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Rocket Bomber - retail

Rocket Bomber - retail

E-Books and Readers: Price War, Betamax, Snake Oil, Razor Blades, and Apple Pie

filed under , 21 June 2010, 22:24 by

Yeah, yeah, I know: most of the time I’m too clever for my own good.

Let me explain 4 of the 5 components of the article title before we get to specifics:

  • A Price War is “a term used in the economic sector to indicate a state of intense competitive rivalry accompanied by a multi-lateral series of price reduction”
  • Betamax is a video format “generally considered obsolete, though it is still used in specialist applications by a small minority of people.”
  • Snake Oil – “applied metaphorically to any product with exaggerated marketing but questionable or unverifiable quality or benefit.”
  • and the Razor Blade reference is actually to the Razor and Blades business model, “the concept of either giving away a salable item for nothing or charging an extremely low price to generate a continual market for another, generally disposable, item”

And I’ll make all this work, I promise.

##

Last point first:

Razor Blades.

Seth Godin [wiki, official site] is a big-idea-guy; he posts boggling (in the good sense of the verb ‘to boggle’) ideas almost daily to his blog. A couple of weeks ago (7 June) he posted an article titled Paperback Kindle directed at Amazon but of note for any potential market player. He posited 4 new business models for an ebook reader:

  • no frills, rock bottom price (Seth calls it at $49) – get people to buy into your ecosystem with a heavily discounted chunk of hardware, knowing they’ll be buying e-books from you for years. This is Amazon’s current business model, except they wanted to charge you $259 $189 for it.
  • Again, the razor and blades model, cited as such by Seth but pitched slightly differently: Buy, say, 8 e-books and get the reader for free. —actually, both the ‘paperback’ and ‘razor’ are fine examples of the freebie model, just different ways to sell it to customers. Alternately:
  • A subscription service, with subsidized hardware, just like a cell phone. Tie your customers into a contract but make it sound like a Book of the Month Club — sure, the e-reader is free, but you just opened yourself up to ‘push’ marketing, where the book each month (a fine book, I’m sure, but…) is not the selection of editorial staff but rather the winner of an auction, whomever was willing to pay most for access to your eyeballs.
  • …and lastly, something fairly Seth-specific that may be important to business, social networks, and New Media types [like, say, bloggers] but doesn’t quite jive with traditional publishers.

My extensive linking to and gloss upon the words of Godin is only meant to highlight one point: the money is not in the e-book appliances, but in the continuing and ongoing sales of e-books. $10 a pop for a file? iTunes was only charging 99¢…

Snake Oil

I’m not going to debate the $9.99 price point — except to note here that it’s about $5 too low for a brand new book about to be released in hardcover, considering the non-print production costs that get discounted or ignored by most ‘experts’ who look at publishing as a dinosaur and e-books as the only answer.

— And e-books themselves are not the ‘snake oil’ that I feel salesmen are trying to foist on an ignorant public. Books are books, e- or otherwise, and they are the most important thing to me, in both my life and career (I’m a bookseller) and everything that I am and aspire to be was either found in or is founded upon books. I love the damn things.

That said: I recently looked into the ePub format and lo and behold: e-books are digital files.

Yeah, I wasn’t really shocked either.

Here’s the thing: ePub formatted e-books use XML, XHTML, a subset of CSS and honestly, No One needs a new chunk of hardware to read these things. Adobe could add ePub functionality to it’s PDF Reader tomorrow, and a creative coder could have extensions for Chrome or Firefox up by the end of the week.

ePub e-books are merely formatted text, a damn sight less complicated than, say, PHP scripted web-pages served up, dynamically, from a MySQL database. —that is to say, e-books are less complicated by many degrees from My Blog, This Very Web Page You Are Reading Right Now on Whatever Phone, Netbook, Tablet, Laptop, or Desktop Computer Screen. Rocket Bomber — indeed, any blog — is magnitudes more complex than an e-book. [so far, no one has complained about blog browser compatibility]

E-Books are [barely] formatted text, and the web has been reliably serving text since 1993. E-Books are easy.

So, the Snake Oil: Amazon (and it’s copy-cats) are trying to convince us we need a new appliance to read text. “Brand new thing, this, the book, never mind the Gutenberg behind the curtain or that sticky-cable thing — if you want to read books, well, step right up! I’ve got what you need [*slap*] right here!

There’s nothing wrong with a book, or plain .txt files, or HTML, or browsable web pages.

So, um, why pray tell do I need another screen to read your ‘e-books’ when it would have been just as easy to read them without proprietary controls and locked-in business relationships? Hm?

Amazon (and its copy-cats) want you to buy their e-book appliance because then [presumably] it ties you in to their system and you end up buying just their flavour of e-books for life. This is the double-damnation of the Kindle — as yes, in fact, if you buy an e-book from Amazon you’re doomed to Amazon-sanctioned readers for life — but other vendors are just as culpable — as everyone selling ebooks may pay lip service to open standards and “you buy it, you own it” rhetoric but the truth is: I, you, and everyone else are just one hard-drive-crash away from having to re-buy everything: music, books, computer games & applications included.

Right now, in the realm of e-books and e-book appliances, there is both a format war ongoing and a price war on the horizon.

Both make little sense. (You might have already guessed why I think so, but I’ll cover the other points first before my conclusions)

##

Betamax

At one point in time, Betamax and VHS were competing formats. [both are obsolete now; one more object lesson in the e-book technology discussion]

Betamax is more notable in the modern day-and-age for the lengths Sony was willing to go to support the new technology [see: Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc.] and that’s a debt we all owe Sony and for which I myself will be eternally grateful, as the SCOTUS ruling on the Betamax case re-affirmed & established a whole new class of fair use and the internet you all so enjoy today may or may not be dependent on it, but your TiVos and Netflix most certainly are.

Anyway. In this article, Betamax (no matter it’s virtues) is cited as a cautionary tale: it was a proprietary format which never garnered enough users to persist after it’s corporate sponsor abandoned it.

I’ll let you Kindle owners puzzle that last bit out.

Are there cases where the ‘proprietary’ format won out over the market and became the standard? Why yes, I think there may be — but only after patents expired and ‘proprietary’ became open domain.

It’s a long process and between Sonny Bono and the speed at which technology advances in the present day, there is a large disconnect — not just between ‘rights’ and ‘the public domain’ but a cognitive disconnect where ‘rights’ are now assumed to continue into perpetuity. There is no innovation, no standing on the shoulders of giants — only a klatch of greedy gollums hoarding their ‘Precious’ forever, no matter how it might damage us, or them.

The open [I’m tempted to put that in quotes but the format is Open even if it falls short of full implementation of that ideal] ePub format helps… but only if the motives of market players follows up on the promise of Open Formats —

That is to say: Books are open formats; just open a book. All this e-book nonsense hasn’t proven itself — and one can argue e- is better (and in many ways, it is) but unless and until we figure out this rights-and-perpetuity-thing I quite honestly hate e-books.

My fear is that once the opportunity to make money on an e-book expires, so does the e-book. No permanent record, no addition to the corpus of human knowledge, no appeal and no recourse: Once the economic viability of a book is gone, there is no [apparent] need [to a business-type] to support the e-book and make sure it persists.

I shudder. Business models suck and they’ll suck us all down with them.

Open Source was the best idea of the last century, as important as the Scientific Method was in the 18th and 19th centuries — and if we can be sure Open Source interfaces with what used to be the Public Domain, I for one will be a lot more confident about our future as a species and our ability to solve all our current and any future problems.

This may make me some sort of hybrid Scientist/Socialist/Communist/Pirate, where I feel ideas must be shared. If so, I welcome that label. And I will stoutly defend my new niche against those who would use the same arguments to obtain popular entertainment iterations for free. Dude: free exchange of ideas is one thing, making sure the wealth of human knowledge is available to future generations — that’s great; admirable, even — but my intellectual argument does not guarantee you access to the latest chapters of Naruto or the most recent episode of the Bleach anime.

That’s merely entertainment.

I’m arguing books. Ideas. Social models and actionable suggestions for transforming our society.

Confuse the two at your peril. At best, you are uninformed and intentionally ignorant; at worst you are part of the problem and only provide fodder to those who seek to clamp down on ideas and innovation because there is no profit in it, and to whom the very idea of a ‘free’ society is just another legal fiction that can be ‘fixed’ if enough lobbying dollars are funnelled into respective legislative bodies world-wide.

##

If necessary I’ll expand on that argument but I’m already off-topic.

##

Price War

The first news article I saw [cnet] was time-stamped 6AM: from B&N $149, Wi-Fi-Only Addition to NOOK Family… NOOK 3G Available at $199

So: Nook as we knew it now $60 cheaper, new model [not yet in stores, but announced] for $110 cheaper than the previous established ‘standard’ e-reader price.

New Chapter.

Didn’t take long: by the time I sat down to lunch, Amazon had their PR up: AMAZON KINDLE NOW ONLY $189 [emphasis Amazon’s]

Yeah, now we really are seeing a competitive e-reader market, and given the realities of the Razor and Blades model: prices will go lower. The point of this mess is not to sell e-reader appliances, but to gain market share.

The retailer with the largest base gets to dictate terms to not only the customers, but to the publishers.

[And I haven’t even mentioned Apple yet. This is going to get real messy before Christmas.]

Speaking of Apple, Joe Wikert posts a dissenting view, on why bookstores (meaning B&N and Borders) should abandon e-reader gadgets right now, in favour of the iPad, as posted here

key quote:

“Seriously, have you seen the ‘Nook specialist’ at the front of B&N stores?  This poor employee has the unfortunate job of pulling you over to the Nook display with the hopes of wowing you with the device’s many features.  It feels like the teenager serving orange chicken samples on toothpicks in the mall food court, only more awkward.  Imagine the buzz the store would generate if that employee was showing demos of the iPad, featuring the store’s app and books.  I guarantee you it would drive a lot more interest than the Nook display (or the almost completely abandoned new media section at my local Borders store, where they try to sell Sony Readers).”

My current employment as a B&N manager restricts me from commenting further [though you might infer something from the fact that I posted that quote to begin with].

##

Apple Pie

There’s no law that says you can’t take advantage of your customers.
There’s no law that says you can’t traffic on ignorance.
There’s no law that says you have to be altruistic.
There’s no law that says you have to care about, or even serve the needs of, your established customer base.

