Posts Tagged Barnes

Barnes & Noble considers spinoff of Nook business

Posted by on Thursday, 5 January, 2012

Barnes & Noble is looking at separating its Nook business in what it calls an attempt to capitalize on the growth of digital content. The company said there’s no time table for such a move nor any guarantee it will happen, but the mention of it suggests it’s very possible.

The news comes after a strong holiday season in which the bookseller said sales of digital content during the nine-week holiday season increased 113 percent over the same period last year. Sales of the Nook Simple Touch, Nook Color and Nook Tablet were up 70 percent over the last year, though sales of the Simple Touch were below expectations.

Barnes & Noble now expects fiscal 2012 digital content sales to come in around 0 million with a run rate for digital content sales to hit 0-0 by the end of fiscal 2012. And the Nook operation is now expected to generate .5 billion in sales this fiscal year. Here’s what William Lynch, Chief Executive Officer of Barnes & Noble had to say about the Nook business:

We see substantial value in what we’ve built with our Nook business in only two years, and we believe it’s the right time to investigate our options to unlock that value. In Nook, we’ve established one of the world’s best retail platforms for the sale of digital copyright content. We have a large and growing installed base of millions of satisfied customers buying digital content from us, and we have a Nook business that’s growing rapidly year-over-year and should be approximately .5 billion in comparable sales this fiscal year. Between continued projected growth in the U.S., and the opportunity for Nook internationally in the next 12 months, we expect the business to continue to scale rapidly for the foreseeable future.

As Lynch mentioned, Barnes and & Noble is looking to expand internationally and is in talks with different potential partners including publishers, retailers, and technology companies. It’s understandable considering that the digital side of the business is outpacing the company’s traditional business. Barnes & Noble said retail store sales increased by 2.5 percent to .2 billion for the holiday season compared to the prior year. Comparable store sales increased by 3.4 percent this holiday season, but that was less than the 9.7 percent increase last year.

Meanwhile, BN.com holiday sales were up 43 percent to 7 million compared to the prior year, with comparable sales increasing 52 percent. The company said Nook business drove the increase of online sales and offset declines of physical product sales. Overall, the Nook business, including sales of digital content, device hardware and related accessories, increased 43 percent during the holiday period to 8 million. The company has lowered its full fiscal year 2012 forecast, saying consolidated sales will now be .0 billion to .2 billion with earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization to come in at 0 to 0 million because of the performance of the Simple Touch.

The stock is getting hammered prior to the open of the market, perhaps due to concerns that spinning off the Nook business could strip away the growing part of the company. But giving Nook its independence could allow that business to grow faster and make more aggressive moves if it’s not weighed down by the parent company.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Connected world: the consumer technology revolution
  • Disruptapalooza 2011: how Amazon’s Kindle is changing the portable media game
  • What Amazon’s new Kindle line means for Apple, Netflix and online media



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Kobo Vox review

Posted by on Thursday, 8 December, 2011
Kobo has long been happy to position itself as the underdog in the e-reader race, a spin that’s based on more than a few grains of truth. After all, what else should this small Canadian company call itself after years of going head to head with giants like Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Sony? In spite of its perceived disadvantages, though, it’s remained competitive with products like the eReader Touch Edition, a device that matched the Nook and Kindle feature-for-feature.

Now, the company is attempting to pull off a similar feat with the Vox, its first entry in the tablet space — and a clear shot across the bow at a couple low-cost slates from Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Can the e-reader David pull off an upset against a couple of Goliaths this go ’round, or have the company’s limited resources finally gotten the better of it? Watch the battle unfold before your eyes, after the break.

Gallery: Kobo Vox review

Kobo Vox review

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Kobo Vox review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Dec 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget’s holiday gift guide 2011: e-readers

Posted by on Monday, 21 November, 2011

Welcome to the Engadget Holiday Gift Guide! We’re well aware of the heartbreaking difficulties surrounding the seasonal shopping experience, so we’re here to help you sort out this year’s tech treasures. Below is today’s bevy of curated picks, and you can head back to the Gift Guide hub to see the rest of the product guides as they’re added throughout the holiday season.

The e-reader space is really — if you’ll pardon the expression — heating up just in time for the holiday season. Industry leader Amazon dropped the gauntlet yet again, with the introduction of three new devices, including the entry-level fourth generation Kindle (which starts at an enticing for the ad-supported version) and the Kindle Fire, which is helping to further blur the lines between the e-reader and tablet worlds. Not to be outdone, Barnes & Noble, Kobo and Sony are also offering up impressive new devices for the holiday season. All in all, there’s never been a more exciting time to give the gift of reading.

Continue reading Engadget’s holiday gift guide 2011: e-readers

Engadget’s holiday gift guide 2011: e-readers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Nov 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet review

Posted by on Monday, 21 November, 2011
Back in April, the Nook Color underwent a magical change of sorts: a software update that transformed the device from a color screen e-reader into an honest to goodness Android tablet. It was the company’s first swipe at the space — a backdoor approach that beat out fellow e-reader manufacturers like Amazon and Kobo. Its follow-up, the Nook Tablet, marks the company’s first out-of-the-box shot at the consumer tablet market. Not to mention, it also goes head to head with the Kindle Fire, a device that’s sure to be one of the best-selling gadgets of the holiday season, thanks to its price and wide content selection.

