Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

E-commerce Times

Amazon Fattens E-Book Royalty Checks in Preemptive Strike

Amazon is trying to "make sure it's ahead of the curve before Apple gets involved," agreed Kurt Scherf, vice president and principal analyst with Parks Associates.

This move "brings them more smaller publishers" and is likely an attempt to "lock in the 'long tail' of the content," Scherf told the E-Commerce Times. "It's a volume and scale issue, which of course Amazon already knows well."

In the bigger picture, Amazon and others are "facing the challenge that Apple set the model for music and video" with its iTunes platform, he added. "They don't want that to happen again."

As new e-readers emerge, "clearly we will be looking at newspaper deals on these devices as well," he pointed out.

Overall, Scherf concluded, "the message here is that Amazon wants to be in front in terms of configuring these deals before Apple even gets there."

From the article, "Amazon Fattens E-Book Royalty Checks in Preemptive Strike" by Katherine Noyes

Previously In The News

The Great and Tragic Lives of OTT Video Service Providers

OTT video service providers must climb the learning curve quickly in order to keep the doors open. Often, content license terms require companies to grow revenues quickly in order to cover minimum...

New Tech and New Horizons for Home Media Installers

These circumstances will change, though, as more dealers will seek out knowledge about these solutions and then communicate the benefits to their customers, which will ultimately push up the number...

Why Amazon's Cagey About Kindle Sales

It's also possible that the Kindle -- while attracting lots of media attention -- is such a small part of Amazon's overall business that the company doesn't feel the need to disclose how many it se...

Mixed Bag of News Keeps Apple Investors Guessing

"There's almost a consensus that Verizon Wireless will get the iPhone, but the question is when," Harry Wang, a director of research at Parks Associates, told MacNewsWorld. "Some put it at early ne...