In fact, there is an established, centuries-old tradition of deceiving your customers, hobbling potential competition, perpetuating unfair systems that happen to be unfair in your favour, lying, cheating, stealing, and generally being a total dick

in fact, being a total dick [in a business sense, and perhaps elsewise] is as American as Apple Pie.

So I can scold Amazon for it’s dick-moves, but my own employer is just as guilty and I’d like to point out one last time:

e-books are just files — many different ways to open files; & you didn’t need to buy a $500 $259 $199 $149 $49 new device at any price to read text. The web is free, and a hell of a lot more complex that these new “e-books”.

I’m conflicted, and confused. I really want to rant and rave against ebooks [and have, over multiple posts] but I’m also trying to understand where my reader base is going – & is this e-book-thing a format they’re adopting, or just a distraction and annoyance?



Two Nook Notes [updated]

filed under , 21 June 2010, 09:56 by

I’d like to remind everyone that my day job, my paycheck, is Barnes & Noble.

[if you think that makes a difference, I’d invite you to read some of my columns]

Anyway, two points I’d like to bring to everyone’s attention:

First: Listed over at Nikkei.com, Headline: Tezuka Manga Available Soon On Nook E-Reader — and the only bit I can read (since I’m not shelling out $90 for access to Nikkei for the full article) “Manga by the late Osamu Tezuka, the creator of Astro Boy, will be available on Barnes & Noble Inc.‘s Nook electronic book reader.”

I think it’s an odd announcement: not that the manga is going e- (a development we all expected, and something that will have to stand on its own merits depending on the print-to-e conversion) but that they call-out Nook as the platform.

update 9:00PM 21 June:
Someone was kind enough to email me the following, which was a nice confirmation of information available to me as a B&N employee:

“Manga by the late Osamu Tezuka—best known as the creator of Astro Boy—will be available on Barnes & Noble, Inc.‘s NOOK electronic book reader as early as this autumn. Teaming up with New York-based publisher AmericanDream Publishing Inc., Tezuka Production Co. is expected to release English translations of Tezuka’s major works, including Phoenix and Black Jack. Three or four stories [sic], totaling about 100 pages, will likely sell for around one dollar each”

So, I think by ‘stories’ we can clearly see that they mean individual chapters (given the page count) and we’ll chalk that up to a translation error.

As we all know [see Kodansha] an article on Nikkei is great — as close to the source as we can get, in many cases — but plans and results are two different things. I have full confidence in TezukaCo. but have to wonder about this AmericanDreams Publishing — who are they? Nothing came up on a Google or wiki search (yes, I’m a lazy blogger) so I’m guessing they’re a start-up?

And as previously noted, it’s odd this comes out as nook news, as the nook uses the ePub format and this could have been just as easily pitched as an iPad announcement and as such would have set the manga-blogosphere on fire. Color me skeptical, and unimpressed, but secretly hopeful: [Phoenix on an e-reader?! Aw heck yeah!]

[original post continues]

Second Nook Note:

Via cnetB&N adds $149 WiFi-only Nook, cuts Nook 3G to $199

As the cnet article notes: ball is now in Amazon’s court.

And now, I need to stop blogging from the break room, go clock in, and actually get to work. boo. :(



Say... funny thing I just noticed...

filed under , 16 June 2010, 18:16 by

So, I was trading comments on Twitter with @Yuricon aka Erica Friedman of SocialOptimized, ALC Publishing, Yuricon, Okazu and many other administrative hats, over the topic of ebooks.

Erica Lamented [over consecutive tweets]

Here’s the thing wrong with all the various comics/manga digital formats right now – they are all various.

The thing about books are, you don’t need new anything to read them. Pick one up – start to read.

I don’t think I’m unreasonable to want to be able to just read my manga without having to have a new anything.

In response, some brought up the ePub format, citing it as an emerging ‘single standard’ and the e-book supported by nook, iPad/iBooks, Sony, and others.

Here’s the thing:

From Wikipedia

Basically, EPUB internally uses XHTML or DTBook (an XML standard provided by the DAISY Consortium) to represent the text and structure of the content document, and a subset of CSS to provide layout and formatting. XML is used to create the document manifest, table of contents, and EPUB metadata. Finally, the files are bundled in a zip file as a packaging format.

So, um, the ePub format uses HTML and CSS? Pardon, but what the flying flip is wrong with, say, using HTML and CSS, raw, straight up, no chaser?

ePub is specifically hobbled for no good reason, when apparently if it weren’t for the slight of hand in file extensions and a few things that aren’t kosher html, we could just read these things in a browser…

…A browser on any screen we already happen to own (and we own a lot of screens that support web browsing).

Hm? Publishers? Amazon, Sony, B&N? Anyone care to mention why you’re using tried-and-true open source code and standards but are trying to hide the easily comprehensible, utterly familiar bits behind this ePub screen. “Pay no attention to the open source code behind the curtain!”

Say, how long would it take someone to kludge together a Firefox and/or Chrome extension to read ePub-formatted “e-books” in browser with very little in the way of effort?

[who says Google isn’t already working on that for Chrome? Google Editions, anyone?]

Manufacturers, publishers, and Google are all likely scared stiff that we’ll figure this out on our own. There is nothing new about e-books; in fact even the fancy e-container is nothing new, as anyone who can use Wikipedia soon realizes:

E-books are web pages! [and Soylent Green is made of People!] The trick, apparently, is restricting access to web-ready text, keep us from copying it, and making it seem new and special and something that requires new hardware, when in fact we’ve been reading text on screens for a couple of decades now. Why sell us a system when you could just sell us a book: device agnostic, HTML/CSS configured, browser ready — just the file, dammit, why all the shenanigans?

With a simple browser extension or update, ePub is even worse (in a business sense) than MP3. MP3s require some sort of plug-in or app; text requires a pair of eyeballs (— sorry, didn’t mean to be discriminatory: a single eyeball, or a sensitive touch and knowledge of Braille will also do the trick) and everything we do on the web already supports that text function. The ‘T’ in HTML is text; this goes deep into the bones of the web we all already know.

##

It’s not gloom and doom, though: Where a hit song can take up 3 1/2 minutes of your time, and a whole album (no matter how epic) seldom takes up more than 77 minutes, a book requires hours of your time and attention. That’s not to say people won’t pirate books — I think it’s fair to say people will pirate anything — but there is less of a potato-chip-factor to books [justonemore] as there was in the early days of downloading music.

Though I suppose that only applies to long works of fiction and literature; comics (particularly 22-48 page pamphlets) may be screwed and 200pgs of manga take, in my experience, about an hour to read the 1st time through. (Obviously I take more time on subsequent re-reading, though not all fans are plumbing books for depth of meaning and appreciation of the art)

But, still, after 15 years (Napster launched in June of 1999 — and only operated for two years — and Napster would have been impossible without the acceptance by so much of the user base of the .mp3 encoding and format, introduced in 1995)

Actually, I need to interrupt that thought — Please note, MP3 came first: small enough to be portable, good enough for most uses, widespread years before Napster. It wasn’t file sharing that “killed” music (if that is your corporate or legal position; and it’s a position that is debatable) it was the music files that made the sharing possible and piracy inevitable.

Anyway, after 15 years, digital music settled down into a new pattern and apparently, someone [*cough* Jobs, Apple *cough* *cough*] figured out how to make money off of it, and we currently enjoy a DRM-free music environment where we buy things and they’re ours, so long as we don’t lose the file. (I’ve lost more music to friends, borrowing my CDs and never returning them, then I ever will to hard drive crashes)

First comes the format, then the user base, then the tools, then the pirates, and then the new sales ecosystem. We’re still waiting on the ebook format for comics (raw image files don’t quite cut it) (and the ebook format for text is already out there: you’re reading a blog that uses it) and while we haven’t seen great tools or ‘mainstream’ piracy a la Napster, yet, I think we all know this is coming.

The trick is to leapfrog the mess and lost revenue and legal hassles and skip ahead to the stable, legal sales ecosystem.

Closed formats, DRM, and “walled gardens” are going to be part of that process. In fact, it’s the part that is currently trying to charge you $100-$250-$500 (and up, for some iPads) for a dedicated e-book reader. And honestly, much like the lawsuits and massive piracy, it’s a step most of us would be willing to skip.

There are just too many businesses, participants, and players out there looking to squeeze money out of the old system or cash in on the new system. This isn’t an open market; this isn’t free-market capitalism yet. People, customers, are going to get screwed over. Business, heck, whole industries may go under before the dust settles and the solution seems obvious.

##

What pisses me off most is this assumption that borders on religious belief, that the old system and old players are somehow sacrosanct, and will always be able to stay in business, stay at the top of their business, and no matter what changes they are guaranteed a place at whatever new table gets set up.

In short: No.

And that’s how things work: Past performance is no guarantor of future success, all investment carries risk; innovate, adapt, respond, or die.

##

So, I’m a bookseller, the endangered salamander of the old ecosystem, soon to die and not likely to stay open through next year, let alone the re-alignment to come.

Oh, really?


[image credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/chanc/2558304478/]

Say, combine this recent post by Seth Godin with my post of 10 months ago — hm. It seems I’ve a business that has nothing to do with ‘books’ and everything to do with the way you people *already* use my bookstore. So what if the books are only decorations, and you buy coffee while connecting to the internet through a portal on which I can sell ads — it’s not much, but the major payroll expenses are restocking and selling the books; if no one is buying books we can do more with less. (While also selling books online – oh, yeah, I’m thinking about this 5 different ways, including some I haven’t posted about yet) Don’t worry about the store; we may end up as nothing more than a fancy coffeeshop, but I’ll make out.

And new books will be released. Maybe not as many, to start with, but good content will win out.

The question, then, between 1970-publishing-and-retail and 2015-publishing-and-retail is how much bullshit they [“they” being corporations who control—but do not create—content] put us through and how much cash they con us out of, before we find the new model book paradise just past the horizon.



Rethinking the Box: Selling Books in the Post-Book Era

filed under , 10 June 2010, 08:04 by

So sorry. one more click.

redirects here



Rethinking the Box: Selling Books in the Post-Book Era ['Love' doesn't have an algorithm yet]

filed under , 9 June 2010, 23:02 by

Bah. I’m getting tired of talking about e-books. I think we all know which side of that debate I’m coming down on — even if you haven’t been reading my blog for years and only picked it up last week.

