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The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

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Who are the Major Retail Outlets for CBA Books?

By Steve Laubeon November 28, 2016
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[This post had to be updated and revised in March 2017 and again in August 2019 due to numerous changes in the industry.]

The question came up recently asking which retail store is the most important to a CBA publisher for selling print editions of their books? And to which store are the most books sold?

CBA is a label to describe the Christian book market. It used to be an acronym for Christian Booksellers Association, an association that is no longer in existence. The ABA used to be an acronym for the American Booksellers Association but came to be a label to describe the general market.

I wish the answer was simple and we could point to one place and say “that one” and forget the rest. But that isn’t a smart response.

The first thing we must do is define terms.

Retail means stores or accounts, either physical or online, that sell direct to the consumer.

Wholesale means accounts that buy from the publisher but sell to the retailer, not to the consumer.

The word “distributor” can be synonymous with “wholesaler” but not always, which only confuses things.

Retailers

Let’s start with retailers. These are accounts that sell either online or in physical locations direct to the consumer. I worked in a bookstore (retailer) for 11 years at the beginning of my career.

A “store” or “retailer” can have one location or many. We call those with many locations, “chain stores.”

The major “stores” or “retailers” (not in any order) in the USA are:

—  Amazon.com (More about them later.)
—  Choice Books (The spin racks you see in grocery stores and airports are very likely supplied and managed by Choice Books. Another industry term to describe them is “rack jobber” meaning their job is to fill the “racks” or displays. According to their web site they service over 11,500 displays. Technically they are not a “bookstore” but place displays in retail outlets that serve the consumer.)
—  Christianbook.com (Also known as CBD or Christian Book Distributors. Here is an example where the word “distributor” doesn’t refer to a wholesaler.)
—  Mardel (A unique chain that also sells office and educational supplies with 35 large store locations. Stores size is usually 25,000 sq. feet. – owned by Hobby Lobby.)
—  The Munce Group (A marketing group serving over 500 independent CBA retailers. The group can provide buying power to their members as if they were a chain.)
—  The Parable Group (A digital marketing group of over 100 independent CBA retailers – many of them larger sized stores.)
—  Barnes & Noble (A general market chain of 640 stores – as of June 2019 when they were sold to a private equity firm that also owns the British bookstore chain, Waterstones.)
—  Books-a-Million (A general market chain of 260 stores in 32 states.)
— Indigo.ca (The largest general market  chain in Canada with 212 stores as of 2017.)
—  “Big Box” stores (Wal-Mart, Costco, Target, Sam’s Club.)

From that list you can see that for print copies there are about 10 major retail outlets (with thousands, of locations). I may have left some out. Note that I have intentionally not included any of the wonderful independent bookstores other than those included in the “Groups” mentioned. This post is not meant to list all the great stores, but to explore the largest retail accounts. You can view a map of Christian independent bookstores in August 2019 at the “Get Local” web site (click here.) The map is discussed on our blog called “A Retail Renaissance?”

Amazon

Obviously Amazon.com is a key “store” for book sales. But they are one store, albeit a large one. For some publishers Amazon can be 50% of their sales. For other publishers it is as small as 10%.

The lesson here is that if you are a publisher (or an Indie author) and only sell your paperbacks on Amazon you might very well be leaving a lot of potential sales behind.

Another lesson is regarding Amazon rankings. While Amazon is a major player, never forget they are one “store.” When a book rises in the sales ranks on Amazon it is a picture of what has happened in one store during a specific period of time. I’m not minimizing the importance of a book getting into the top 100 of all books sold (that is significant) on Amazon. But if your book suddenly moves in the ranking from 15,433 to 10,312 it may mean only one copy sold. Or it could mean 10 copies sold…but there were 10,000 others that sold more during that period of time.

Amazon is one, very large, “store.” But there are a bunch of other places where books are sold too.

Wholesaler

Wholesalers are companies with massive warehouses that carry a lot of titles and ship to retailers who then sell to their customer. They specialize in quick turnaround on orders and often have multiple warehouses so the books can get to the retailer faster than a publisher can because the publisher usually has only one warehouse. Independent authors usually have to work through a service (like Ingram Spark) to get their books listed with Ingram.

There two major wholesalers in CBA are:
Ingram/Spring Arbor (Ingram is the largest of all book distributors. Many years ago Ingram bought Spring Arbor Distributors which focused exclusively on CBA products.)
Anchor Distributors (In business since 1970.)

So What? Why Should I Care?

The best answer to that question is so that you have a better understanding of the entire publishing eco-system. If your book isn’t selling then maybe a key account above did not chose to carry your title. Or maybe they carried it but the book didn’t sell so the stores returned their copies.

Some of our clients have been asked to meet with key retailers by their publisher. They’ve been flown to sales presentations where they get to talk directly to those retail buyers and their managers. If you don’t know who the main accounts are you might brush off the invitation not knowing how important they are.

