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Showing posts with label tablets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tablets. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Bugging the Strategizing Back-Rooms of Barnes & Noble

Customers at a Nook kiosk in a Barnes & Noble store. The company
said that it would no longer manufacture color tablets
Barnes & Noble is in a 'make-or-break' corner. Beat up pretty bad from its digital dalliance with the Nook e-reader --- bleeding blood-dollars from its coffers.

B&N wanted to expand its business in 2009 so they ventured into the digital field with the introduction of its first black and white e-reader, the Nook. The Nook had some initial success that convinced the B&N strategizers to further expand into more bells and whistles for the Nook --- But, this placed the Nook e-reader-turned-tablet into a field of bigger, heavier hitters which just overwhelmed the bookseller-recently-turned-digital-entrepreneur --- resulting in Barnes & Noble's digital plans being blown to hell.

"For the fiscal fourth quarter, the Nook unit showed a $177 million loss in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda, more than doubling the loss from the period a year earlier. Sales fell 34 percent, to $108 million."

On top of this, Mr. William Lynch, the tech wizard hired to run B&N's digital division, quit! Talk about pressure and intrigue.

So now Mr. Leonard Riggio, the chairman of B&N and the one who initially built the bookseller into a powerhouse, is once again in the captain's chair. He also cherishes the physical bookstores.

So you can just see the 'think tank' smoke billowing out of the B&N's boardrooms --- resulting, hopefully, in financial soundness for the last major bookstore chain. 

If B&N survives and grows, you will hear a universal sigh of relief emanating from publishers, authors and agents!

So, stay tuned!

More details by Julie Bosman in the New York Times:  

Fork in the Road for Barnes & Noble


William Lynch was brimming with the enthusiasm of a start-up entrepreneur. It was January 2012, and Mr. Lynch, Barnes & Noble’s chief executive, was showing off the company’s shiny Palo Alto, Calif., offices, a 300-person outpost that was the center of its e-reader operations.

He and other executives proudly displayed their new devices, talked about plans to expand and promised that the bookstore chain could go head-to-head with the giants of Silicon Valley.
“We’re a technology company, believe it or not,” Mr. Lynch said.
But only 16 months later, Barnes & Noble’s digital plans are crumbling. Last month, a disastrous earnings report coincided with the company’s announcement that it would no longer manufacture color tablets. And on Monday,Barnes & Noble announced that Mr. Lynch, the young, tech-savvy architect of the company’s digital strategy, had abruptly resigned. A new chief executive was not named.
That leaves the nation’s only major bookstore chain without a clear path forward, reviving fears among publishers, authors and agents — who are deeply dependent on a viable Barnes & Noble — about its future.
Barnes & Noble executives have acknowledged one fact: the digital business that was to be the centerpiece of its growth strategy must be retooled.
After introducing its first black-and-white e-reader in 2009, called the Nook, Barnes & Noble joined the tablet race, a move that industry experts have pointed to as a source of the company’s current troubles. Barnes & Noble’s inexpensive color tablets aimed for a niche in the market below the iPad. But while the company grabbed close to 25 percent of the e-book market, its digital division was getting pummeled by larger competitors, and bleeding money.
“Barnes & Noble was in a Catch-22. They had to do something in digital and Nook was their best shot at it,” said Peter Wahlstrom, a retail analyst with Morningstar Equity Research. “William Lynch had a good vision, but he was overwhelmed and fighting with one hand behind his back.”
Mr. Lynch’s departure, which was effective immediately, leaves Leonard Riggio, the chairman of Barnes & Noble, with a much more visible and powerful role within the company. Mr. Riggio, who built the company into a national force, is known to cherish the physical bookstores. His increased influence, analysts said, could shift the company’s focus more toward the retail side of the business.




Sunday, February 13, 2011

Sports Illustrated's All-Inclusive Print/Digital Subscription Plan


Excerpt from Mashable: ... "At a press event in New York City Friday, Sports Illustrated and parent company Time Inc. announced a new subscription plan that spans the web, and several major mobile and tablet devices — excluding, notably, the iPhone and the iPad."

Make special note of the last phrase above...it spills forth an intriguing issue discussed in some of my previous posts of late.

Although this post is interesting and informative (if I do say so myself) on it's own...please read my yesterday's post on Publishing/Writing: Insights, News, Intrigue Blog (Time, Inc. Tells Apple iPad:‘Screw You!’), and the links therein, for more juicy background.

From Mashable by Lauren Indvik:

Will Sports Illustrated’s Subscription Plan Rescue Digital Magazine Sales?

At a press event in New York City Friday, Sports Illustrated and parent company Time Inc. announced a new subscription plan that spans the web, and several major mobile and tablet devices — excluding, notably, the iPhone and the iPad.

To subscribe, Sports Illustrated readers will need to elect one of two subscription options at si.com/magazine (see below), and then download the apps through the Android Marketplace. Google will take an undisclosed cut of sales, Time EVP and Chief Digital Offer Randall Rothenberg said.

The subscription options are as follows:

Print/Digital Bundle: Print delivery plus full access to web content, and apps for Android-powered tablets (currently only the Galaxy Tab) and smartphones. Costs $4.99 per month, or $48 per year

Digital Only: Full access to web content, and apps for tablets and smartphones running Android. Costs $3.99 per month

Current print subscribers will have free access to all digital properties through the end of their current plan. Those who prefer to read Sports Illustrated on their iPhones or iPads can continue to purchase and download single issues of the magazine through the apps [iTunes link] designated for each device.

Read and learn more

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