So, let’s assume for a moment that Jobs and Bezos sign a non-aggresion pact, divy up book retail, distribution, and publishing like so many polands, and as a bookseller I’m shipped off to a “retirement farm” or re-education camp [with a free iKindle, a pacifier to keep me quiet] — or if I decline, forced to fight on as a guerilla bookseller, part of a small, scrappy resistance facing insurmountable odds and a quixotic fight against not just big corporations but also my former customers (who no longer have need for a ‘bookstore’ in the 20th-century-sense. That’s so… last millennium.)

But so long as hot blood and cold beer still run through my veins, I will be a bookseller, and I can harness creative self-delusion, technical prowess, and years of experience to aid me.
“Vive la Résistance! ¡Por Cuba Libre! Free Tibet!”

…actually, I could go for a Cuba Libre right now… I wonder if we have any rum…


[image credit, Iliad Bookshop, North Hollywood, by Zach Schrock http://balcony-smoker.tumblr.com/post/59996549/zach-schrock]

##

Rethinking the Box is a collection of ruminations on retail & bookselling, with an eye towards comics (as one goal of the exercise is to guage the viability of a graphic novel superstore).

Previously:
Study your History. Recognise your Motives. Location, Location, Location. Know your Customer Base, and your Staff. Find your Niche. Consider your Product Lines, Stock Your Shelves, Set your main-aisle displays, consider Alternative display strategies, take a second look at What the Customers Want and Why Even Annoying Customers are Important. Answer for yourself whether raw dollars or customer service is more important to your store, and its future. Stare again in dismay at the Profit Margins. Try calculating your upper-limit affordable rent and affordable salaries along with revenue from inventory (with a side of coffee) and compare your numbers to average industry per-storefront sales.

Chronologically: 123456789101112131415161718192021222324

##

So, while not part of the Rethinking the Box column proper, I’ve written quite a bit about the book-as-form, book-as-object, publishing history, and with glancing blows at piracy and some random thoughts on how it might affect retail:

17 Nov ’09: Form, Content, Copies, Rights, and Plato
22 Nov ’09: Same story, different perspective — which links to this post by Clay Shirky [see also]
15 Dec ’09: The Other Shoe: Borders partners with Indigo’s Shortcovers for E-Books
4 Apr ’10: The iPad is merely incidental to the rest of the ongoing discussion
4 Jun ’10: Publishing Buggywhips
and most recently, 7 Jun ’10, E-books, retail, publishing: One More Time

It was the ‘buggywhips’ thought-piece where I half-promised, half-threatened to write a post explaining why “[in a thread I’ll pick up on in the next rethinking the box column] there is still a place for bookstores: there is still expertise, and enthusiasm, and atmosphere, and experiences to be had, even in a world without ‘books’”.

In a post-Amazon, post-Kindle, post-iPad, post-Nook world (yes, even my employer has abandoned me) what use is there for a bookstore, or a bookseller? What the heck does a bookseller really do, anyway?

##

As a practical matter, day-to-day, we spend quite a bit of time cleaning, straightening, re-organizing. From coffee cups to soda cans, discarded food containers, chicken bones, used tissues, abandoned clothing — and occassionally, human waste (the way you people treat public restrooms is appalling, really beyond the pale) — there are also the stacks of magazines and half-read books left in piles all over the store.

Dude. It’s not enough you destroy the product while you ‘browse’ it; it’s not the way customers unpack and totally camp out, stealing electricity and clogging up tables that might have been used (ever so briefly) by a paying customer with a legitimate need to look through a stack of [$60 and up, large-format art] books — it’s not the folks stretching out in the aisles, taking their shoes off and literally laying down while they read a book — a book they have no intention of buying, more often than not…

I’ve been a bookseller for a decade. I have seen and mostly understand all of this. But:

It’s the damn sense of entitlement, of ownership over the bookstore, most especially from those who spend absolutely no money that might lend even a thin veneer of truth to either assumption. Good Gods Damn, People — what do you think a bookstore is? A public reading room with a public bathroom and free wi-fi? Even a library gets more respect.

Here’s the short course: At a book store, we sell books — shocking, I know — and we also sell the magazines you love to read for free, and newspapers, and the bibles you love to steal [book retail trivia: #3 most-stolen items? Bibles. Yep, ‘struth. Think about it…] and the computer books that no one buys because they’re cheaper online but that everyone expects us to have, in stock, today no matter how obscure the topic and that get stolen anyway. [book retail trivia: #2 most-stolen items? Computer Books. Even though everyone says our selection is crappy, somebody is still stealing ‘em.]

Apparently, if I were to really listen to my ‘customers’, the bookstore would be a library that stocks everything but where you don’t have to bother to check anything out, just walk home with it, where we supply both device recharging though multiple outlets placed every two feet on every available wall (and some just randomly in the middle of the floor) & free wifi that is faster than your broadband or cable connection at home, and where we don’t hassle anyone about how much all this costs or try to guilt anyone into actually buying anything unless they really need a copy or just happened to be feeling charitable.

In the face of all this… an uncaring, downright abusive public who positively delight in telling me daily how much cheaper Amazon is while completely discounting the things we do that Amazon can’t (and taking advantage of all of it either unknowingly, apathetically, or callously) and with a casual disregard for both the expertise of veteran booksellers, or even the basic respect due a fellow human being —

[it’s not always that bad, all the time… Decembers are brutal, tho]

Despite all this I still love books, and I still love bookstores, and it may be hard to believe but I Love My Job. After 40+ hours a week, I still think obsessively about my employment and employer, and blog about how we can do it better — what more can I say?

Dear Customers: even though your demands are unreasonable and unprofitable [for me, as a bookseller] I’m still willing to work with you, compromise, meet you half-way on some points, and totally capitulate others. You win. Take full advantage.

The only thing I ask (and what will keep the store open, in a post-book era) is that you recognise what a bookstore is and what it does. A little respect, some props. Least you can do while you put me out of business.

##

Yeah, the web is great. Cheap. Fast. All of that.

If you know what you want then you can order it on the web within minutes of thinking of it. You don’t even have to call my store to bug me about it. Just order it online already. Sure, if you want to come in and see if we have it, that’s great too. Buy a cup of coffee, ask us about it, maybe browse the store, maybe buy something. But the phone calls? Just a waste of my time. [I’ve noted previously, this is a good problem to have but to go through all the work just to have someone say, 9 times out of 10, “nah, I’ll just order it online” — dude: you could have done that before you wasted my booksellers’ time.]

If you kinda-sorta know what you want, sure, come on into the store: we’ll try to help. If you can’t find it in an internet search, well, we’ll try, but Google is pretty damn good and while I’m better than the average bear at gaming an internet search, I’m only as good as my inputs. I can’t spin half remembered compost-fodder into gold no matter how much faith you have in me. But we’ll try, and please, come on into the store: this kind of thing is so much easier face-to-face, where I can turn the screen around to show you the search results; maybe you see something that prompts further recollection, & together we refine the results, in steps, down to what you’re looking for. Once again, this is hard to do over the phone no matter how earnestly you’d like to think I can read your mind over 19th-century-era copper wire.

If you have only the vaguest memory and just one applicable clue (“the cover is red”) I really wish you’d just forget about the whole thing and move on. Still, as a business, and in the business of customer service, I have to pretend I can help and must feign surprise when searches of ‘the red book’ only pull up $150 dream journals by Carl Jung

##

The internet is great and grand. Everything and anything, so long as you know what to look for.

but: what if you could find something you didn’t even know you wanted yet?

What if there was a website where books were presented with expert reviews and recommendations, and available for immediate purchase? Hell, what if most of those books were in stock at a nearby physical storefront, to take home today?

Maybe, between expertise and depth of selection, we’ve discovered one thing a bookstore could do better than a website. Or: I’ve identified a role for a unified blog-and-bookstore where the booksellers are paid to post reviews and previews to the web. An Amazon where product reviews aren’t written by sarcastic/ironic/sardonic hipsters, or the clueless but earnest, or the haters who couldn’t even finish the book — but instead were all written by booksellers.

##

- Let’s say I win the lottery, not only enough to pay my debts and start up a scrappy new manga publisher, but with enough left over to buy a building, $5 Million in inventory and set up my dreamland, destination bookstore (with a pub in it, alongside the coffee shop). Who do I hire to staff it?

Fans.

I’ll pay them to work the bookfloor 4 hours a day, I’ll pay them to read at work for at least an hour a day and I’ll buy them a laptop but I expect them to blog (for me) for an hour each day. [35 hour work week for my full-timers; I’m progressive like that — and we can work out a 4-day or 5-day work-week from these basic expectations]

So, my ideal bookseller is also a blogger, posting reviews or business analysis or thought pieces, or WTF else – I don’t care. So long as it’s on-topic and on-schedule it helps. I’m not just starting a bookstore, I need a search-engine-ready social-media-footprint & continuous online presence. “oh ho!” you say, “The brave bookstore advocate is finally admitting he is beat, and wants to hedge his bets, starting a web site just like Amazon [*knowing smirk*]” – Of course I’m beat. The web in general has me beat on price, to the tune of at least 10% and often 40-50% (my entire profit margin on a book) and sometimes even deeper, if we consider used offerings. But my group blog would not be a sales site. In fact, hell, we could sign the whole thing up as an Amazon affiliate, let them worry about procurement & shipping & margin, and just take our cut from the internet sale. I don’t need a warehouse and fulfillment protocols for millions of titles if I can get Amazon to do that for me — I’ll take the booksellers, thanks, the ones who know and love the product, and we’ll do just fine.

So why bother with a bookstore at all, if I have this shiny new books blog with it’s own business model, marketable moniker, much lower overhead, and humongous potential employee pool?

The largest part of that is going to the “bookstore” part. No matter how much you think you know or how closely you follow the publishers’ web sites, the Times’ book review & The New York Review of Books (or Otaku USA, depending on your preferences), and no matter how ‘plugged-in’ to the market you feel, nothing beats the awe and wonder of taking something out of the box on the day it comes out, or finding a hidden gem tucked away on a bookshelf. We need a physical bookstore for that.

We need the ‘hook’. Beautiful photos of books on shelves, Author signings, book clubs, writing workshops and in-store events — we need a bookstore. It may just be a 7 million dollar prop, but 75% of that is inventory ($5 mil would be ~350,000 books on shelves: I dream big and this is already a “what if I won the lottery” piece) and there is nothing in the world quite like a bookstore.

We need the workplace. Online communities are great, but bloggers write better when they can meet face to face, and are more productive when they go to an office. “The office” in this case is a bookstore and coffee shop — but that makes it that much better.

