Book Wars. John B. Thompson

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was a market for short books published as ebooks only and priced very cheaply – books that, in most cases, simply would not have existed in the world of print, since, at 7,500–10,000 words, they were too short to be published as a printed book in English.2 Might this be the basis for a new kind of publishing – a new publishing venture that could be built on the digital short?

      This is an idea that had been gestating in the mind of John Tayman since late 2006 and early 2007. John was a writer, not a publisher, and he was frustrated by the fact that a conventional nonfiction book typically took several years to research and write. He had been a magazine editor at an earlier stage of his career, so he was accustomed to keeping a folder of interesting ideas that could be developed, but most of these ideas fell into a kind of literary no man’s land: they were too complicated for a short magazine article but they didn’t merit the time, commitment or extent of a full-length book. John was also a heavy reader, but many of the books he bought and stacked up on his nightstand were books that he never read: reading a book was a seven- or eight- or ten-day commitment, and he simply didn’t have the time to read them all. He began to think: ‘I would like a story that I could digest more quickly than that. I would like a reading experience that maps to the experience that I have when I go to the movies. I want to consume a story – start, middle, finish – in one sitting. That’s when the germ of Byliner started coming up.’

      In 2011, this innovative new venture in digital publishing seemed to have a bright future with everything going for it. E-singles ‘are the format of our time’, purred technology reporter Laura Owen; they ‘fit perfectly with the curl-up-with-your-iPad phenomenon. They’re long enough that you don’t blow through them in ten minutes, but most can be read in under an hour.’3 But three years after it launched with its stunning debut success, Byliner was in trouble. Sales were static, margins were being squeezed and managers were looking for ways to cut costs. The dream was over. What went wrong?

      It quickly became clear that Byliner needed to find another revenue model – individual transactions at 99¢ with a 30 per cent fee to the vendors simply wasn’t going to generate enough revenue to make this a viable business. So they began experimenting with a subscription model that would give readers access to all its content through its website and mobile apps for a monthly subscription of $5.99. But they didn’t get enough subscribers to make this work. Perhaps it was too early for a subscription model, maybe consumers were not yet accustomed to paying for reading material in this way – ‘I’m still not convinced that there is a viable business model for subscription at that level’, reflected John, ‘but if there is, it’s still two, three, four years away. And so we just sort of flat-lined.’

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