The more you know about the industry the more comfortable you become when it comes to business conversations with your agent.

P.S. Ebooks

In case you are wondering, for ebooks Amazon (Kindle) has 70% or more of the market. ITunes (Apple), Nook (B&N), Google Play, and Kobo (the main vehicle for Canadian ebooks) are the majority of the rest. There are other ebook retailers too, but the above five account for 99% of ebooks sold.

 

 

 

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Category: Book Business, Book Business, Book Sales, Economics, Marketing, Publishing History, The Publishing Life, The Writing Life

Fun Fridays – November 25, 2016

By Steve Laubeon November 25, 2016
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Try the choreography with your family this weekend! (link to the instructions at the end of the video.) The first 45 seconds should be easy enough. But then gets a little more fun. Your group may not sound as amazing as this one however.

Read moreFun Fridays – November 25, 2016
Category: Fun Fridays

Getting Ready to Give Thanks

By Karen Ballon November 23, 2016
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No doubt about it, it’s been a tough year. In publishing. In politics. In our nation. In our world. There are so many things to worry about, to be frustrated about, even to fear. And yet… God is. Whoever runs the country…God is. Whatever personal or professional trials you face…God is. However discouraging circumstances may be…God is. Whatever is happening… GOD. IS. As we prepare to celebrate …

Read moreGetting Ready to Give Thanks
Category: Personal, TheologyTag: Faith, Personal, Theology

Giving Thanks for Lessons Learned

By Dan Balowon November 22, 2016
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Throughout my life in the church, from earliest Sunday school lessons to the current day, whenever I encounter Bible stories about people who have done less-than-good things, I have grown less judgmental of them than I might have in the past. The Israelites in the desert for forty years are actually a picture of just about every believer I know, including me. God does great things, but at the …

Read moreGiving Thanks for Lessons Learned
Category: Agents, Book Proposals, Career

Fun Fridays – November 18, 2016

By Steve Laubeon November 18, 2016
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Last Sunday was National Tongue Twister Day. Your assignment, should you decide to accept it, is to have your family do a Tongue Twister Challenge. Here are a few to try, some are better for younger kids! (To win you have to say it three times really fast without error.) Red leather yellow leather. Can you can a can as a canner can can a can? She sells seashells by the seashore. Fuzzy Wuzzy was a …

Read moreFun Fridays – November 18, 2016
Category: Fun Fridays

Should I Push Romance into my Story?

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon November 17, 2016
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Whenever I go to a conference, I am privileged to hear about a wide range of stories and ideas. I always want the writer to succeed in marketing work to editors, so often I’ll ask how much romance the story has. Sometimes it has quite a bit. Other times, not so much. One writer told me that a male character was “intrigued” by a female character, but that was the extent of that thread, and more …

Read moreShould I Push Romance into my Story?
Category: Romance, Writing CraftTag: Marketing, Romance, Writing Craft

Lessons from a Crab

By Karen Ballon November 16, 2016
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No, the title isn’t talking about a grouchy person. It’s about a real, live crab. One that I encountered one day on the Oregon coast as I walked along the beach. It was early morning, with the rising sun streaming across the vast water, the glory of the sunrise reflected in the wet sand. I’d gotten a little to close to the surf as it came in, and since I hadn’t rolled up my pants legs, I had to …

Read moreLessons from a Crab
Category: The Writing Life, TheologyTag: The Writing Life, Theology

Author Seven Deadly Sins

By Dan Balowon November 15, 2016
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Every profession has its list of “sins” which can forever taint a person, group or organization guilty of committing one or more of them. Singers who are revealed to lip-sync to someone else’s vocalization are never taken seriously again. Athletes found to be taking performance-enhancing drugs are forever flagged with an asterisk next to their accomplishments. A political leader who violates the …

Read moreAuthor Seven Deadly Sins
Category: Book Business, Career, Writing CraftTag: Career, Failure, plagiarism

When Your Book Doesn’t Sell

By Steve Laubeon November 14, 2016
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You have spent years writing your book and now it has been published by a traditional publisher. It took a while for the publisher to bring it to market. But it is finally out there. Dreams have been realized. You. Are. A. Published. Author. But then the sales reports begin to appear. Sales have floundered. There isn’t any buzz. No one is even commenting on your Facebook page. It’s a …

Read moreWhen Your Book Doesn’t Sell
Category: Agents, Book Business, Book Sales, Career, Economics, Editing, PlatformTag: Book Marketing, Book Sales, Failure

Fun Fridays – Nov. 11, 2016

By Steve Laubeon November 11, 2016
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What if headlines for Old Testament stories were written for the Internet? Original found at: https://wronghands1.com/2016/09/30/clickbait-old-testament/. Used under the provision of Creative Commons.

Read moreFun Fridays – Nov. 11, 2016
Category: Get Published
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