1. Estimates of units sold for both the iPad and the Kindle range from 3-5 million.
2. Even with competition from Apple, Barnes and Noble, and others Amazon still holds 90% of the ebook market share.
3. Publisher Author J. A. Konrath reported that on the iBookstore he sales 100 books per month. On the Kindle store he sales 200 books per day.
4. Kindle is not just the physical device. You can read Kindle books on the iPad through the Kindle App. Kindle is also on Android and Windows and everything else that you could possible want to read an ebook on. This means that even if the iPad or an Android
5. The production of the Kindle and price Amazon must purchase the ebooks from their publishers must be taken into account. Let’s assume the Kindle Reader only costs Amazon $150 to produce and that for each $10 book sold they have to give the publishers $7.
19 x $7 = $133 in ebook costs + $150 for the Kindle = $283 in total that Amazon would spend on giving away the Kindle. $283 – $189 the customer pays = $94.
Amazon would go from making $39 on each Kindle Unit to losing $94. If you factor in the lose sales of 19 books x $3 Amazon gets for selling the book then Amazon is losing out on another $57 in revenue for a total of $96 in lost revenue by your brilliant idea. $96 in lost revenue + $94 from the unit sold = Amazon would be making $190 less by giving it away for free than they would by still selling it.
6. Oh yeah, Amazon already gives away over 1.8 million out of print books for free.
One thing they really need to work on is book quality. I bought a Kindle book and there are so many errors that it's hard to read. I know the hardcover version doesn't have this errors, so their conversion process probably needs a proofreading step added. There also doesn't seem to be an easy way to report these errors, so I don't I'll be buying any more Kindle books. I had even preordered one of the new Kindles, but I canceled it because of this.
Most kindle books I have purchased have been, for the most part, free of errors. For a few books that did have significant errors, they showed up in the free sample, the book's comments were all complaints about kindle errors, and the books were fixed the next time I looked at them.
2. Even with competition from Apple, Barnes and Noble, and others Amazon still holds 90% of the ebook market share.
3. Publisher Author J. A. Konrath reported that on the iBookstore he sales 100 books per month. On the Kindle store he sales 200 books per day.
4. Kindle is not just the physical device. You can read Kindle books on the iPad through the Kindle App. Kindle is also on Android and Windows and everything else that you could possible want to read an ebook on. This means that even if the iPad or an Android
5. The production of the Kindle and price Amazon must purchase the ebooks from their publishers must be taken into account. Let’s assume the Kindle Reader only costs Amazon $150 to produce and that for each $10 book sold they have to give the publishers $7.
19 x $7 = $133 in ebook costs + $150 for the Kindle = $283 in total that Amazon would spend on giving away the Kindle. $283 – $189 the customer pays = $94.
Amazon would go from making $39 on each Kindle Unit to losing $94. If you factor in the lose sales of 19 books x $3 Amazon gets for selling the book then Amazon is losing out on another $57 in revenue for a total of $96 in lost revenue by your brilliant idea. $96 in lost revenue + $94 from the unit sold = Amazon would be making $190 less by giving it away for free than they would by still selling it.
6. Oh yeah, Amazon already gives away over 1.8 million out of print books for free.