Press Release: Childrens and Young Adult Hardback Books Up 95.2% in July 2016 vs. July 2015
WASHINGTON — December 20, 2016 — Childrens and Young Adult titles grew 31.1% in July 2016 vs. July 2016, with the majority of that growth coming from hardback books. While revenue for Trade Books grew in April, May, June and July, the gains were not enough to counter declines from earlier in the year, and the overall category was flat (-0.4%) for the first seven months of 2016 vs. 2015.
Overall publishers’ revenues (sales to bookstores, wholesalers, direct to consumer, online retailers, etc.) were down 7.9% for the first seven months of 2016 vs. the same period in 2015. The revenue decline occurred because of lower sales for higher education course materials, and Prek-12 Learning materials.
Overview
- From January to July, sales in all tracked categories were down 7.9% to $7.5 billion vs. the same time in 2015. Tracked categories include: Trade - fiction/non-fiction/religious, PreK-12 Instructional Materials, Higher Education Course Materials, Professional Publishing, and University Presses.
- Publishers’ book sales in July 2016 declined in all categories except Children’s/YA books
- From Jan. to July, trade sales were flat (-0.4%) to $3.63 billion:
- Adult Books had $2.51 billion in sales, down 3.3%
- Children’s/YA Books had $877.0 million in sales, up 6.3%
- Religious Presses had $250.0 million in sales, up by 8.3%
Trends for Trade by Format
- From Jan. - July 2016 vs. 2015:
- Paperback books grew 8.4%
- Downloaded audio grew 31.1%
- Hardback books grew 2.6%
- eBooks were down 19.2%
Educational Materials and Professional Books
- Educational Materials had a revenue loss of 8.9% for K-12 Instructional Materials and 18.1% for Higher Education Course Materials, in the first half of 2016 vs. 2015.
- Professional Publishing was down 19.4% in the first seven months 2016 vs. the same time in 2015. These categories include business, medical, law, scientific and technical books. University presses were down 3.9% during Jan. – July 2016 vs. 2015.
For information about 2016 publishing trends, check out our recent AAP Views post.
About StatShot
Publisher net revenue is tracked monthly by the Association of American Publishers (AAP) and includes sales data from more than 1,200 publishers (#AAPStats). Figures represent publishers’ net revenue for the U.S. (i.e. what publishers sell to bookstores, direct to consumer, online venues, etc.), and are not retailer/consumer sales figures.
Media Contact
Marisa Bluestone / mbluestone@publishers.org / {202} 220-4558
About AAP
The Association of American Publishers (AAP) represents about four hundred member organizations including major commercial, digital learning and education and professional publishers alongside independents, non-profits, university presses and scholarly societies. We represent the industry’s priorities on policy, legislative and regulatory issues regionally, nationally and worldwide. These include the protection of intellectual property rights and worldwide copyright enforcement, digital and new technology issues, funding for education and libraries, tax and trade, censorship and literacy. Find us online at www.publishers.org or on twitter at @AmericanPublish.