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Target to stop selling Amazon Kindles #ebooks #Author #Writer #FED_ebooks

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Target to stop selling Amazon Kindles in its stores

Even if it loses offline Kindle sales elsewhere, impact on Amazon is minimal, analysts say

By Matt Hamblen

Computerworld – Target plans to stop selling Kindle e-readers in its brick-and-mortar stores after seeing buyers test the devices in its showrooms only to later buy them online from Amazon.

Target’s decision was reported this week in The New York Times, after analysts reported in January that the company wasn’t willing to let online-only retailers use its 1,800 stores to showcase their products while undercutting Target’s prices.

Target’s decision could influence other retailers that sell Kindles, including

Wal-Mart, Staples and Best Buy, analysts said. Amazon and the other physical retailers didn’t respond to a request for comment.

“Target’s problem is a common problem for brick-and-mortar companies,” said Rob Enderle, an analyst at Enderle Group. “Customers will find what they want at the store, then leave and shop for the best price online.”

Smartphone apps now available allow customers to scan a barcode on a product in a store and instantly look for better prices at other stores in the area and online, Enderle noted.

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Amazon’s Kindle Fire

What has made matters worse at Target is that Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet also serves as Amazon’s online storefront to everything Amazon sells, Enderle added. “So that’s like Target is promoting all of Amazon, and Target’s not a fan of doing that,” Enderle said.

Enderle said if other brick-and-mortar retailers stopped selling Kindles, Amazon’s physical shelf space could dry up and Amazon would have to find shelf space by opening stores in malls or kiosks. Barnes & Noble has one advantage in selling Nook e-readers and tablets because it can offer a place for users to test out the devices before buying them, analysts said.

Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates, said he would not be surprised to see Best Buy or Staples, among others, “push back on selling Amazon Kindles as a result of this frustration with Amazon.”

However, even if large retailers stop selling Kindles in their stores, Gold sees a “minimal effect on Amazon and Kindle sales” simply because most of their devices are sold directly.

Also, offline retailers wouldn’t see much material impact if they stopped selling the devices, since there was probably only a small mark-up for them, Gold added.

Amazon has sold its Kindles at a loss, primarily to encourage purchases of books and other merchandise with the device where it can make a profit, Gold noted. “It’s not a real penalty to Amazon to only have direct sales of the device,” he said.

 covers mobile and wireless, smartphones and other handhelds, and wireless networking for Computerworld. Follow Matt on Twitter at Twitter @matthamblen or subscribe to Hamblen RSSMatt’s RSS feed. His email address is mhamblen@computerworld.com.

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Report shows Kindle Fire owners are most likely to use device to read e-books #ebooks #author #writer #FED_ebooks

 From:  paidcontent.org – –  March 19, 2012

By Laura Hazard Owen


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Analysts don’t know how many Kindle Fires have been sold any more than you do. Sometimes, though, they do cool stuff like an analysis  of their family’s Amazon (NSDQ: AMZN) Prime usage—or, in the case of a new Citigroup report released today, a survey on Kindle usage and Prime membership.

Some tidbits from Citi analyst Mark Mahaney’s survey of over 1,100 “U.S. Internet consumers” (so just imagine “Citi says” in front of all these bullets):

—Twenty-three percent of survey respondents own a Kindle e-reader—just a Kindle, not a Kindle or some other type of e-reader. A July 2011 Pew report estimated U.S. adults’ e-reader ownership at 12 percent, hence Citi’s assertion that “Kindle ownership has increased about 100% over the past 7 months”). Six percent of respondents own a Kindle Fire.

—“We see Amazon’s eReader revenue contribution as actually materially greater than its Tablet revenue contribution for the foreseeable future.”

—“E-reader owners purchase about 2.4 books per month….this survey finding is higher than our prior assumption of about 1.5 books purchased per month by Kindle owners.” Also, 24 percent of respondents said they’d purchased five or more e-books in the past 30 days.

—Kindle Fire owners are most likely to use their device to read e-books (35 percent), browse the Internet (18 percent), and play games (18 percent).

—Eighty-one percent of Kindle Fire owners have purchased digital products, 10 percent have purchased physical products and 8 percent have purchased nothing.

—About 20 percent of Amazon shoppers in the survey were also Prime subscribers—most through a paid annual membership (58 percent). Also, Citi agrees with me that this Bloomberg report on Prime subscribers is stupid: “12 percent of Amazon shoppers in our survey are paying Prime subs. Although a relatively low %, this would seem to suggest that the recent report that Amazon has only 2-3MM Prime Subs was a bunch of bull-twinkie.”

—“Prime subs shop more frequently (22x per year
vs. 9x purchases per year done by non-Prime subs) and spend more dollars ($458 vs. $310, or about 48% more than non-Prime subs.”

—Finally, for those who just really like analysts’ estimates of devices sold: Citi estimates that 30 million Kindle e-readers will be sold in 2012, compared to 12 million Kindle Fires. And Citi estimates Amazon’s e-book sales at $6.2 billion this year, up 176 percent from 2011.

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