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Readers Snarl At Patterson’s Free Preview of "Fang"

By Tom Dulaney 
Even the astoundingly bestselling James Patterson—or his publisher’s marketing experts—are still floundering when it comes to using the Kindle and its bestseller list as a launch pad for a new book.
FangBook 1, the latest in Patterson’s Maximum Ride series targeted on young adults, appeared on Amazon on Feb. 10 in three guises: as a hardback available for pre-order at $9.71, as a Kindle book pre-order for a coincidental $9.71, and in a Free Preview. The preview edition jumped quickly into the top 25 on the Kindle Store bestseller list.
But the first two reviews of the preview pounced right on the fact that “it is not the whole book” being given away, followed by comments criticizing the marketing technique.
Awarding the lowest one-star rating, one reviewer warned others off and called the free preview “deceptive advertising.” The second one-star reviewer joined the first in saying such “previews” were much like the standard samples available on any book for the Kindle.
Perhaps author and publisher would have done better to call the Preview a “Free Sample” or some such term more clearly relating the situation?
Time will tell. But thus far the handful of reviews seems to be getting trumped by the obvious fact that having the book displayed near the top of the Kindle Store bestseller list is getting Patterson’s latest the kind of attention that less successful authors would love.

EXTRA – Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Wednesday, February 10, 2010: Sampler for "The Reincarnationist Series" by M.J. Rose, and a Question About Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #3: Paragon

M.J. Rose is a first-rate novelist and, even before her fiction was brought to dramatic life in the Past Life series that debuted last night on the Fox network, she has long shown that she has a first-rate mind when it comes to thinking in independent and innovative ways about how to connect with readers. She pays plenty of attention to what readers want, a quality that I would love to see become more widespread among today’s bestselling authors.


So it’s not surprising that she has come up with a new and distinctive way to use the Kindle platform to entice us to enter the world of her novels.


She’s just created a nice, free, almost book-length Kindle sampler of the first three chapters of the three novels that compose her series, The ReincarnationistThe Reincarnationist, The Memorist and The Hypnotist.


There have been a number of other “series” novelists who have experienced some success lately with the strategy of offering a previous title or two from a series as a free book on the Kindle platform in an effort to attract readers to the newest installment in a series, and we certainly welcome more of that. But I really like Rose’s approach here, and there’s no indication how long it will last, so I have already downloaded the sampler which is available right here:



Here’s one reader who is quite likely to buy all three Kindle books as a result of this nice welcome.


As Amazon works to find ways to offer more and more distinctive, high-quality Kindle content at prices that will continue to support the decisions of millions of avid readers to invest in Kindles, it is high time for the company to provide all its authors with the opportunity to come up with innovative ideas like this one. The Digital Text Platform for Kindle publishers should allow authors and publisher to choose from several promotional options with the click of a mouse.


In another situation related to free Kindle listings, we’ve noticed in the last day or two that a new free listing that we mentioned here yesterday — Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #3: Paragon — has strangely been excluded so far from Amazon’s Kindle Store Sales Rankings. It is clear to us that the book has been  downloaded by hundreds of Kindle owners already, and if it got the same Sales Rankings treatment that has been accorded to nearly every other title include Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #1 and #2, it would be near the top of numerous Kindle Store bestseller lists, including the primary bestseller list. So, we’re just wondering whether this is a glitch or the advance-guard of new policy. Time will tell.

The Kindle Owner’s Beer

By Stephen Windwalker 

Originally posted February 10, 2010 – © Kindle Nation Daily 2010

Okay, it’s all well and good that we recently passed 10,000 Kindle Nation subscribers and we were quoted (out of context, of course) this morning on Marketwatch. We’re still not above an occasional whimsical post.

The word is that there is a minor winter storm on its way toward my Arlington, MA neighborhood, so on my way back from my gym-and-swim this morning I stopped at my neighborhood packie to pick up a 12-pack of Sam Adams Light Beer.

What’s that got to do with Kindle Nation?

I don’t want to overstate the connection, but I promise, we’ll get there.

You may not have watched the Super Bowl this past weekend. Indeed, I think that a lot of Kindle owners were reading their Kindles early Sunday evening and may have missed the game, the Who, and the various multi-million dollar Super Bowl commercials. From what I have heard, we didn’t miss that much. I loved The Who in their day, but I think that day may have passed for Pete and Roger.

But it has come to my attention that reading, and specifically the very Kindle-friendly notion of book clubs, played an important role in one of Sunday’s most prominent Super Bowl commercials.