And we need customers, and customer interaction. Nothing has taught me more about books (or life, or anything) than working in a bookstore. Every day, people ask me questions and I discover titles I would never have thought of or even thought to look for. A job in a bookstore is an education in itself. Yes, customers are frustrating — but that’s because they are people (& needy people at that).

Who do you trust?

The averred conclusions of an algorithm that “customers who bought this also liked…” or the opinion of an Actual Human Being who can point you to books & series that are similar but only tangentially related to your current favs? Do you buy based on categories and tags, or on the recommendation of someone who’s actually read the damn thing? Bookselllers have an expertise not found at Amazon or other on-line sales sites: we love and read books. “Love” doesn’t have an algorithm yet.

Can I beat Amazon at it’s own game? No. That battle is lost.

Can I game Amazon and make money at what I do best? – Oh, hell yes. (If I weren’t hung up on the ‘bookstore’ thing I could probably launch that review site in two weeks.)

##

So.

Post-book era.

Everything is E-

Nothing is print.

How does a bookstore work?

Here’s what the bookstore can do:

  • We can sell books, in the exchanging-money-for-goods meaning of the word ‘sell’
  • we can sell books, in the telling-you-what-is-fantastic-about-this-book meaning of the word ‘sell’ — and honestly, that’s what we do best, and it’s something Amazon can’t do yet.
  • we can use the internet for you. No, honestly: for the most obscure title requests, or the searches based on incomplete information this is exactly what I do 10 times an hour (when I don’t just happen to know the answer off the top of my head, which only happens once a day or so but you should see the look on the customer’s face when it does).
  • we can order, ship, receive, and hold for pick-up any title in our database. It’s not fancy, but it’s what we do everyday. For some, the convenience of pick-up (as opposed to UPS or Fed-Ex just leaving packages on the doorstep) is a service worth paying a little more for.
  • we stock thousands (~100,000+ at my branch, other stores have more) on shelves for purchase today. It’s not much, actually, given the embarrassment of riches available, but we try to guess what’s going to be popular, and stock bestsellers in fiction & biography, at a minimum, and in as many other categories as we can manage.
  • we try to hire book-lovers with years of experience, decades of personal reading history, and steel-trap memories that allow them to recall, with the fewest actual facts, the books they’ve read (or browsed, or read reviews or even just the jacket-copy on) and we try to keep them at the information desk for as many hours a day as possible, given that most of the work in the bookstore is, as previously cited, cleaning up after your lazy ass and the sisyphean task of keeping the stacks in any sort of proper order.
  • past that: we can keep the doors open — for you to hang out, arrange meetings with friends, kill time, read books, nap, log onto and browse the internet, blog, write, research, collaborate, network, tutor, learn, connect, launch a business or idea, and recoup after a long day of doing all of the above with a slice of cheesecake and a latte.

[If I have my druthers, you’d also be able to do all this with a pint of Guinness or a glass of port, as I’d love to run a bookstore with a pub on the bottom floor. I am a visionary. I dream Big.]

Say people stop buying ‘paper’ books entirely:

What is my raison d‘être?

Experience, expertise, product knowledge, and internet savvy. And a love of books.

No matter what the format, I am a bookseller. E-books complicates the whole mess but doesn’t change my goals:

I Am A Bookseller. And I have a backup plan: I’ll blog about and sell you e-Books, if that is my last option, though I hold a special place in my heart for the physical books printed on dead trees. But I plan to keep the doors open as long as I can, for all those non-book uses for a bookstore that everyone loves but nobody pays for.



E-books, retail, publishing: One More Time

filed under , 7 June 2010, 14:41 by

[This started out as an editorial to the lead story for this week’s Geek Biz Report; about 10 paragraphs in, I realized this would be it’s own column.]

So, the news: Borders gets it’s sh!t together, investors shrug: stock price goes up a whole 10¢

[editorial]

here’s the breakdown: Borders isn’t going out of business. Yet. So, there’s that. Invest if you want to.

But: no matter who throws money at Borders or what kind of wet dreams they have about a Borders/B&N merger to form The One True Book Retailer, it’s still not going to happen. If you buy Borders & think BGP can buy out BKS — hell, if you have that kind of money you could rebuild Borders from scratch. And B&N isn’t shopping right now, so a BKS x BGP merger is even less likely. In fact, B&N is still busy digesting the College division, launching a digital division, and generally flopping around – waiting for someone to tell them what the e-book answer is.

There is no e-book answer. There wasn’t an e-book question.

& Just because Amazon shows up late and comes up with a half-assed, proprietary approach to a “problem” which already had a solution, thanks and manages to dupe people into buying yet another device (no matter how spiffy) doesn’t change the fact that e-books aren’t any newer than a paperback. Books are books.

oooo… there’s a new format and a new business model and Publishing Will Be Changed Forever! — yeah, yeah, whatevs. Check that wikipedia article I just linked to on ‘paperbacks’: 75 years ago there was a new format, and new business models. You know what happened? More people could read more books, for cheaper.

That’s about all that happened.

yeah, there was some business stuff, and book retail moved out of stuffy, out-of-the-way bookshops and into the mainstream. This is the embarrassment of riches you currently enjoy: some shops closed but nationwide mall chains, followed by the major big-box retail booksellers, arose from that mess and these days you can drive 5 miles to buy a book, just about any book, today — or, upon asking, have it in a scant 100 hours – so long as a copy of the book still exists somewhere on the market.

That is what’s amazing, if you ask me.

Books are still being published; hardcover books are still being published. “But, but, why would anyone pay $27 for a hardcover when they can get it as a $15 paperback?” Good damn question. The answer, of course, is that publishers introduce artificial scarcity: the paperback isn’t available yet. Buy it for $27, or wait a year.

Why this isn’t applied to e-books, right now and retroactively, is a mystery to me. Just tell Amazon No. Tell ‘em to sit down, shut up, and go sit in the corner. Amazon is a parasite; gaming the system for their own profit. Amazon is perfectly within their rights to do so: there is no law that says you can’t take advantage of a decades-old multi-tiered distribution system designed for nationwide retail sales, lay down some internets on it and squeeze it for profits. But, Dear Amazon, there is also no law that requires publishers to gamely take a reaming up a nether orifice just because you have some market share that you’ve had for a couple of years now and that you think is yours by right and into perpetuity:

Amazon, What do you do when they say ‘no’? When e-books are fully integrated into the system, what makes you think you’ll have access to all titles, all the time? — what, just because you’re Amazon? Hubris, much?

##

There are a number of readers—the true book lovers—who actively follow new releases and published reviews and favourite authors, and this number is proportional to the overall population (and so is growing slowly, along with population) but is for all intents and purposes static. Only so many readers.

The publishers, so long as they were in control, knew and pwned this market. First the hardcover, for the critics and libraries and collectors, and then the paperbacks for book clubs and the mass market. And this works: not every book merits a paperback reprint, and the reception of the hardcover informs the way the book is released (and occasionally re-introduced) in paperback formats. There are the book awards. There’s the occasional ‘break-out’ title. For the most part, it’s a meritocratic system (once one makes it over the curb—the steep curb—into actual publication) — the market decides the bestsellers, those worthy of paperback reprints and eventual acceptance into either heavy-bookclub-rotation or inclusion on school reading lists.

Parallel to the ‘literary’ track: some books go direct to paperback, skipping the hardcover release because it’ll do better as a ‘pulp’ anyway. 99% of Harlequin releases are pulp paperbacks — 110 new titles a month, shipping world-wide — so there is already another publishing model out there, past Amazon’s wet dream of ‘all e-book, all the time’ and the traditional publishing most of us are used to.

If Amazon were smart (and not just big and full of themselves) instead of attacking and emulating all of a clunky, internally inconsistent, and thorny publishing market as a whole — they’d just buy Harlequin: built-in catalog, built-in subscriber base—who are more interested in reading stories and not so much the book-as-artefact—and an established content-producing-engine that churns out 200pg books by the metric tonne yearly. Take out printing costs and the $3.99 e-book is handily the successor to the $5.99 pulp paperback and you don’t have to pretend you’re anything you’re not — and you’ve also bettered your strong conviction of $10 as an e-book price point by better than half.

It’s not that $10 is a bad price, or the wrong price — but it shouldn’t and honestly can’t be applied to all books, willy-nilly, just because you’d like it that way, Mr. Bezos. Books aren’t widgets. Books aren’t “content”, at least not in the internet-sense where content can be produced by skimming web-bots or tricking your users into writing ‘reviews’ for you.

Books are books, and books are special. If there is anything I hate ([gollum]hates hates hates it, Bagginses[/gollum]) it’s this idea that books are just another thing, to be bought, traded, commoditized, digitized, and sold sold sold.

Sure, e-books seem new, special, different — but they’re not so different. We’re actually arguing about the container, merely the outer wrapper —
iPad, iPhone, Kindle, ePub, PDF or just plain text: whatever the platform or filename, what’s inside is still a Book. This isn’t even a technological problem, just a cognitive one: how often do I have to repeat myself? Books are Books and almost by definition, books are not the internet.

##

Publishing is a dynamic business. Right up until the 1990s, in fact, there were precious few publishers who’d been in the game for a whole century; it was all 1890s and aughts & 1910s & 20s & 30s. Publishing as a whole (going to the etymological roots of ‘publish’: the act of making things public) is an extension of centuries and millennia of writing, printing, and culture — but the actual business units (as are currently extant) all seemed to spawn in a 50 year period prior to 1939. Someone with better academic chops than I should take that particular nugget and run with it; there’s a doctoral thesis right there just waiting to be written. And while a lot of brand-names are the same, actual ownership and management is not

Ownership has changed hands several times over, and many new publishers entered the field, and there was a time when no Major Media Conglomerate felt quite right unless and until they ate a major publishing house — consider Random House and it’s maze of imprints: many represent former competitors (Anchor, Ballantine, Bantam, Crown, Doubleday, Knopf, Pantheon) gobbled up over decades, and Random House as a whole was bought by the privately-held Bertelsmann group in 1996. This is a different business than it was 70 years ago; it’s big business. *Really* Big Business. And yet, there were no economies of scale to had in consolidation. The book business still hangs on by it’s fingernails, hoping for that next bestseller to pay for years of debut novels and careful editorial wagers — good books, all, for the most part, but break-even publishing at best.

