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Blogger luc said...

Why not sharing the machine? If 10 local bookstores buy it together, the maths are becoming more friendly... Also, this is a huge educational market where teachers sell their books to their students for more than $100 (Law is a good exemple). These authors make very little on each copy. Why not POD that segment?

8:41 AM

Blogger Borderlands Books said...

Hi Luc,

Good point. But that shared model wouldn't quite have the same benefits for the other 9 stores that didn't have the machine at their location. A plan like that would certainly produce income for all the stores participating, but the over all math would still be pretty much the same since the income would still have to pay off the machine for each of the stores to make a profit.

Thanks for the comment,
Alan

8:49 PM

Blogger Unknown said...

A couple of things that might make this work:

1. If it can print a books in 4 minutes, then you can print 360 books/day. 3/ hour for eight hours is only 7% of capacity.

The reason I mention this is that you aren't in any way limited to JUST printing books for customers that walk in. Instead of idling, you can also use the machine's downtime to rapidly replenish fast-selling inventory, do print jobs for local businesses (yellow pages, churches), operate a small publishing company on the side etc.

2. I've heard the biggest users of these machines, where they've been installed, are actually self-pub authors- It's an easy way to do a small print run if you don't have a publisher. So if you arrange a couple book signings, etc. you could easily have days where you print dozens or hundreds of copies at once.

3. The $2 fee paid to Espresso and Google is for accessing their book catalog - I think you can also feed the machine a PDF for free.

So you can print classics from Project Gutenberg, your own computers etc. for just the $3 cost of material. And if you have any direct deals with self-pub authors that would be $3 to print as well.

That should change the calculus a little, as $3 is often less than the cost of shipping a single title.

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Some cons

1. It's a lot of work. You or an employee have to babysit the machine.

2. The machine IS still expensive, and it may come down in price soon.

Barnes and Noble is the elephant in the room and they haven't yet made a move in this space, but it's hard to imagine they aren't planning something.

If they decide to partner with Espresso, economies of scale could rapidly drive the cost down. If they decide to compete with Espresso than competition could do the same.

Either way, it may be prudent to wait if the cost isn't chump change for your business.

7:27 AM

Blogger Borderlands Books said...

Unknown's comment right above raises some good points. And the timing is excellent since I just put up a follow-on post that talks about those very points http://borderlands-books.blogspot.com/2012/06/print-on-demand-might-come-to-store.html

Thanks for commenting,
Alan

6:16 PM