SIMBA Report: Loss of Bookstores Does Not Translate to Increased Ebook Sales
The showcase effect, according to research group, is real
By
Brian Howard
Trends in Trade Book Retailing 2012 details the interconnected worlds of print and e-book retailing through profiles of each of the three major channels of book retailer: bookstore, online and 'other.' Key demographic details and trends unique to each are provided, including gender, age, household income, education level, purchasing habits and more. Five-year trend data is also new to this edition, as is exclusive data showing to what extent e-book consumers have bought digital content from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Apple's iBookstore, and other e-book sources.
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%0D%0A"It%20may%20go%20against%20common%20sense,%20but%20the%20loss%20of%20hundreds%20of%20physical%20bookstores%20and%20several%20million%20square%20feet%20of%20book%20retailing%20space%20in%202011%20actually%20negatively%20affected%20the%20expansion%20of%20e-book%20usage."%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookbusinessmag.com%2Farticle%2Fsimba-report-loss-bookstores-does-not-translate-increased-ebook-sales%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="3091" type="icon_link"> Email Email 0 Comments Comments