| Two Important Factors
New Books vs. Used Books
Students prefer used books because they are less expensive,
and we do our best to supply used books because they are more
profitable. However, publishers and authors earn nothing from
the sale of a used textbook. So a broad goal of the publishing
industry is to eliminate the used textbook market. They are fighting
back.
Some years ago they tried to challenge the used textbook market
legally, claiming it was theft of intellectual property, but
they failed.
So they have opted for different approaches.
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They reduce the life of an edition. Ten years ago a textbook
edition could be expected to last at least four years.
Now that life is closer to 3 years, even that is apparently
shrinking.
The only guaranteed profit to a publisher is from the first
printing.
After that first sale, wholesale companies and bookstores
begin the process of buying and selling.
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Another approach is to push for the requests of custom
editions which are useful only to the professors using them,
and which
only they (the publishers) provide. Some stores, have
copy centers with the capability to manufacture these items,
do the copyright clearance, and sell the materials less expensively
than the publisher.
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Another way a publisher fights back is by complicating
the buyback and ordering process.
The Way Things Work
Many stores use POS (point of sale) systems to track inventory
sales. Since 1997 we have been using a POS (point of sale) textbook
inventory system. Before that, we would work from price charts
and put price stickers on every book in the store. Now the prices
are listed on the shelf cards, and the price is determined by
the bar-code, which is scanned at the cash register.
After a book is scanned (sold), it is deducted from the inventory.
When books are bought at buyback, refunded, or received from
the publisher, they are added to the inventory. In all cases
this depends on the bar code. The bar code is derived from the
International Standard Book Number (ISBN).
In times past, one textbook would have one bar code. Now, a
textbook may have multiple bar codes, with the basic text being
imprinted with one, and then shrink wrapped to include CD's,
PASSPORTS,
study guides, lab manuals, Wall Street Journal subscriptions,
videos, and who knows what, adding another bar code to the package.
Many times we do not know what we will get from the publisher
until it arrives. This is a problem in that we must have the
bar code entered before the book will scan. During buyback we
must figure out what bar code is on the actual textbook so that
we will be able to effectively buy it from the students. We also
need to know what will arrive in the store when we
order that
ISBN from the publisher.
Many times these 'extras' are valuable to the student, but often
they are not. We don't have the choice of omitting the 'extras'.
Many publishers will not sell certain texts as 'text only'. The
publisher's goal is to thwart the used book market.
For Example
"The Simon and Schuster Handbook for Writers"
is a good example. The ISBN on the textbook, which is what the
student presents
at buyback, is 0-13-079783-9. If you order this ISBN from the
publisher,
the ISBN on what you receive is
0-13-021457-4 (at least it *was*
in July, next month it might be something else). The newer ISBN
has a CD, which some of instructors may or may not use. The CD
is rarely used by most students, nor do they keep the CD with
the
book,
yet students are angry when we won't buy the book back without
the CD. The bar codes for each textbook are different. This is
the reason the course request printouts that we send often lists
two textbooks of the same title, edition, and copyright as being
required, when you only requested one. This is also how we can
tell who is checking the lists as they should. Those who check
carefully have questions, those who do not check their lists
generally call us the second day of classes wondering what is
going on, asking why we are selling materials which were not
requested nor needed.
A typical order is processed like this. We receive requests
for 100 copies of 0-13-079783-9 for 4 sections of English 100.
We enter that into the system. Based on the Fall term
sales, we expect to buy 70 copies from the students. The additional
30 copies are ordered from the publisher.
When the new textbooks arrive, they have a different ISBN and
the text system doesn't recognize it. (Even if we phone the orders
in and speak with a person, they often do not tell us what ISBN
will be arriving.) We then have to enter the new ISBN for each
of the four sections, adjust the outstanding quantity of the
'buyback' ISBN, add the new ISBN to the purchase order, make
sure pricing is identical for each textbook, and place additional
shelf card(s) so they will reflect the correct information. We
then edit the old ISBN (which is what is still on the text) to
remind us to require the CD when ordering the textbooks from
wholesalers or buying them back from the students.
It has become a very tricky process. Again, the publisher's
goal is to make the merchandising of used textbooks difficult
and unprofitable.
How You Can Help
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We urge you to question your textbook representatives when
they arrive at your doorstep trying to get that
all-important
huge
textbook
adoption.
-
Ask the representatives about the materials they are including
in the texts.
'Oh, but it's FREE!' Nothing is free when it
comes
to
textbooks.
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Will you use it, (the extras)?
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Is it a one time use only?
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Can you get just the textbook without the study guide wrapped
up with it?
Note From The Manager
If you've read this far, I thank you. We,
as well as our competitors, Lemox and UTS, are in business to
provide course materials and information in a seamless manner.
I mention our
competitors because they receive their information from us. They
are in the same 'boat' as we are. They also have the same goal.
That goal is to provide the customer with the correct information,
correct materials, and correct prices on time. When we can do
it well, we are proud of our efforts. When we perform poorly
as a result of our own decisions, we can figure out how to make
it better. However, when conditions outside of our control prevent
us from performing well (the publishers, requests coming in during
buyback, classes being added or enrollment caps being increased
without our knowledge) we all lose, especially the students,
and the general mood is frustration.
I wish each of you the very best in the coming semester.
Sincerely,
Forrest Halford
Book Department Manager
University Bookstore-WKU
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