Recently, there have been rumblings of dissatisfaction among small-press publishers about Amazon.com.
This article, and
this one, are the most recent. We at Bad Dog Books have noticed some troubling developments as well.
Amazon.com is apparently slowly and quietly ejecting independent small-press publishers from their catalog, in favor of their own print-on-demand partner BookSurge. The Bad Dog Books products on Amazon.com are listed largely as 'out of stock', and we've had no fulfillment orders from them of late. We're hearing similar stories from others in the business.
While we were deeply excited by the prospect of reaching a larger market by presenting our (frankly superb!) line-up on Amazon.com, the administrative hassle, tight, obtuse policies and extremely low margins have been more of a burden than a boon, and these latest developments are frankly depressing.
It seems that we have ourselves and each other. We're running a sale at
FurPlanet this month, cutting $5 off all the books (even Kamui's new art book), basically sacrificing a month's profits to promote the value and importance of small-press publishers like ourselves and our brothers at
Sofawolf Press, and niche distributors like
FurPlanet and
Second Ed.
So, an open question to all of you.. As publishers, should we continue to try to expand anthropomorphic fiction beyond our fandom and into the mainstream, with the tremendous financial risk of investing in sales channels such as Amazon.com which may, at their whim, be sealed off, or should we focus on the fandom first, and leave expansion for the future?
I'm very interested in your thoughts.
- Alex Vance, editor-in-chief of
Bad Dog Books