include support for their entire ebook catalog for paid subscribers.
eBook subscription models have taken off in the past year, despite having digital roots extending back as far as 2010 with companies like Spain - based 24Symbols.
But what may have really helped Scribd establish its foothold in the model is the way the company continues to make the subscription reading experience every bit as enjoyable and seamless when compared to how these same consumers would be using ebooks if they were buying them individually.
With the advent of Amazon Prime and the ability to borrow a free eBook every month, eBook subscription programs are being launched by a number of companies.
Scribd was one of the first companies to launch an eBook subscription service.
Today, emerging crossmedia business models, such as film / publishing company Cinestate and audiobook / ebook subscription streaming service Storytel, and storytelling platform oolipo, allow content creators to envision a new kind of world, uninhibited by format or borders.
This might have been the tone in presentations about I See Me, a 16 - year - old personalized - book company, for example, or about children's ebook subscription programmes MeeGenius, Speakaboos, and (not yet launched) SmartyPAL.
Several companies have started offering ebook subscription services, such as Oyster, Scribd and Entitle, over the past year; it was only a matter of time before Amazon got onboard with the idea as well — now if only they can convince some big - name publishers too (that's probably what's delaying the announcement).
With business models that link online stores to specialised gadgets, companies like Apple and Amazon are proving that consumers will pay for music downloads, ebooks and even online newspaper subscriptions if you make it easy and attractive enough.
Kindle FreeTime Unlimited — Amazon's tablet subscription product for kids that includes unlimited access to ebooks, movies and games — is not available on the Kindle Paperwhite, though Grandinetti said the company is thinking about how that could work.
Amazon is the biggest company offering ebooks for a monthly subscription rate.
The company launched its own online ebook subscription service back in February, and now it is back with audiobooks.
Ebook subscription can work, maybe, if it's done the way Amazon is doing it: With tiny payments for authors, backed by a giant company that can actually also afford to take a loss on the program (though we have no proof that Amazon is taking a loss on Kindle Unlimited).
It makes Oyster look pretty prescient for focusing so hard on its technology and mobile reading experience (as it did from launch — and which was surely one of the main reasons it raised $ 17 million from big VCs), because otherwise the company's exit would only stand as a symbol of the fact that ebook subscriptions don't work.
Ebook subscription service Scribd has dumped many romance and erotica novels from its line - up because they are so popular with readers that they cost the company too much.
According to the company, it offers an integrated service that combines reference databases, subscription management, online journals, and books, with content discoverable via commercial search engines as well as through their databases and ebooks available in multiple formats.
On ebooks The company offers libraries over 15,000 ebooks via SciVerse ScienceDirect, which has perpetual pick and choose with no limits on simultaneous access and volume discount where applicable (as well as purchase by single chapter, e-series subscription, and other options).
Officials at Amazon believe subscription - based ebook consumption is an inevitability, and will continue to invest in and build the company's Kindle Unlimited service as part of an effort to stay ahead of the emerging trend, Russ Grandinetti, senior VP, Kindle, at Amazon explained during a candid general session interview on January 14 at the Digital Book World Conference and Expo 2015.
On January 5, Scribd officially announced that it had secured $ 22 million in Series D funding, which will be used to grow the company's burgeoning ebook subscription business.
This was illustrated by rival ebook subscription service Scribd when it dumped lots of romance and erotica titles from its line - up in July because they were too popular with readers and cost the company too much.
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