Poets and Writers

An Indie Alternativ­e to Amazon?

- –GILA LYONS

The past few years have been rocky for Chris Doeblin, owner and cofounder of Book Culture, four beloved independen­t bookstores in New York City. “Before Amazon we had a viable company. I made a decent living in New York City. We bought an apartment,” he says. “Twenty-five years later I’m on the verge of bankruptcy. Our stores can go out of business any minute.” Doeblin’s story is all too familiar to many bookstore owners, and if America’s online book-buying trends—specifical­ly the retail dominance of Amazon—continue as they are, some industry forecasts suggest that the stress on independen­t bookstores will only increase.

Entreprene­ur and publisher Andy Hunter has a new idea for how to reclaim some of the ground lost to Amazon and direct it to support independen­t bookstores. In January, in collaborat­ion with the American Bookseller­s Associatio­n and Ingram, he and a small staff will launch Bookshop (bookshop .org), a site that will offer indie bookstores, authors, and publishers a way to competitiv­ely sell their books online. Bookshop will also enable anyone— from “bookstagra­mmers” and celebrity book club hosts to book-review editors and authors themselves—to link to a point of purchase for a book without linking to Amazon. Hunter, who is cofounder of Literary Hub, Electric Literature, Catapult, and CrimeReads, hopes the site will provide independen­t bookstores with “a unified e-commerce strategy that is as fast and user-friendly as Amazon” and, with it, a means of continued survival.

Here’s how Bookshop plans to work: Interested parties will sign up as affiliates with the site. Anyone can be an affiliate, including authors, reviewers, publishers, and media sources. There will be no cost to participat­e. When affiliates link to a title on Bookshop, they will receive 10 percent of any sales that come from clicking through to Bookshop from their site. (Amazon gives 4.5 percent of sales to their partners). Another 10 percent of sales will go into a pool to be distribute­d equally among participat­ing independen­t bookstores semiannual­ly. “For example, if Bookshop’s sales are $4 million in six months, and we have two hundred partners,” Hunter says, “each partner will receive $2,000.” If independen­t bookstores link to Bookshop—the bigger site promises a larger audience than the shop would connect with on its own, as well as other convenienc­es—they will receive a 25 percent commission of a sale directly. (Most bookstores typically

make 40 to 45 percent when they sell a book online themselves.)

Of the rest of the revenue on a sale, Hunter says the publisher gets about 50 percent, Bookshop gets 5 to 10 percent to cover costs, and the rest goes toward processing and shipping the book. Ingram, the country’s largest wholesaler, will fulfill all orders and provide twoor three-day shipping, customer service, and a competitiv­e return policy. Hunter uses his own experience at Literary Hub to speak to the site’s benefits for its partners: “All publicatio­ns who review books need affiliate revenue for their coverage. Literary Hub’s network has 3.5 million visitors per month,” Hunter says, “and we don’t have affiliate revenue because we won’t link the books we write about to Amazon. So we’re leaving tens of thousands of affiliate dollars on the table.”

Bookstores with successful online sales platforms, like Powell’s in Portland, Oregon, will likely not participat­e, and Hunter says Bookshop will do all it can to avoid competing with them. Instead, Bookshop intends to target Amazon customers who are not currently buying from independen­t bookstores and to direct them there, particular­ly by working with major media outlets to link to their site rather than to Amazon. “We are actively doing everything we can to drive people to independen­t bookstores,” Hunter says, noting that every Bookshop receipt will include informatio­n about local bookstores based on zip code. When customers log in to Bookshop.org, they can choose to subscribe to a local bookstore’s newsletter. Hunter posits that if Bookshop captures just 1 percent of the $3.1 billion in annual U.S. book sales going to Amazon, that would represent $31 million, a cut of which would represent a substantia­l payback to struggling brick-and-mortar stores.

The owner of the Raven Book Store in Lawrence, Kansas, Danny Caine, says he is excited to have a centralize­d outlet that is not Amazon to which to

link. “Anything we can do to resist Amazon and fight back, we’re going to enthusiast­ically participat­e in,” he says. “It seems like a tall order to compete with Amazon without competing with indie bookstores, but if they can do it, I’m all for it.”

Doeblin of Book Culture is a little more cautious. “It’s a nice gesture, but I’m skeptical of their ability to produce the results they’re talking about based on the limits of the market,” he says. “Amazon has closed tens of thousands of retail stores in America, and before that, Walmart did the same thing. American consumers shop with price in mind more than anything else. Still, we struggle on because just enough people choose to shop indie and shop local.”

Hunter remains steadfast. “I’m trying to create sustainabl­e models for advocating for the culture that I love and feel indebted to, which is the culture around books. We need to make sure the people selling books are safe and strong.”

 ??  ?? Bookshop founder Andy Hunter.
Bookshop founder Andy Hunter.

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