Non-Profit Book Company Gives Away Books For Free!
In the Internet Age, book publishers are having a harder and harder time running their company in the black. Even with the addition of hardware such as the Kindle and iPad, publishers must do an superior job selecting and then merchandising each book they publish.
But it seems there are novel types of publishers coming on the scene. The Concord Free Press is currently publishing books and then handing them away for free. There is a catch , but it’s a pretty small one at that. The Concord Free Press merely asks you to give a donation to a charity in exchange for your book.
Another model that is quickly becoming a new benchmark is purchasing discount books online. numerous sites have become popular offering books at a considerable discount .
Free books sound too good to be true? They’ve been in business for two years and look to be accelerating , not dropping off the planet.
“We just ask people, one, make a voluntary donation to a charity or person in need; two, chart your donation on our website,” Stona Fitch, of The Concord Free Press says. “And three, pass the book along to someone else so that this project keeps going.”
And in those last two years, readers have given more than $140,000 to charities.
The business itself also relies on donations, and has published a total of four books. While this doesn’t make them a powerhouse, or even a “large” publisher, they seem to have started a revolution in the way books are produced .
“You know, we’re not saying all books should be free,” Fitch explains. “We’re just saying this is one way to put out a book.”
While Fitch has many supporters, he has just as many detractors. Hamilton Fish, former publisher of The Nation, said his initial thought was pure anger toward The Concord Free Press.
“And Stona Fitch was waltzing around inviting people to help themselves to the books that Concord Free Press was publishing free of charge,” Fish says.
Fitch, of the Concord Free Press, says he recalls Fish saying: “‘This is the death of publishing.’”
nonetheless Fish had to come to a reasonable conclusion about this novel model, and in general came to the conclusion that any new model in the book business was good for the book business. The publishing industry has by and large been a stagnant force for some years, even with the addition of new mediums, and he believes that this will put new life into the industry.
“Obviously, the big publishing houses are facing tremendous challenges,” Fish says. “Their financial viability is very much in question. We need as much innovation and independent spirit as possible.”
Again the pressures of sites offering discount text books look to add salt to a growing wound in the book industry.
“In an industry where nine out of 10 books don’t make money anyway, the real issue is: What does the reader think the book is worth?” he asks.
It seems that The Concord Free Press allows that judgment in the hands of its readers.
Category: Effective Web



