Anti-Competitive Companies, Amazon & Authors
by August Wainwright
Quite a bit has been said about Amazon and their “monopolistic” practices lately. Let me start this post by putting my thoughts right out in the open: This entire discussion is bullshit.
Many authors have weighed in publicly with their opinions on the evil overlord known as Amazon. It’s common to hear about used ebooks,the ridiculous idea that could destroy the publishing industry, as if it’s a complete inevitability looming around the corner. Or about how it’s only a matter of time until B&N starts folding under the weight of their massive stores, leaving Amazon in an even more powerful position.
The fact that both of these things may never happen is never really discussed. But the end of most of these discussions usually contains some line referencing Amazon’s desire to take over the world.
My response: so what?
Seriously.
Just for a moment, let’s take a look at the facts.
1. Amazon and the Kindle are almost entirely responsible for the massive shift in publishing
Usually, if the arguments that are taking place are based solely on the fact that the platform in which we are arguing about exists, then maybe we should take a long hard look at what it is that’s so bad and so frustrating and so down right evil about said platform.
I don’t know about you, but I wouldn’t be able to publish my works if it wasn’t for Amazon. You know what, let me rephrase that: I wouldn’t be able to publish the way I want to, market the way I want to, or take responsibility for the successes AND the failures of my own work. I wouldn’t be able to make royalties between 35%-70% of all sales. I wouldn’t be able to fluctuate pricing, do my own promotions, or test new ways to reach readers.
Some authors thrived in the old Big 6 publishing world and it’s a guarantee that other authors would have made it big if things hadn’t changed. But look at the environment we operate in now, look at what keeps you from “making it big” now; absolutely nothing. Put the work in, dedicate the time, and reap the rewards.
You don’t have to spend a year or more trying to find an agent to represent your book. You don’t have to wait while the agent fails to sell your book to a publisher. You don’t have to act happy just to have the chance to be published, even when the editors tell you to completely change the entire idea of what your book was supposed to be. And you don’t have to start all over when the publisher decides to pull your book one month before it was supposed to go out, and your agent decides it would be better if you went separate ways.
This brings me to the point of this post and the second fact that is so easily overlooked:
2. Monopolies are NOT inherently bad for the free market
Yes, you read that correctly. No, I’m not anti-competition, anti-democracy, or anti-American (all of which you might be called by implying that monopolies aren’t bad). But, there is an important distinction to make here.
The main reason that authors freak out over Amazon’s “stifling” business practices is actually quite simple: fear.
Fear is also the reason that monopolies are labeled as being evil, competition killing mega-corps that couldn’t care less about the consumer (see everything that AT&T does for example).
Now, this fear makes perfect sense. And it’s a completely valid and warranted opinion. If a company is allowed to snuff out all competition, only to turn around and lower the quality of services while raising prices for consumers, then that company is a tried and true monopoly, deserves to be broken up, and should be looked at in the same light as Enron and Bernie Madoff.
But nothing, absolutely nothing, points to the fact that Amazon operates this way.
If you have facts and data that prove otherwise, I’d be more than happy to take a look at them and re-evaluate. But so far, I’ve never seen it to be the case.
As a matter of fact, I would say that, although Amazon and the Kindle are the iPhone of the digital book universe, they actually do everything within reason to empower authors, pay them what they deserve, all while LOWERING the costs to consumers, not raising them.
Let’s suspend the Amazon argument for a moment so we can look at another massive tech company: Google.
Take a second and remember back to the birth of the search engine. Consumers had plenty of choices (they still do). You could use Google to find what you’re looking for online, or you could use Yahoo, Hotbot, AOL, Excite, Ask/AskJeeves, AltaVista, MSN/Bing, Netscape, and on and on and on.
So why does Google now keep a market share north of 80% and the phrase “Google it” is as ubiquitous as “Man, this grilled cheese is delicious”?
Because they were, and still are, better than everyone else.
There’s a lot more that goes into why that’s true, and what your opinions are towards what the word “better” means, but ultimately, the fact that Google was just flat out better at the search engine game is all that matters.