The amazing thing: no one knows what’ll be that next breakout title. You, as an editor, pick books you like, you help the author polish her work, tighten it up, and then you release it into the wilds of the book market and see how it fares (while marketing the hell out of it). Sometimes, you get a Da Vinci Code or The Help. Sometimes, you sell just enough to break even. Most often, the book doesn’t even pay off it’s advance, particularly for a first novel. For years, decades, publishers didn’t sweat it; so long as the enterprise as a whole broke even year-to-year, great: keep going. A surprise bestseller would fund a publisher for a couple of years, a new opportunity to find new authors—deserving authors—and maybe, just maybe, the next surprise bestseller.

So long as the people making books also love books this system not only works it produces real gems – not the Da Vinci Code, but the smaller, exceptional titles that people love & that sell well, but fly just under the New York Times magical top 15.

Amazon hasn’t done their homework: they want to destroy the publishing business but haven’t thought about what the publishing industry is or does. Sure, you can look at King, Patterson, Steel, & Roberts, and say, “Hell, these guys don’t need a publisher… we’ll sell the manuscripts direct to the public as a digital file—no publishing costs—and share the profits and abandon the printed page for good!”

Sure, for an author that has a built-in fan base…

But how do we discover new books, new voices? And do you even know what editors do? It’s not just proofreading, I’ll tell you that.

Books are not files. Books are not widgets. Books are experiences, better than Hollywood, better than cable TV, sometimes better than real life.

And to succeed at publishing, or at book retail, One Must Love Books. Whole-heartedly, and with all our intellect and soul. Amazon can beat me on price, but Amazon can not create new readers. Amazon can index the entirety of the backlist, and the well-known names, and bestsellers — but Amazon does not put new books into the hands of customers, Amazon does not foster discovery and conversations, Amazon does not sell books. Amazon cannot put a book into the hands of a 5 year-old; Amazon can’t read that book to a child. If Amazon succeeds at supplanting book retail, they’ll also severely damage their own customer base, perhaps permanently. People turn to Amazon last, after talking to a friend or reading a review or following a link on a blog — or after going into a store. Amazon delivers the world to your doorstep, but can’t sell anything. Selling is a personal interaction; sales is a skill. Sales happens person-to-person, millions of times a day.

At the bookstore: We sell books — Amazon is merely an overgrown warehouse, a delivery system that ships the books after the hard job of selling the book is done. And like all parasites, Amazon is the only one that benefits, at the expense of the host.

When the host dies, what will Amazon do? And after Amazon kills off both book retailers and book publishers, then who the eff is actually still making the books?

Is this a good thing? I can publish to the internet right now, skipping retail, publisher, and Amazon: why do I need Amazon? Do they provide editors, or marketing? [editorial and marketing cost money] Do they put my book on shelves in stores, to be discovered by browsing readers? [Amazon has no brick-and-mortar storefront, let alone multiple storefronts, and e-books are hard to shelve in libraries] Does Amazon do anything, besides list the book, with a page & a search engine, and a “buy” link?

I can set up my own page, my own ‘buy now’ button. And there are at least three major search engines out there that not only index the web, but also occasionally are the best way to find something on Amazon.

Amazon does nothing that I can’t do myself. Heck, I could even print and ship physical copies of the book myself: Ask Howard how well self-publishing works.

##

E-books are new, and the future is uncertain. But, 75 years ago there was also a new format, and new business models. You know what happened? More people could read more books, for cheaper. And that’s exactly where we’ll be, 10 years from now. I don’t know how Amazon will cope, but if they want to provide books (either as a retailer or publisher) then they need to study the system they’re breaking, and spend the time, money, and effort to replace it.

If they don’t, we will, and we won’t need Amazon to do it.

[/editorial]



Rethinking the Box: linking to other people's stuff

filed under , 9 May 2010, 11:00 by

I’m turning over the soapbox this week, not because I ran out of things to say [I can always rant about customers] but because there are a few links clogging up my drafts file and I thought it might be better to propogate them, rather than have them collect dust until they might be useful.

[for a full index of ‘rethinking the box’ posts, see the most recent one, Sales vs Service]

##

Most recently was Tom Spurgeon’s conversation with Brian Hibbs over at The Comics Reporter

Among other observations:

“Specifically, what I would really say is that it’s a real lack of understanding in the retail base that alt-comics aren’t just a sell-this-month or even a sell-this-week kind of a deal. That alt-comics for the most part tend to sell continually over the years. I still have every single issue of Optic Nerve sitting on my shelf, including number one that came out 15 years ago. I still stock it because I sell enough copies to justify that rack space. I have every issue that’s in print and available from Diamond of Love and Rockets Vol. 2 on myself. I don’t have Volume One because it’s easier to sell the single book. If I could have the last ten issues of Eightball and the last ten issues of Hate on my wall, I would.”

##

McSweeney’s Issue #33 was an actual newspaper, featuring news of the day, comics [indy comics!], sports & arts coverage, and of course, a book review section.

Not necessarily buried, but tucked away, in the Book section was this neat little sidebar, thankfully reproduced in the May/June issue of the Utne Reader [and posted to their website, click the link] and also represented (with commentary, & alongside a number of other photographic snippets from the SF Panorama) at Steve Rhodes’s flickr account

So You Want To Open A Bookstore featured figures from Annie Danger of Modern Times Bookstore in San Francisco. “Modern Times is a medium-sized independent bookstore—about 3,700 square feet, and with five part-time staffers.”

So, a small storefront bookstore with six booksellers (I’m guessing Danger didn’t count herself as part of the ‘part time’ staff) can be run with monthly operating costs of $56-57K — more than half of which is the cost of new inventory, and which dates back to November? of last year.

We could parse the numbers to figure out Modern Times rent-per-square-foot (~$20/sq.ft., actually) or the wages offered to employees (you can ball-park it, but there are too many unknowns) but that would be unfair. All bookselling is local, and while it is nice (abso-freaking lovely) to see someone else’s numbers, it doesn’t affect my expenses or the differences between our two stores and markets.

Still, very much worth a read

##

Questions abound around Google’s e-bookstore initiative, and Ian Paul at PC World rounds up five

##

This guy gets a book deal, and I don’t. Thems the breaks, I guess. I must not be snarky enough. Oh, and I write essays, instead of posting pics-and-a-gag or stuff other people write for me — my loss, twice over.

##

…almost on cue: oh, look, A Survival Guide to Managing Employees from Hell: Handling Idiots, Whiners, Slackers, And Other Workplace Demons (isbn 9780814474082) is one of five titles recommended to retail managers by Shari Waters, retail blogger for About.com. I need to read at least 3 of these. (Yes, even with my experience, I’m still looking for input on how to do the job better) – Waters also posted a list 10 books on how to get started in retail

##

How valuable are my columns on retail? Well, of course, value is subjective, but at least one firm wants to charge you $1,150 for stuff you can find on Google in a single weekend. [that, and by looking at primary sources, you can do you own analysis] — $1000 seems a bit steep, and their description of the doc is more than a little… dry. Could be any industry.

One thing I can promise: Mean spirited, condescending, self-righteous, occasionally funny (but not as often as I think I’m being “funny”), and grounded in reality — but never dry. Even when I’m numbers-heavy, I try to tell you what the numbers mean. And I’m not charging anything for it, let alone $1000.

I’ll take a book deal if anyone cares to offer one, though.



Rethinking the Box: Sales vs Service

filed under , 25 April 2010, 16:07 by

I’m going to start with a confession: I’m a greedy bastard.

There are a lot of things *I* need to buy, places to go, a world of beer and a pilgrimage (at least one) to Japan — and for the most part, I’m going to need your money to do all that. So in a perfect world where I was a slick huckster with few(er) morals and the gift of gab, I’d be quite happy to be a salesman and take as much of your money as I can talk you out of — sales is a skill, and I’m not knocking it, or the people who can practice it.

I can’t do sales. I can seldom even sell myself, being almost violently introverted and more willing to close the door and read then to force myself to ‘be social’.

And yet, I work retail. And I’m pretty good at it.

##

Rethinking the Box is a collection of ruminations on retail & bookselling, with an eye towards comics (as one goal of the exercise is to guage the viability of a graphic novel superstore).

Previously:
Study your History. Recognise your Motives. Location, Location, Location. Know your Customer Base, and your Staff. Find your Niche. Consider your Product Lines, Stock Your Shelves, Set your main-aisle displays, consider Alternative display strategies, take a second look at What the Customers Want and Why Even Annoying Customers are Important. Stare again in dismay at the Profit Margins. Try calculating your upper-limit affordable rent and affordable salaries along with revenue from inventory (with a side of coffee) and compare your numbers to average industry per-storefront sales.

Chronologically: 12345678910111213141516171819202122

##

How, you might ask, does an introvert and borderline shut-in manage as a retail associate (and manager) in a high volume sales environment?

First, I sell books. I love books. I know a lot about books, and all sorts of books, and even quite a bit about books I haven’t even read. I’m also a trivia nut, a news hound, a history buff, a word freak, and on top of everything else I have an odd gift for remembering almost all of it — I have a very strong knowledge base.

Second, I’ve been able to cope by taking on defined roles and a number of ‘scripts’ that I can run through. So long as interactions can be made to fit one of my premeditated scripts, I have no problem with people. I’m a high-functioning introvert. I’m an actor. It doesn’t change the fact that the exercise exhausts me mentally (and occasionally physically, too, though that may be psychosomatic) but I can fake it for eight hours a day to collect my paycheck. It’s taken me 20 years to work out how to interact with the world this way, but I wasn’t given a choice.

I was actually quite lucky when I fell into bookselling 10 years ago, as it is a perfect fit for me tempermentally (…when I can actually sell the books; many, many customer interactions have nothing to do with books and that is where I occasionally get frustrated) and I bring to the store all the random bits and facts collected over decades, and it’s actually useful

Some guy came in looking for a book with a quote “I have written you a long letter because I did not have time to write a short one”. My staff tossed it around for a minute and then immediately called me over — and just kind of stood mouth agape while I rattled off that it is often mis-attributed to Mark Twain, who did in fact use a variation on it, but it was in fact first written by Blaise Pascal.

This turkey had never heard of Pascal, I guess, since he insisted that Twain was the source (though he didn’t even know that until I told him) and took up the next half hour of my time that afternoon while I patiently tried a number of searches of our inventory system to find that we had nothing in the store, and then I had to turn the terminal screen around where he could see and get on the internet and type every variation on the quote this, customer could think of, in front of him, because he couldn’t be arsed to go home and do it for himself — and since Twain did not in fact write it—he was quoting Pascal—the phrase does not appear in any of those ‘wit and wisdom of Mark Twain’ books.