Let’s just say that the commercial wasn’t exactly respectful of book clubs, of reading, or for that matter of women. It was a commercial, after all, for Budweiser beer.

I’m not a crotchety old curmudgeon, and the only thing that bothers me about the commercial is the way it seems to celebrate stupidity. Some men are actually better than that, at least 40 percent of the time. It’s not like I’m going to start boycotting Budweiser beer as a result of one silly commercial.

The fact is that it isn’t a boycott if you just don’t care for the product.

As a reader, a Kindle owner, and a moderately intelligent person of occasionally refined tastes, I prefer a quality beer. And I may have a slight bias toward Sam Adams because its founder Jim Koch and I were college pals and are still good friends more than a few years later. He brought me a celebratory case of his then-fledgling beer company’s finest brew when I opened my brick-and-mortar bookstore in Boston 25 years ago, and Betty and I attended his 60th birthday party last summer. It was a great party with lobster and steamers and great clam chowder, but the best of it all was the beer.

And I have no doubt that if Jim’s company were to make a similar commercial they would, at the very least, be cutting-edge enough to have a Kindle show up somewhere in the 30 seconds of footage.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Wednesday, February 10, 2010: James Patterson, Tom Reynolds, Darren Craske, and More

Fang: A Maximum Ride Novel  (Free Book 1 Preview) by James Patterson

Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #3: Paragon by JOHN JACKSON MILLER  


Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #2: Skyborn by JOHN JACKSON MILLER 


Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #1: Precipice by JOHN JACKSON MILLER

Change the World: Recovering the Message and Mission of Jesus 
by Michael B Slaughter

Edge of Apocalypse Free Preview Only (Equivalent of about 35-40 pages despite metadata that indicates longer) by Tim LaHaye and Craig Parshall

Devotions for Lent

  
The Apothecary’s Daughter by Julie Klassen (Jan 1, 2009)

Talk of the Town Lisa Wingate (Mar 1, 2008)

Daisy Chain (Defiance Texas Trilogy, Book 1) Mary E. DeMuth (Mar 1, 2009)

Peculiar Treasures (The Katie Weldon Series #1) Robin Jones Gunn (Apr 1, 2008)

Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith Rob Bell (Jul 1, 2006)

Icy Heat: A Heat series story by Leigh Wyndfield

John Newton: From Disgrace to Amazing Grace by Jonathan Aitken (Jun 7, 2007)

His Lady Mistress
Slow Hands (Harlequin Blaze)

 

Senior Executive Indicates Random House Could Steer Clear of Price-Fixing Cabal

Thanks to Bufo Calvin at I Love My Kindle for turning my attention to some fascinating remarks last week by Madeline McIntosh, who returned to Random House in early November in the newly created position of President, Sales, Operations, and Digital. Speaking in San Jose at the Winter Institute of the American Booksellers Association, McIntosh separated herself and Random House dramatically from what had previously seemed like lockstep among Big Six publishers around issues of pricing control over ebooks.

According to a report at Publishers Lunch:

McIntosh took on pricing control directly as one of the reasons Random House has “not acted quite as quickly as others.” She expressed a series of concerns that publishers “have no real experience at setting retail prices….”

She cited a recent visit to Powell’s, where with used books and new books sitting on the same shelves “they set the prices on every single unit in a unique, demand-based way.” But more importantly from her perspective, up until now “our authors have not been at risk if you make a different decision about how to price a given book, so it didn’t actually affect our author if a given retailer decided to aggressively discount a certain segment of books. The benefit…is that we have been able to sustain a great variety of different authors at different levels.”

On the windowing of releases, McIntosh expressed a personal opinion and noted “there are a lot of divergent opinions at Random House,” but she is “not convinced that delaying an ebook will be to the benefit of either the author or the consumer.” She prefers not to lose a potential sale because an ebook version is not available and also does not want to “create an adversarial relationship” with ebook readers or “train those readers that instead the best way to get that digital copy is to download it for free.”

Instead of through changed pricing models, McIntosh said “the best value we can offer in the digital world will be about embracing what we already know how to do well…. Our best asset is our editors.” She spoke about “allowing digital to force us to reinvent ourselves as editors” as Random looks at ways “to contract and deliver content that is a whole range of different lengths, and bring ideas to market in a much faster way than we can when its print.” For the future, she is less excited about “just about creating a digital version of a book or adding bells and whistles” but wonders instead “do we need to push ourselves into an area we really don’t know anything about, which is thinking about developing applications.” She sees the process as taking a brand and conceiving of “what would be compelling to a consumer…that would make us still relevant as a content producer” in a new way, admitting that they don’t have the answers yet–just the question.