So is Google a monopoly?Google chairman Eric Schmidt all but admitted that they were back in 2011.
Has Google made your life easier or harder because of their huge market share? I can’t see how it’s been harder.
Has Google, because of market share and consumer confidence, fueled new technologies, donated huge sums of money to private space exploration and alternative fuel sources, and created a car that drives around by itself?
Yes, yes, and yes.
Part of the reason they are able to do these things is because of economies of scale.
In microeconomics, economies of scale are the advantages that naturally occur when the sheer size of a company allows the cost of the output to decrease simply because of the number of units being sold. Without getting too technical, it could be described as spreading the fixed costs out across more items sold.
If Apple wasn’t so huge, the iPhone probably would have cost closer to $1000. If Google wasn’t so massive, they wouldn’t be “messing around” in areas like private space exploration and augmented reality. And if Amazon wasn’t so ridiculously large, they wouldn’t be able to stay as ubiquitous as they are to consumers (see readers).
If another company was to come along and build a company that consumers liked more than Google, and THEN Google took actions to limit that companies opportunities in the marketplace, they should be punished.
And if Amazon does the same thing, they should be punished, broken up, or whatever else will deter those actions from happening again in the future.
But the idea that, since authors fear Amazon someday wielding too much power and turning into a monopoly where they take advantage of both writers and consumers, we should punish them now for something they might do tomorrow is absolutely ridiculous. Now who’s anti free-market?
Which leads me to something that all authors should embrace:
3. It’s not your responsibility to help B&N, Smashwords, or any other platform survive
It is not your job as a writer to keep a company in business OR to level the playing field for consumers. Your job as a writer is to do two things: 1. write, and 2. find the readers, wherever they are, who want your product and deliver it to them. It’s really that simple.
Now I understand that there is more to the profession of writing than just selling and profits. I acknowledge and agree with that mentality. But if your ultimate goal is to change lives, or raise money for a certain cause, or help society in some way, first you have to find a readership. Next you have to produce a product worth consuming. Then, and only then, can you create the change you’re after.
If you don’t want to make your titles available exclusively at Amazon because your readers are on multiple devices, then don’t do it. But if you’re making sure that 10-15% of your potential readership is happy at the expense of not being able to reach the other 85-90% as easily, don’t complain about monopolies and anti-competitiveness.
You’re making a choice for your business.
And nobody is forcing you to make that decision – just the same way nobody is forcing you, or consumers, to do business with Amazon.
People are constantly making that choice because Amazon is just flat out better than everyone else right now.
One last thing; the actual definition for a monopoly is:
The exclusive possession or control of the supply or trade in a commodity or service
Is it me or is the definition for monopoly interchangeable with the answer to the question “What did big publishers want, and fight over, for the entire history of their existence?”
(In case you can’t tell, I’m super excited to be a self-published author.)
A wildly intriguing, intimately suspenseful story about the human capacity for good and evil – and what pushes us to inevitably, and often tragically, turn to our darker emotions for comfort.
Jacob Watts broke his neck in Afghanistan. Now he’s in D.C. with no job, a therapist, an uncontrollable tick in his arm, and PTSD. And he can’t pay his rent.
His new, and monetarily necessary roommate, Remy Moreau, isn’t helping either. Cold and detached, she might be a savant – but she’s also socially inept, has absolutely no boundaries, and is possibly dealing drugs out of their apartment. When the two come in contact with a stiff and blood-covered body in Capitol Row, the ambiguous Remy Moreau will lead him on an obsessive-compulsive hunt in pursuit of a tormented killer.
Can Remy, with Watts in tow, catch a murderer before he strikes again? And what are Remy’s real intentions with Watts? Is she even capable of anything resembling real human emotion?
A Study in Sin is a fast-paced modern update of a classic Sherlock Holmes mystery.
Buy Now @ Amazon
Genre – Mystery / Thriller / Suspense
Rating – PG13
More details about the author
Connect with August Wainwright on Google Plus & Twitter
Website http://augustwainwright.com/
0 comments:
Post a Comment