(and we ordered 3 Twain quotation books anyway, which I could have done at the start of the exercise without the Google excursion)
(and a week later when the books came in, this same customer tracked me down in the store so I could then use the books’ indices and speed-read pages looking for the non-existant quote while he looked over my shoulder. Honestly.)

The results of that interaction aside (and the inability of some people to take a straight ‘no’ even when no is in fact the correct answer) the thing is, a customer came up to the desk with the most obscure thing he could think of, and I had an answer. It’s like winning a game show every day.

[My suspicion is that also drives many comic book geeks to run comic book shops — Finally, finally a lifetime of collecting the most obscure of trivia can be put to use.]

##

Now, I’ve described a customer interaction that didn’t end in a sale, one that wasted an hour of my time and kind of killed my enthusiam for bookselling not one day but two.

But that’s what makes bookselling different: it is not a sales job.

It should be all about customer service. When someone calls up and asks for a book on organic ostrich farming or walks into the store with a half-remembered quote, or wants a recommendation — a bookseller gives suggestions, guides the search, relies on personal knowledge and past experience (and even the results of past customer interactions) to find answers.

Bookselling is retail, don’t doubt that. We love money
…but we love books more

So, at its core, bookselling is a service provided. Our employees provide knowledge, share enthusiasm, answer questions, solve problems and occasionally make magic happen. Handing someone the exactly right book, the sort of thing that changes lives, that’s magic.

This spirit is also what makes the bookstore different, and why we put up with the sorts of things no one would dare imagine doing in any other retail or even public context: if you sit down in the middle of the aisle, take off your shoes, and begin pulling goods off the shelf in a Grocery Store you’re going to be escorted from the premises and invited to not come back — but if it’s not happening on a daily basis at the bookstore then your business is slow (and you need to figure out how to get Ms. French Cheese Feet back into your store)

Many people come in at least once a week, mess up the store in their own small way (small, but multiplied by dozens, even hundreds of customers), hang out for hours, and don’t buy anything. And I’m cool with that. Eventually, something will show up on Oprah or the sunday news shows or Boing Boing or wherever one gets a ‘must buy’ recommendation, and the year-long bookstore habit eventually translates into a sale. Yes, we do need a certain number of book addicts to keep the lights on and the doors open — but the bookstore is huge, the inventory is already a sunk cost, we’ve a hundred thousand (or even multiple hundreds of thousands) of books — and the profit of one more book sold is pure gravy. (well, the margin is still only 40% of the cover price — but if you bought the book last year the other 60% is already accounted for; you own it and so you get the full $15-$25 — and of course, one more sale is one more sale.)

After you’ve paid your fixed costs and made the commitment to be open 10 to 16 hours each and every day, (at the risk of sounding banal) you just need to sell books. The doors are open. A non-paying customer walks in, walks out. The doors were open anyway. If a certain minimum amount of sales are made each day, the extra customers have no direct costs and very few indirect costs —

Well, they can steal our electricity, waste booksellers time and effort, make a mess that I have to pay someone to clean up, move and mis-shelve product so we can’t find it (our last copy, which might have sold to someone else, in fact), but the paying customers do the same things, and there’s no way to know which is which when they walk in the front door. What we can do, is sell coffee — which browsers, grazers, campers, non-book-customers, and the die-hard book addicts all seem to like, and coffee makes money — and provide the same high level of service to all patrons (customers or otherwise) because some significant fraction of these interactions result in sales.

I don’t know exactly what the fraction is, but I do know a larger number of potential customers in the store is directly proportional to a larger number of actual customers.

Even more than the books, though, the modern bookstore sells atmosphere. It only seems like they give it away: cups of coffee, the occasional newspaper or magazine, and eventually the larger purchase (even if only once or twice a year) pays for the comfy chairs, the music, the knowledgeable staff, and all that reading you sponges do for free while lounging in the aisles, or the inconsiderate louts who tie up all the tables (and outlets) in the cafe with their laptops and accoutrément, and even the people sleeping in the aforementioned comfy chairs.

[that, once again, was from my first Rethinking the Box column]

This idea of service, combined with the ‘bookstore atmosphere’, and the lack of hard-press sales (we’ll gently suggest other books as an add-on purchase, but that’s the upper limit) all combine to make the bookstore a Third Place, the sort of business that is also a neighbourhood hangout and inviting refuge from the rest of the world.

Service & Knowledge are key to the ‘bookstore’ — a smile and an answer, and usually a book-in-stock-and-in-your-hand.

Mind the bookstore, and the sales will take care of themselves.

##

Sadly, the focus on customer service and knowledgeable staff are getting lost in the current economic climate. Yes, as a business person you have to balance the books, but it would be better if one planned ahead for business cycles — save money during the boom years to keep the bookstore running when times are lean, or godawful. Sadly, they don’t teach the long-view in business schools. When you have a stack of cash: you expand, you buy out smaller competitors, you add product lines or experiment with new sales channels. It’s a shame that the biggest (and often, only) bookstore in most of our communities are run by the big corporate chains — who cut payroll, decrease stock, and turtle-up in hard times because the profits of the past have been wasted on unsubstainable expansion, reckless gambles, or corporate dividends.

I not just not a salesman, I’m no executive. I think I’d be able to run a business (and will do my damnedest to convince a bank of that at some point) but I lack the corporate mindset. I’m a bookseller, and I want the best damn bookstore I can start, run, and maintain for decades until I die of liver failure after a lifetime of selling books and drinking beer.

Yes, as I stated in the opening, I’m a greedy bastard. I want your money, and I’d like to take a portion of profits to spend on my own selfish pursuits. But my salary (however high) is just a cost of the business, accounted for and paid for as an ongoing expense, while the business profits go back into the business: more books, better coffee, comfy-er chairs, and better-paid happier employees — with a fund set aside to keep the doors open even when sales go down.

A drop in sales should not mean a drop in service: the customers don’t come in to spend money, they come in for answers, and for books.

I wish corporate HQ at Big Box Books weren’t so fixated on costs, that they sabotage our ability at a store level to provide excellent customer service.

image credits, top to bottom:

  • composite image, “Almighty Dollar”, non-commercial CC licensed photo from EssG on flickr and “Bookshelves – Kona Stories – Big Island Book Talk”, non-commercial CC licensed photo from brewbooks on flickr. Kona Stories is an independent bookstore on the Big Island, Hawaii, founded 2006.
  • “used books”, non-commercial CC licensed photo from babblingdweeb on flickr. The store isn’t identified, though the caption on the photo is the quote, “Books are the quietest and most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest of counselors, and the most patient of teachers.” – Charles W. Eliot, The Happy Life, 1896
  • “Federal Street Bookstore”, non-commercial CC licensed photo from Phil LaCombe on flickr. The Federal Street Bookstore is in Greenfield, MA.
  • “Comics”, non-commercial CC licensed photo from Amerist on flickr. Pictured is the Comic Hunter comicshop, located in Prince Edward Island, Canada.
  • untitled CC licensed photo from A.K. Photography on flickr. Captioned, “Probably my favorite corner of this book store because most of the books were super old. Ill definitely go back there often.”
  • “sliding bookshelves in a convenience store” non-commercial CC licensed photo from katkimchee on flickr. The unnamed convenience store is in Korea; pictured are manhwa collections.
  • “shelved”, CC licensed photo from D’Arcy Norman on flickr. This unnammed bookshop with drool-worthy manga shelves is apparently in Calgary, Canada.
  • “Bookhenge”, non-commercial CC licensed photo from Kevin H. on flickr. Pictured is The Strand in New York.

I include images in this post as it’s been a long time since we took a look at the actual bookstores in all this discussion of business: This is what bookselling is, this is what I love, this is why I care enough to talk on this topic for 15 months.



Rethinking the Box: The 4% solution.

filed under , 13 April 2010, 17:52 by

I’m about to present a whole slate of opinions, some of which run counter to ‘common business knowledge’ and practice, but which I heartily believe in and around which I can gather a few facts, half-proofs, and lies, damn lies, and statistics. Do not doubt: This is in fact how I’d prefer to conduct business, when the store belongs to me and I have no corporate overlords.

Others will say it makes no sense. Some might even say it’s no way to run a business.

I’d reply: Being fair to people, both customers and staff, is the only way to run a business.

##

Rethinking the Box is a collection of ruminations on retail & bookselling, with an eye towards comics (as one goal of the exercise is to guage the viability of a graphic novel superstore).

Previously:
Study your History. Recognise your Motives. Location, Location, Location. Know your Customer Base, and your Staff. Find your Niche. Consider your Product Lines, Stock Your Shelves, Set your main-aisle displays, consider Alternative display strategies, take a second look at What the Customers Want and Why Even Annoying Customers are Important. Stare again in dismay at the Profit Margins. Try calculating your upper-limit affordable rent and the revenue from inventory (with a side of coffee) and compare your numbers to average industry per-storefront sales.

##

Companies are not made of IP, patents, rights & licenses, manufacturing plants, retail outlets, buildings, websites, or products.

Like Soylent Green, Companies are made of People.

Your first, best, second best, and in the end the only asset that positively impacts your bottom line, are your employees. Hm, that sounds awfully familiar… who said that?

Oh yeah, I said that.

Say you own a diamond mine: you likely think that your greatest asset is the mine.
Sure it is.
…Have fun digging.

I’m not joking. Anything else — patents, concepts, business models, venture capital, great product lines and beautiful facilities — it’ll all just sit there, unless you have good employees.

And I’m going to ask you to keep that one point in mind, while I discuss some history and business (and yes, retail crap) that may distract you temporarily from that one truth.

Remember the 60 hour work week?

Of course you don’t: most workers haven’t been required to work 10 hour days, 6 days a week since 1850 or so; and even at the height of Dickensian Industrial Revolution excesses, there were folks like, well, Dickens there to call us on it, and deplore the way we treat our fellow human beings.

