While presenting recent data on consumer book-buying habits and the impact of digital technologies on how books are discovered, purchased and read, Gallagher was quick to point out that publishers need to understand their consumer even better than they understand sales data.
Speaking within the event's overall theme of "Points of No Return," Gallagher identified significant impacts affecting consumer points of no return, including the proliferation of choice and access to content now enjoyed by consumers. A second impact, as noted by Gallagher, is a new model he termed the "book demand chain," as opposed to the traditional book supply chain, in which the consumer rather than the publisher drives the process and defines the marketplace. "We are now living in a 24/7/365 supply chain," Gallagher said.
Gallagher also addressed the shifting of communication mediums from print to digital as a third impact affecting consumers, specifically noting the growth of book buyers engaged in online social networks. "Sixty-nine percent engage in some form of [social networking] activity," he said, noting that this activity is not only driven by the younger generation. Eighty-nine percent of the surveyed book buyers who are 55-plus years of age said they have a Facebook page.
Other statistics presented by Gallagher at this year's "Making Information Pay" include:
• 27 percent of e-book buyers mostly purchase e-books, purchasing fewer print books than before. Fifteen percent exclusively purchase e-books, unless an e-book option does not exist.
• In 2009, 20 percent of all books were sold online.
• 44 percent of e-book buyers purchase print books online.
• 58 percent of e-book buyers are women, although Gallagher mentioned that the iPad may have an impact on the number of male e-book buyers.



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