The numbers are in and its clear without a doubt that world media has changed: eBooks now are again outselling hardcover books. The Association of American Publishers (AAP) has compiled data from 1,189 publishers on adult and young adult literature and discovered that ebooks brought in a revenue of $282.3 million in the first quarter of 2012, rising 28.4%, while hardcovers brought in $229.6 million, rising a mere 2.7%. The numbers vary by season, and often hardcovers are in number one, but the general trend is an increase in the ereader public, up from last year in the same quarter.
And while paperbacks continue to lead with $299.8 million in revenue — they is some decline. Last year they were at $335 million. In fact, most of the converts to e-readers come not from hardcover readers but from softcover. Nevertheless, softcover remains the dominant medium, for those who want to continually use a book, and not merely to own it, such as is sometimes the case with an expensive hardcover, or dismiss it, as is common with e-books when they are finished.
The e-reader market is booming in tandem with the popularity of such e-readers as Barnes and Nobles Nook and Amazon’s Kindle, the Ipad and Sony’s e-reader. The convenience of purchasing a book from online and getting it instantly, as opposed to the torturous wait for snail mail delivery, or the frustration of visiting a book store that doesn’t have what you want, has made e-readers the latest craze. And this is so despite the Digital Rights Management on some literature files and the difficulty in sharing a good book with a friend the old fashioned way.
It is also a boon for self-published authors who haven’t convinced a publisher to front the cost of printing an edition of their work: self-publishing is free and venues such as Barnes and Nobles online and Amazon in fact have programs to allow self-published authors to make their books available to a worldwide public — for free.
Thanks for the mention of our organization but your analysis of the stats I produce and distribute was incorrect.
The assumption you made – that this marked the first time ebook revenue has surpassed that of hardcovers – isn’t true. These categories change ranking regularly. All I noted in the report (and explained correctly by GalleyCat, from which you took your information) was that the two categories had switched rankings this quarter vs last year. What’s more significant – as captured in my chart, which you ran – is that the Trade paperback format, which ranked #1 above both ebooks and hardcovers in first quarter 2011, remained in that #1 spot for Q1 2012 by quite a lead.
Will these positions change? Certainly. There are seasonal book-buying patterns. Hardcovers, particularly as new releases are made available, surge traditionally in the Fall while ebooks tend to show high growth in January-February (i.e. first quarter of any year) as consumers start buying after receiving e-readers for holiday gifts. So while these new figures are interesting, I strongly encourage no one to read more into them than I intended.
Andi Sporkin
Association of American Publishers
Thank you, Mr. Sporkin, I have updated my article in light of your comment.