Sentences with phrase «majority of ebooks it sold»

The DOJ alleges that the publishers and Apple made the switch in tandem to combat Amazon's dominance and its $ 9.99 price point for the vast majority of ebooks it sold.
On the ebook distribution side, EpubDirect are the only (and admittedly impressive) crew actually making a go of that business and even they don't make up for the fact that the majority of ebooks sold in Ireland will have been distributed through other channels.

Not exact matches

eBook sales don't account for any more than 30 % of all books sold, which means the majority of the market is in printed books.
My experience is that the vast majority of ebooks being sold are novels... So, all those features don't really make a hill of beans difference.
The majority of EPUB books sold by the eBook store are unavailable in Canada due to publishers distribution copyright problems.
In a world where traditional publishers are still basically brokering to sell and warehouse paper rather than books (i.e. sticking to an antiquated business model in a market where ebooks are rapidly growing to be the majority of sales and shouldn't be ignored), this is a landmark deal.
Have you taken a moment to figure out the price point where the vast majority of eBooks are sold?
The majority of ebook readers sold today are supported by Android and the majority of ebooks read are on android devices.
The vast majority of ebooks are sold on Amazon, and with KDP Select, I get the most value out of the platform.
Over time, I suspect we will see a majority of book content sold in eBook formats, but I do not see print books ever going away.
The major online ebook retailers are Amazon (which enjoys the majority of the market and sells both print and ebooks), Kobo (an ebook retailer a wide international reach), Barnes & Noble (print and digital), Apple (ebook only), and Google Play (ebook only).
It seems that the vast majority of Big Five ebooks that sell reasonably well only do so in their home market.
If you're traditionally published, you're probably going to get the majority of your money from physical book sales (judging by Amazon's entirely physical top 100), so it doesn't make sense to compare the tinier portion you'd get from ebook sales to the best - selling indie ebooks that by definition don't have a physical counterpart.
Instead, we have a handful of giants and one mega-giant selling the vast majority of ebooks.
It seems to me that the inescapable problem for anyone selling ebooks on their own website is that the vast majority of ebook readers don't even know that getting ebooks from a site other than Amazon, Nook, or Kobo onto their reader or tablet is even possible, never mind how to do it.
Print publishing is more complicated, costly and time - consuming than ebook publishing, and although print books still account for the majority of book industry sales, many self - published authors sell more ebooks than print books.
As for libraries, the majority of publishers surveyed (75 %) sell ebooks to libraries, up from 61 % in 2013.
In the other hand you have a number of major online ebook retailers that sell Adobe DRM'd EPUBs and PDFs that are compatible with the majority of current ebook readers, except the iPad.
Editor of TeleRead Interview starts at 11:26 and ends at 37:11 Even if all the publishers remove DRM from every eBook they sell tomorrow, I would bet the vast majority of Amazon Kindle customers would go right on being Amazon Kindle customers, just because it's so easy to tap the button and start reading the book.
Last week I looked at the complex set of spreadsheets I use to track my ebook sales and gave a whoop of delight: I had just sold my two - millionth book, something I would never in my wildest dreams have considered possible just over four years ago, particularly as the vast majority of those sales were achieved through self - publishing.
Although, like most indies, I expect to sell the majority of books online, and as ebooks, I do like to have the option of being able to make them available through high street stores, for two reasons.
It's also worth noting that the vast majority of authors fall short on best practices (witness the low adoption of ebook preorders, even though preorders are proven to sell more books, or witness the large number of self published authors who design amateur - looking cover images despite the dearth of low - cost professionals who for $ 200 or less can make their cover look amazing).
«Currently, none of the big six has entered into any agreements with any independent brick - and - mortar bookstores or independent collectives to sell their ebooks,» say the booksellers, and «consequently, the vast majority of readers who wish to read an ebook published by the big six will purchase the ebook from Amazon.»
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