Does the Nook Tablet have what it takes to topple the Kindle Fire? Do the product’s benefits justify its premium over Amazon’s device — or the recently discounted and soon to be upgraded Nook Color for that matter? Find out the answers to these questions and so, so many more, after the break.

Gallery: Nook Tablet review

Gallery: Nook Tablet unboxing

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Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Nov 2011 10:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle Fire vs. Nook Tablet…fight!

Posted by on Friday, 18 November, 2011

There seems little doubt that the Kindle Fire will prove one of the holiday season’s biggest hits. At 0, the budget tablet will no doubt prove too good a deal to pass up for many consumers not ready to make the price commitment to the industry-leading iPad or a top-tier Android tablet like the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1. Of course, the Fire wasn’t the only budget Android tablet to launch this week — heck, it wasn’t even the only budget Android tablet launched by an e-reader producer. Barnes & Noble’s Nook Tablet also, conveniently, hit stores earlier this week. The company took what it got right with the Nook Color, souped it up a bit internally and wound up with a solid competitor to the Fire.

So, which of these products should budget-friendly gadget shoppers pick up this holiday season? We take a look at their hits and misses after the break.

Continue reading Kindle Fire vs. Nook Tablet…fight!

Kindle Fire vs. Nook Tablet…fight! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Nov 2011 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why Google should buy Barnes & Noble

Posted by on Tuesday, 15 November, 2011

The release of the Kindle Fire has many pointing to Amazon’s vision for the tablet as a breakthrough. After all, with it’s low price, curated approach to the crowded world of Android apps and a content-first approach, it looks like someone finally got an Android tablet right.

Except that Barnes & Noble kinda got it right before Amazon.  OK, sure, so maybe the Nook Color is technically categorized by B&N as an e-reader, but in reality it was a low-end Android tablet, priced cheaply with a curated approach to content.

But that’s all just a technicality now, because while B&N may have been ahead of Amazon with the Nook Color, the Fire will still blow every other Android tablet out of the water, including the Nook Color and the new Nook tablet, which B&N introduced last week as an answer to the Fire.

So what’s more interesting with the Fire is not where it leaves B&N, which is in a fairly predictable second-place position among high-end e-readers and Android tablets, but where the Fire leaves Google. After all, the Fire is Amazon’s audacious attempt to introduce another tablet upon Google’s platform, while taking away many of the advantages that Google has gained through investing in the Android platform.

What do I mean? Well, sure, technically the Fire is built upon Android, but Amazon’s curated approach will no doubt be more about Amazon than Google, which is best exemplified by the fact that Amazon puts its own browser on the device, displacing Google’s browser. By taking the browser away and giving the consumer a server-assisted browsing experience with Silk, it will be Amazon, not Google, gathering all the data about consumer purchase and social behavior.

So what should Google do? Well, there’s not much they can do, other than continue to push hardware providers like Samsung, HTC and, of course, Motorola and others to utilize a version of Android that has all the Google services that Google was intending for consumers to use with the release of Android.

Nothing to do, except maybe…

Why Google Should Buy Barnes & Noble

Yes, Google should acquire Barnes & Noble. Wait, you ask, didn’t Google just buy Motorola, another hardware company? Of course, but the thing is, B&N isn’t a hardware company. What B&N is is a content retailer.

Like Amazon.

And content is something that Google, as much as it likes to think it is, doesn’t get. At all. The examples are numerous. The failure of Google TV.  Google’s no-show in the music space despite making noise with Google Music. And finally, there’s Google eBookstore, which, from what I can tell, is even more of a non-factor than Google Music.

Why? Because Google, for all its efforts, just hasn’t done well in content sell-through. Compared to Amazon, which is a company with content retailing in its DNA, to say Google is clunky and uncertain in this regard is putting it kindly.  And now, with the Fire, it’s likely that Amazon will show Google — and even possibly Apple — what the dominant online content-retailer can do with its own tablet device.

So how would B&N help Google? First, it would give them a division that understands how to merchandise content, both online and offline.  It would also possibly help them revive their moribund Google eBookstore as well give them an answer to the Kindle business, which is much more than just the hardware line. The Kindle is an entire ecosystem, or book industry in a box, including a growing publishing services. B&N has many of these same offerings, such as its PubIt platform, which Google could simply make its own.

Lastly, Google could also put B&N’s network of physical storefronts to good use.  Sure, Google lives in the cloud almost exclusively, but as Apple has shown, it often pays to have stores where consumers can “touch the company,” and for Google this might be even more important given that it’s hard for a company that is almost all-cloud to build trust as a lifelong content partner. Other benefits, such as encouraging adoption of Google Wallet and selling other Google hardware like the Nexus smartphones, are fairly obvious ones.

A few closing thoughts. Some would argue that buying B&N would mean Google would be competing with its partners, but that concern was put to rest with the Motorola acquisition.  And the cost of B&N would be just a fraction of the Motorola buy, given the book retailer’s sub- billion market cap. Lastly, Kobo’s acquisition by Rakuten for 5 million took maybe the only viable alternative to B&N off the market, and is another reason that Google would be wise to snatch up B&N quickly.

So what are they waiting for?

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Connected world: the consumer technology revolution
  • Disruptapalooza 2011: how Amazon’s Kindle is changing the portable media game
  • What Amazon’s new Kindle line means for Apple, Netflix and online media



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