Название: Merchants of Culture
Автор: John B. Thompson
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Кинематограф, театр
isbn: 9781509528943
isbn:
At the same time as Barnes & Noble was expanding its bookstore chain from its original base on the East Coast, Borders was building a national chain of bookstores from its base in the Midwest. In 1971 Tom and Louis Borders opened a small used bookstore in Ann Arbor, Michigan; they moved to larger premises in 1975, expanded the business and ran it successfully for many years. In 1985 they opened a second bookstore in Detroit to see whether they could replicate their success in a less academic setting. The success of the Detroit store encouraged them to expand into other locations in the Midwest and Northeast. In 1992 Borders was bought by the retail giant Kmart, which had acquired the mall-based bookstore chain Waldenbooks in 1984. Kmart merged Borders with Waldenbooks to form the Borders Group, which went public in 1995. By this stage, the Borders Group and Barnes & Noble had become the dominant book retail chains in the United States and their sales were five to ten times those of the other national chains, such as Crown and Books-A-Million.
In the course of the 1990s both Borders and Barnes & Noble expanded rapidly, seeking to extend their presence across the United States and to consolidate their positions as dominant players in the retail book trade. In both cases their expansion was based on the concept of the ‘book superstore’, which differed in certain key respects from both the mall stores and the independents. Often located in prime city locations, the book superstores were designed as attractive retail spaces that drew customers in and encouraged them to browse – they were clean, spacious, well-lit stores with sofas and coffee shops and areas to relax and read. The stores were open for up to a hundred hours a week, seven days a week; they emphasized customer service and attractive, eye-catching displays. The chains competed with one another and with other chains and independents by giving deep discounts (30–40 per cent) on frontlist5 bestsellers and modest discounts (10–20 per cent) on other hardcovers and by the range and depth of their stock. They centralized stock purchasing and inventory control, which gave them a great deal of leverage in their negotiations with suppliers and enabled them to realize substantial economies of scale. In many cases they stocked merchandise other than books, such as magazines, music CDs, computer games and videos. They sought to make the experience of buying books easy, unthreatening and enjoyable for individuals who were not accustomed to going into a traditional bookstore.
As the rivalry between Barnes & Noble and Borders intensified in the early 1990s, both companies closed many of the mall stores in their B. Dalton and Walden chains and opened more superstores instead. In the year from 1993 to 1994, for example, Barnes & Noble closed around 52 B. Dalton stores, the total number of which fell from about 750 in 1993 to 698 in 1994; at the same time, it increased the number of superstores from 200 to 268. During the same time period, Borders closed 57 Walden stores, the total number of which fell from 1,159 to 1,102, and it nearly doubled the number of superstores, from 44 to 85 (see table 1).6 The old mall-based bookstores were gradually giving way to the rise of the book superstores.
Table 1 The expansion of Borders and Barnes & Noble, 1993–1994
* estimate.
Source: Logos (1996).
By 2006, Barnes & Noble was operating 723 bookstores across the United States, which included 695 superstores and 98 mall stores; its total sales were around $4.8 billion.7 The company had diversified into the video games and computer software retail business and was operating a large number of video game and entertainment software stores under various trade names including Babbage’s, Funco and Software Etc. It had also become involved in publishing, acquiring Sterling Publishing in 2003 – a non-fiction trade publisher with some 5,000 books in print – and publishing an extensive line of classics under the Barnes & Noble imprint. In 2009 Barnes & Noble entered the ebook market by launching its own ebook reader, the Nook, and selling ebooks from its own website.
The Borders Group, with total sales of around $4.1 billion in 2006, was the second largest book retail chain in the US at this time, operating around1,063 bookstores in the US, including 499 superstores under the Borders trade name and around 564 mall-based Waldenbooks stores. Borders had also expanded internationally, opening a number of Borders stores outside the US (mainly in the UK and the Pacific Rim) and acquiring Books Etc. in the UK in 1997. But in the early 2000s the Borders overseas operation began to run into difficulties. In 2007 the UK business – which by then comprised 42 superstores in the UK and Ireland and 28 branches of Books Etc. – was sold to a private equity group, Risk Capital Partners, for a modest initial sum of £10 million. It was bought out by the management in July 2009 and went into administration in November 2009. All 45 Borders stores in the UK were closed on 22 December 2009. Borders’ US business also went into decline; its last recorded profit was in 2006 and from then on its annual sales fell and its losses grew. In February 2011 Borders announced that it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and by September all remaining Borders stores had been closed down.
The bankruptcy of Borders marked the end of an era, in the sense that the long-running rivalry between Barnes & Noble and Borders, which saw the two book retail giants rolling out their superstores across America, was now over. But the profound changes currently taking place in the retail marketplace will pose major challenges for Barnes & Noble and the smaller retail chains that remain. Bricks-and-mortar bookstores have long faced serious competition from online retailers like Amazon and from mass merchandisers (more below); now they face the real threat that a growing proportion of book sales will be realized as ebooks that bypass the physical bookstores altogether. Total revenues from the Barnes & Noble bookstores have been declining since 2007. Barnes & Noble is a significant player in the ebook marketplace but well behind Amazon in terms of market share, and it’s not clear whether the growth of its ebook revenues will be sufficient to offset the decline of bookstore sales. While Barnes & Noble will pick up some of the sales that would previously have been credited to Borders, it is likely that the overall proportion of retail sales accounted for by the superstore and mall bookstore chains – which was probably about 45 per cent in 20068 СКАЧАТЬ