It’s good to see some engaged, intelligent, independent thinking by someone in a position to influence how the ebook pricing saga may actually play out.

Three-Year Cost Comparison Before You Buy a Single Book: Kindle $359, Kindle DX $639, Apple iPad $1959

Has the entire Internet been hijacked by close relatives of Steve Jobs?

Don’t get me wrong. I am pretty jazzed about the Apple iPad, and I plan to get one if I can keep myself convinced that I will be able to use its features, apps, and hardware functionality in ways that actually allow me to save money on other gadgets and services. 

But I have to say that it’s a little surprising, as I read various posts about Apple’s new iPad, some at otherwise responsible websites, how confused many people seem to be about the real cost comparisons between the Kindle and the iPad. Anyone who tells you that the two products are relatively close in price is not telling you the whole story.

I will grant that it was a pretty good initial PR coup for Apple to announce that the iPad starts at $499, but let’s get real here. Given the fact that the iPad will be all about mobility and will provide a very cool environment for downloading and viewing, reading, or listening to various kinds of high-bandwidth media content (including ebooks), it simply does not make sense to analyze the iPad’s price without unlimited 3G wireless or without at least 32 GB of storage. To equip the iPad with less than the 3G and 32 GB options seems rather like buying a Maserati with a speed governor and using it to delivery the mail in your town, or in this case, the email. And we are talking about a Maserati here.

So, let’s do a three-year price comparison of the current 6-inch Kindle, the Kindle DX, and the 32 GB iPad 3G, before a customer buys a single book:

  • The latest-generation 6-inch Kindle costs $259 up front, another $75 to $100 for accessories and an extended warranty, and never another dime = $334-$359
  • The latest-generation Kindle DX costs $489 up front, another $100 to $150 for accessories and an extended warranty, and never another dime = $589-639
  • The iPad with unlimited 3G (i.e., enough bandwidth to do anything more than email and a few ebooks) and 32 GB storage capacity costs $729 up front, another $100 to $150 for accessories and an extended warranty, and $30 a month x 36 months = $1909-$1959

But like I said, the iPad is a Maserati. For people who are looking for a highly mobile, highly portable convergence device, and for whom money is no object, this may (soon) be the closest thing yet on the market. Although the iPad has been roundly criticized for some specific limitations like the fact that it will not play well with Adobe Flash, the fact remains that it will be able to do so much that it is unfair, in one sense, to compare it to the Kindle. But in another sense, unless you truly value all that the iPad can do, it’s reasonable to compare it with your other options — like the Kindle that you probably already own if you are reading this post — for doing very specific things. And for many of us, there will be several ways in which the iPad comes up short in comparison with the Kindle when it come to very specific reading-related issues such as its weight and its backlit screen.

Perhaps it just comes down to the fact that we do not, as consumers, live in a one-size-fits-all world. The iPad is an exciting product to me and to many other people who already perceive the need for higher levels of tricked out mobility. It will definitely achieve at least moderate success, but there are some  issues that would concern me if I were an Apple investor:

  • For the iPad to become a mass audience product Apple will have to create the perception of a need for millions of affluent customers who do not yet perceive the need. (Apple’s done it before, so I wouldn’t bet against them doing it again.)
  • When people buy the iPad they will be buying it for very different reasons than those for which they buy the Kindle, so the iPad is not well-positioned to ride the wave of the Kindle revolution, and trying to stand on Amazon’s shoulders, to use Steve Jobs’ phrase, may be a precarious perch indeed.
  • The weight of the iPad is wonderful if you are comparing it to a tablet or a netbook, but it’s going to be a dealbreaker for many potential customers when it comes to serious reading. In our current Kindle Nation Citizen Survey 52% of respondents so far say that the fact that a device weighed 24 ounces would have a negative influence on whether they would buy it or continue to use it.
  • Of all the products that might lose sales to the iPad, the first would seem to be the iPod Touch, and there may also be some low-level cannibalism between the iPad and the iPhone, particularly among those who figure out that you can run Skype on the iPad.

Meanwhile, there are three ways in which the iPad could actually be helpful to the Kindle:

  • If it gains a foothold as the primary ereading alternative to the Kindle, it could discourage investment in other ereader devices and platforms.
  • Its impressive bells and whistles are bound to inspire Amazon to add new features and sex appeal to the Kindle sooner than might otherwise occur.
  • By all accounts to date, the iPad like the iPhone, the iPod Touch, and soon the Mac will allow access to Kindle content through various Kindle for X apps.