What we do for ‘work’ has changed a lot over time, from paleolithic hunter-gatherers to modern internet, um, hunter-gatherers [though we prefer the term ‘blogger’] and in the roughly 12,000 years from pre-history to the launch of the iPad, there have been at least 4 revolutions — agricultural, industrial, transportation, and information. You can pick your own, of course, and assign your own dates, and spend quite a bit of time debating the points on Wikipedia if that is your particular kink, but I’ll boil it down to this:

For 11,850 years we kept working more and more, with less leisure time — right up to that 60 hour work week — and only in the last century and a half have we been able to work less. (see also, workweek and labour and employment law) Technology has finally reached the point where we could all work just 20 hours a week, and still earn a living wage, even one sufficient to raise a family — but of course the increases in worker productivity have instead been diverted into corporate profits, and we’re all still working 40hrs plus overtime, or two jobs, or limp by on part-time or a minimum wage job while seeking a job that will appropriately use our skills — or do what we can while going to school to acquire the right skills.

I’m not against profits. Responsible corporations use profits to expand, to innovate, to invest in things that lead to more production (& more jobs) or to a better product at a lower price: and this sort of thing increases the standard of living for us all.

But if all we’re doing is paying top executives tens to hundreds of millions, funding war chests for political lobbying or irresponsible corporate take-overs, or paying out dividends to stock holders instead of and in place of making investments in the actual business: now, this is where I have a philosophical difference with the way most corporations are run.

And of course, we can all work more if we want to — for example, one could spend 20 hours a week on a blog after working a full 40 hours at the regular job — and many of us do. There is value in work, even in tasks considered ‘menial’ by folks who don’t know better and what many of us call ‘hobbies’ were either employable jobs not more than a few decades ago, or remain viable means of employment even given the number of amateurs who also ‘work’ in the field.

And there is the myth of the ‘perfect job’, one that is fulfilling personally and spiritually as well as financially; it is indeed a western luxury to reject work merely because it provides nothing except money.

##

Wow. Deep breath. That aside takes of far afield of my topic, and I recognise it might take some a mo to readjust.

So. OK? back to retail:

Running the store.

For every hour your store is open you need someone to run a register. Not: “run a register and answer questions” or “run a register and help customers” — I don’t care if they’re standing around bored out of their skull 6 of 8 hours a day: if a customer wants to spend money we need someone to take their money (quickly, politely) before they change their mind.

This is retail: money for goods.

Customer service is different from retail, and you shouldn’t ask the same employee to do both at the same time. In fact, many retail ‘jobs’ — merchandising, community relations, sales associates, product specialists, customer support; even your back office staff taking care of the ordering, receiving, and stocking and your front-of-store management who keep the sales floor organized and your entire staff on task — are all secondary to the cashier:

The cashier puts money in the till, and everything else supports that.

Yes, even if you’re the owner, running your own small retail business (bookstore or otherwise) you’re role as owner and sole proprietor is secondary to the cashier. For store-front retail: nothing else makes money.

I belabour the point because in many stores, the cashier is an after-thought. She’s the part-timer, or the entry level position. He’s the student taking classes who can only work nights 3 days a week, or maybe the stay-at-home parent who can only work weekends. And with training, any of these folks would be fine — or more than fine, as it takes a special skill to smile and be friendly to a never-ending stream of customers while the job itself is actually a bit boring.

But the final service contact with your customers is the point-of-sale — and it’s the most important because money actually changes hands: you don’t get paid until the register rings. Always remember that, and when you’re hiring staff and setting schedules, always keep it in mind.

##

So at a minimum, you have a cashier; if it’s a really small store you as owner are the cashier (and if helping customers takes you from behind the register often enough that someone with money is left waiting, there’s your tipping point: hire help)

Of course, we’re not discussing the mom-n-pop storefront in this series, we’re considering a multimillion dollar bookstore. So staffing is bit more complex:

  • You need at least one, and often two, dedicated cashiers all day. Don’t skimp. The register pays everyone’s paycheck
  • (If you need more than 2 cashiers to handle your sales volume, why are you reading my blog? you should be giving me advice.)
  • Bookstores, like libraries, have an information desk. So you need at least one person to staff this desk all day. This is also non-negotiable.
  • If you have specialty departments (kids books, music, DVDs — whatever you want to run) then each dept. also needs to be independently staffed — maybe you don’t need a kids bookseller from 9pm to Midnight, but otherwise: yes, an additional person per dept. all day long. If you’re not staffing it, what’s the point? It’s just another set of shelves else.
  • If you run a café, then in staffing terms you have to run it like a separate business: it’s own cashiers, management, and dedicated employees.
  • Depending on sales volume, you may also need dedicated staff to receive product, sort and shelve it, and process damages and returns.
  • You need a manager (or “key-holder” — most likely also known as managers) to open the store, and close it. If you’re open more than 8 hours a day, that means you likely need two.
  • You need to give everyone breaks. I’m not just being nice: it’s the law. So on top of everything else, you need to figure out how to give people lunches and shorter breaks — unless you go the Walmart-Evil route and just hire everyone part-time: but even there I think you have to give folks at least one 15min. break every four hours. [Your state & local employment laws may vary.] On top of slotting a warm body into each designated role, you need at least one extra staffer every day just to cover breaks.

You can run a store with less (minimum 2: one cashier and one everything-else) but once again, if you’re open more than 8 hours a day, suddenly you’re looking at two shifts (maybe three: open, mid, and close) and while over-lapping work shifts means it’s suddenly easier to figure out the lunch and other breaks for each employee, it’s still twice as many employees minimum every day.

Say it’s a smaller, and/or slower, store: only does $1 Million dollars a year. And you’re only running 2 shifts, and just 3 employees (cashier/associate/manager) for each. And for simplicity’s sake, we’ll consider full-timers — 8 hour shifts — without throwing part-time and evening-and-weekend-only staff into the mix. (Realistically, you won’t be able to do that: students, people otherwise working full time, parents, and slackers are going to be a large portion of your retail workforce, but I’m looking for a minimum number in a mathematical model in this case, so this level of real detail has to be set aside)

So, two eight-hour shifts, three employees per, seven days a week. Absolute bare minimum: 336 payroll hours each week (3 roles x 2 shifts x 8 hrs x 7 days) — this excludes a café, and glosses over niceties like checking in any new product or stocking shelves.

We’re already talking about a staff of 9 people, of whom a third have to be ‘managers’ or at least those trusted with keys to the front door (and the safe combination, since this is a cash business) — and at most, given an hour before open and an hour after close to set up and close down and all the other associated crap the shopping public doesn’t think of (and the previously mentioned overlap of shifts so folks aren’t working 8 hrs in a straight shift) we’ve established 10 operational hours for our hypothetical storefront.

[Yes, there is math. I’ll spare you, unless you really want the breakdown]

10 hours is something like 10am-8pm daily; not bad. And 9 employees is manageable, if everyone can always work the same shifts and no one needs flexible scheduling or vacations or sick leave or whatever: like I said, this is a bare minimum and a mathematical model besides, and if nothing else your weekend (or Wednesday) crowds will necessitate at least one extra body on the schedule; there is no way your staff will actually look like this.

Any expansion of your business also necessitates more staff: additional operating hours, additional sales volume, specialty departments and the all-important coffee — you’re spending more on staff. Maybe even three to four times as much as that ‘keep the doors open’ payroll number.

##

Of course, at a corporate level you’re not going to think of payroll as actual ‘people’ responsible for actual roles and work in your chain bookstore; it’s just an expense, and one that can be managed — even cut, willy-nilly — because nothing matters but margins and profits.

And payroll is the first thing to be cut when times get even a little tough…
or some other bet didn’t pay off and now the corp. is in trouble— no fault of the employees at the store level of course, it was some idiot at corporate HQ who made the mistake, but store payroll is the easiest thing to squeeze and gods forbid any vice president be cut, or have his salary cut

And this is part of a longer aside and also the main point of my argument: If your business is retail, the money comes in the cash register. ALL PROFITS come in through that cash register, at the local store level, and cutting back the support staff in store that generates those profits should be the last thing you do.

I’m lucky: I still have a job & my company is doing well. My store isn’t necessarily hitting all of it’s arbitrarily determined performance goals but we’re still making money and also positively contributing to the megacorp’s bottom line.

And there’s another point: sales can be up, sales can go down, but so long as you’re making money what’s the hassle?

Anyway, if one is an independent you don’t have to worry about goals, targets, and annual reviews: just pay the rent and other bills, and make your payroll, and maybe a little extra to re-invest in more inventory, nicer chairs, and the usual upkeep and you’re golden

##

I know at least three ways to calculate payroll:

  • by sales: there is one school of thought that says each payroll-hour (that is to say, each hour worked by an individual employee) needs to generate X dollars in sales to justify it’s expenditure. Needless to say, this is a favourite of corporate accountants. The problem is that X is a variable, and even among similar stores in a large bookstore chain, the value of X will change based on location, sales volume, and the whim of some blighter at corporate. I know all about Sales-per-Payroll-Hour numbers and the related math, and I hate ‘em as intimately as I know ‘em.
  • by role: you need a certain minimum number of booksellers just to keep a store running, and to keep it running in such as way that no customer is more than momentarily inconvenienced. The staffing levels in this case are proscribed strictly by your store layout and departments, and have very little to do with that all-important sales number. —If there are too few hands, the ship won’t sail. Hopefully the payroll graciously allotted to a manager at a chain bookstore is enough to cover this minimum, but if it isn’t, well: it’s the customers who suffer. The next time you can’t find anyone to help you at a bookstore, I hope you remember this last point.
  • bare minimum: by my math, just 10 people can run a store, 10 hours a day, 7 days a week: and they’re going to be tired, bitchy, and more than a little strung out; they’ll have to work while sick or while their kids are sick, they’ll occasionally snap at customers, and nothing extra will get done, not even the standard replenishment of books that have sold, because there really isn’t the time.

Since accountants don’t work retail, they look at the first number [payroll by sales] and try to squeeze it. And they can squeeze it [though they shouldn’t, really] to the point where we’ve an ‘optimal’ number of employees to run the store — and the customers won’t really notice. More and more, though, retailers of all types are squeezing past that point, and much much closer to the ‘bare minimum’ (and occasionally beyond) because they look only at numbers, payroll spent vs reciepts taken in, and don’t even know about the other intangibles of retail that occasionally require a person to be present, and to smile, even if no dollars are immediately generated by that interaction.

Of course a rising tide raises all ships, and a lot of this will improve if the economy improves. In the lean years, though, figuring a clear way to navigate one’s corporate-outpost-store past all this bullshit is just grating. and tiring. And the lack of perspective on the actualities of retail by those who purport to run a ‘retail’ corporation is exasperating.

##

If you run your own store, how can you beat the majors?

They have more square footage, more affiliates, more books, more amenities; they have a website and warehouse and distribution chain. They pwn you.

OK.

We can work with this, actually.

I’ve covered this before: First and foremost, if you want to run a bookstore and compete with the chains, you need a defined niche and you need to actively compete in that small segment. If you cover those bases, even a 2500sq.ft. strip mall storefront can hold their own against a 25,000sq.ft big box: pick your battles, and only fight the ones you know you can win. (and of course, compulsively plan and prepare for those battles, so you can and will win them on a regular basis)

Where else can you compete? What one thing do customers cite when they profess a preference for their local independent over the charms and wiles of Big Box Books?

The Knowledge and Attitude of the Staff.

You might think this is the sort of thing that can only be developed over years. And it can be, if you’re lucky — just as often, you’ll be a retail-employment revolving door for a never ending string of almosts and moving-ons.

The only way to secure great staff is
[drumroll…]
[wait for it…]
Pay for it.

##

Minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, at least until legislators who care about people & their quality of life can get around to raising it again, given the opposition by other legislators who just hate seeing ‘poor’ people ‘get ahead of themselves’ or whatever their stupid argument is.

And I think this is just fine, actually, as a introductory or training salary — but if you find someone you like, who does a good job, even if it’s ‘just retail’ (and retail is in fact a skill, & one even more difficult than many ‘corporate sales’ jobs — but that’s a different rant) then you really should be looking at $10 an hour, and maybe more depending on the cost of living in your area.

I’d like to think my home town (Atlanta) is in the low-to-average-but-really-average band for rent, food costs, and other factors that make up the ‘cost of living’, and $10 an hour isn’t much, really. (It’s a damn sight better than minimum wage though, and can mean the difference between one full time job or having to work two, or between getting food stamps, or not.)

Minimum wage is also a good base rate for baristas (or wait staff, if you run a restaurant) who also earn supplemental income via tips; I’ll ignore for the moment that current federal law allows employers to pay as little as $2.13 an hour in this case, as that is just insulting and I’d be embarrassed to pay so little to the men and women in these fields who work much harder than the job description might merit, and certainly work harder than I do for much less. Yeah, I know, you’ve had a bad experience with a waiter or waitress and I’m sure you can’t wait to share that with us in the comments (along with your proud refusal to leave a tip) but no one deserves $2.13 an hour, particularly for the crap the vast majority of us will put restaurant staff through.

I personally tip generously and as an employer, even if I could pay less I’d never go below actual minimum wage. $7.25 plus tips is hardly generous; actually, it’s the least I can do.

##

My expectations as a potential business owner are… unique. Most entrepreneurs are looking for a get rich quick scheme a reasonable return on investment, and my thoughts on compensation will fall on deaf ears.

Let me pitch it as an investment:

So, you’ve overall sales of some multiple millions, and [minus the known cost of stock, call it 60% of MSRP] your Gross Profit is also in the millions, and after accounting for fixed overhead (rent, utilities, payroll, cost of servicing debt) you’re still making a cool million (with the lovely zeroes: $1,000,000) and the only costs left are additional employee pay, and taxes.

If I’m paying money to employees as wages, that’s an expense, not a profit. I don’t pay income taxes on it (though I do have to pay FICA and other payroll taxes, as part of my employer contribution) — FICA is a cost split with the employee, however; as an employer my end is only 7.7% — a good bit lower than the tax rate on corporate income (25-35% depending on current tax law, which changes frequently.)

So as an employer, if I channel more money to my employees it affects, and lowers my ultimate tax bill.

Also, expenditures on employees is an investment, and if your employees have to deal with the public on a daily basis, keeping employees happy is only good business sense. (actually, it’s a good idea no matter what, but the folks who deal with the shopping public need a little extra consideration)

Instead of cashing out, I can share the company ‘profits’ [which were, in fact, earned for the company by our employees] and the small investment will reap dividends over years: employee retention, increased sales, community goodwill,

and what am I going to do with the money anyway? I just want to run a bookstore; the best damn bookstore I can and a Graphic Novel superstore besides. This isn’t a scalable idea – there is no chain, no national plans, just one really excellent bookstore. Of course profits are going to be plowed back into the operation, and part of that is making sure employees get paid what they’re worth, and maybe a little extra.

##

just 4% of that $1,000,000 is $40,000 a year. If I have the ‘bare minimum’ 10 employees described above, all working full time, I can afford to pay them $2 an hour more above and beyond what I might otherwise be paying them (obviously, rates will differ depending on experience and capabilities)

just 4%: hell, why don’t I pay them more? Instead of calling that the bare minimum to run the store, consider these 10 employees to be the core of my working staff — they do the most work; they are in fact the employees I’d miss most if any one of the 10 were gone — say, they left to take a job that they didn’t like but that offered an extra $2 an hour.

Why wouldn’t I pay that 4% to retain my best staff? If these dollars represented profits I’d otherwise have to pay taxes on, I should spend that 4% five times over: to pay 10 employees $4/hr over the base, and to keep the next 30 best employees by paying them $2 an hour more? Why the F*<# not?

And that’s just $200,000, 20% of the hypothetical million in profits each year — or $200,000 in operational expenses on a store that otherwise brings in $5-10MM —

And if your storefront can’t manage that first mil – say you only earn $100,000: it only costs $2000 to pay one employee an extra dollar an hour. Can’t you find $2500 or $5000 somewhere for your best employee? Or best 2, or best 5, or best 20 employees? — In a bad year, if you had to fire everyone else, who would you keep? And in any other year: why aren’t you paying these same essential employees more? Don’t wait for a recession to make these decisions.

##

Which employer couldn’t find 4% for staff? Which corporations already pay that annual 4% as dividends to stock holders? (and since when has a stockholder contributed anything to ongoing corporate operations – all they did was buy the stock)

##

OK, if it were my store and I’m calling all the shots:

  • Café servers only make minimum wage. Sorry, guys. But I encourage you to solicit tips, and provide the type of service that encourages tipping. And I hope the differential between actual minimum wage ($7.25) and what the gov’t laughably calls minimum wage for staff that otherwise earns tips (only $2.13) makes up the difference.
  • Book sellers who make it through the first 3 months: congratulations, I’d like to start all you folks at $10.25 an hour. After those first few months of training: If I’m going to keep you then you’re worth the extra three bucks an hour — and if you’re not, then honestly I just need to fire your ass now. We don’t need to string it out. Not every job works for every person, and an employer is not a welfare agency.
  • Booksellers who have been with us a year deserve the extra $2 an hour I found lurking in the corporate earnings statement above. At this point we’re up to $12.25 an hour, and that ain’t bad.
  • Cost of living adjustments for veteran booksellers would obviously follow, along with considerations for management, booksellers considered key to specialty departments, and folks who always show up on time and can still manage to smile after years of working retail.

It’s not billable hours at a legal firm, so we can’t pay astronomical rates, but I have no problem with investing profits back into my staff. An investment in employees always pays off. Just because it’s “only retail” doesn’t mean you have to make do with constant re-hiring and students and part-timers and “whomever is left” — make a committment to pay the staff what they’re worth, and you will always have a staff that will beat the snot out of the competition.

Hiring.

Personally, I know in the first five minutes of an interview whether I’ll hire someone or not. I trust first impressions; I trust my gut.

It doesn’t always work out. But I find that’s true whether I spend 45 minute in the interview, or just 5. Most of what we’re looking for, most of what the store needs, is only going to be apparent after someone has worked with us for, say, 6 weeks.

Which is why I’m a big proponent of provisional hiring, and a training/probation period. Say I like you enough to offer you a job: what I’m going to offer is 3 months at minimum wage, and I’m going to pay that to you even if I ask you not to come back after the first week.

But to actually work for more than 3 months, you’ve got to earn it. This isn’t the interview, where a sunny personality and the right answers will get you by: I want to see you on the job and actually performing. Yes, this means the first interview is easy — but actually landing a job is going to be hard. I personally feel this is the best way to add members to your staff, as the longer introduction allows all sorts of things to come out that would never be revealed in an interview: Always 10 minutes late, no matter what the scheduled shift is? Calling out ‘sick’ three Friday nights in a row? ‘Stuck in Traffic’ or weird emergencies always coming up at the last minute?

Sure, that’s life. Everyone has issues. But when you should be trying to make a good impression on a new employer? I know retail doesn’t have the same urgency as, say, Emergency Room Medical Treatment, but some basics need to be covered.

Also, if an employee has a tendency to mouth off to customers, or take an hour-and-a-half for lunch to meet their girlfriend, or do things like steal — well, it’s nice to have the option to just part ways before it all gets too involved. So long as the probationary period is made known to all new hires, I don’t forsee any problems. [particularly with the commitment to pay the 3 months salary no matter what]

Obviously, this isn’t the way I’m allowed to run my store at present, as I myself am just an employee at Big Box Books, but when I run my own outfit, this is the way we’re doing it.

Benefits

And things like health insurance and paid vacation time: provide as much as you can to as many employees as you can – after all, like wages, this is a pre-tax expense and is also an investment in your staff. Don’t skimp. Sure, you can… but it’s just wrong

And I’m sure you can guess what I’m about to say:

Your first, best, second best, and in the end the only asset that positively impacts your bottom line, are your employees.

No matter how big or how small, your company isn’t made of products or things or ideas: It’s people who make the product, who sell it, who have the ideas, who keep going even in the face of set-backs. Your only real asset are your employees, and not just the parasites capable management at the top of the org chart but the whole staff, from CEO at the top to bottle-washer, nerf-herder, intern, and janitor at the bottom.

Your employees are the company. And don’t you forget it.



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Yes, all the links are broken.

On June 1, 2015 (after 6 years and 11 months) I needed to relaunch/restart this blog, or at least rekindle my interest in maintaining and updating it.

Rather than delete and discard the whole thing, I instead moved the blog -- database, cms, files, archives, and all -- to this subdomain. When you encounter broken links (and you will encounter broken links) just change the URL in the address bar from www.rocketbomber.com to archive.rocketbomber.com.

I know this is inconvenient, and for that I apologise. In addition to breaking tens of thousands of links, this also adversely affects the blog visibility on search engines -- but that, I'm willing to live with. Between the Wayback Machine at Archive.org and my own half-hearted preservation efforts (which you are currently reading) I feel nothing has been lost, though you may have to dig a bit harder for it.

As always, thank you for reading. Writing version 1.0 of Rocket Bomber was a blast. For those that would like to follow me on the 2.0 - I'll see you back on the main site.

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