The Medium and the Message
A debate is raging in e-publishing circles: should content be encrypted and
protected (the Barnes and Noble or Digital Goods model) - or should it be
distributed freely and thus serve as a form of viral marketing (Seth Godin's
"ideavirus")? Publishers fear that freely distributed and cost-free
"cracked" e-books will cannibalize print books to oblivion.
The more paranoid point at the music industry. It failed to co-opt the
emerging peer-to-peer platforms (Napster) and to offer a viable digital
assets management system with an equitable sharing of royalties. The
results? A protracted legal battle and piracy run amok. "Publishers" - goes
this creed - "are positioned to incorporate encryption and protection
measures at the very inception of the digital publishing industry. They
ought to learn the lesson."
But this view ignores a vital difference between sound and text. In music,
what matter are the song or the musical piece. The medium (or carrier, or
packing) is marginal and interchangeable. A CD, an audio cassette, or an MP3
player are all fine, as far as the consumer is concerned. The listener bases
his or her purchasing decisions on sound quality and the faithfulness of
reproduction of the listening experience (for instance, in a concert hall).
This is a very narrow, rational, measurable and quantifiable criterion.
Not so with text.
Content is only one element of many of equal footing underlying the decision
to purchase a specific text-"carrier" (medium). Various media encapsulating
IDENTICAL text will still fare differently. Hence the failure of CD-ROMs and
e-learning. People tend to consume content in other formats or media, even
if it is fully available to them or even owned by them in one specific
medium. People prefer to pay to listen to live lectures rather than read
freely available online transcripts. Libraries buy print journals even when
they have subscribed to the full text online versions of the very same
publications. And consumers overwhelmingly prefer to purchase books in print
rather than their e-versions.
This is partly a question of the slow demise of old habits. E-books have yet
to develop the user-friendliness, platform-independence, portability, brows
ability and many other attributes of this ingenious medium, the Gutenberg
tome. But it also has to do with marketing psychology. Where text (or text
equivalents, such as speech) is concerned, the medium is at least as
important as the message. And this will hold true even when e-books catch up
with their print brethren technologically.
There is no doubting that finally e-books will surpass print books as a
medium and offer numerous options: hyperlinks within the e-book and without
it - to web content, reference works, etc., embedded instant shopping and
ordering links, divergent, user-interactive, decision driven plotlines,
interaction with other e-books (using Bluetooth or another wireless
standard), collaborative authoring, gaming and community activities,
automatically or periodically updated content, ,multimedia capabilities,
database, Favourites and History Maintenance (records of reading habits,
shopping habits, interaction with other readers, plot related decisions and
much more), automatic and embedded audio conversion and translation
capabilities, full wireless piconetworking and scatternetworking
capabilities and more.
The same textual content will be available in the future in various media.
Ostensibly, consumers should gravitate to the feature-rich and much cheaper
e-book. But they won't - because the medium is as important as the text
message. It is not enough to own the same content, or to gain access to the
same message. Ownership of the right medium does count. Print books offer
connectivity within an historical context (tradition). E-books are cold and
impersonal, alienated and detached. The printed word offers permanence.
Digital text is ephemeral (as anyone whose writings perished in the recent
dot.com bloodbath or Deja takeover by Google can attest). Printed volumes
are a whole sensorium, a sensual experience - olfactory and tactile and
visual. E-books are one dimensional in comparison. These are differences
that cannot be overcome, not even with the advent of digital "ink" on
digital "paper". They will keep the print book alive and publishers'
revenues flowing.
People buy printed matter not merely because of its content. If this were
true e-books will have won the day. Print books are a packaged experience,
the substance of life. People buy the medium as often and as much as they
buy the message it encapsulates. It is impossible to compete with this
mistique. Safe in this knowledge, publishers should let go and impose on
e-books "encryption" and "protection" levels as rigorous as they do on the
their print books. The latter are here to stay alongside the former. With
the proper pricing and a modicum of trust, e-books may even end up promoting
the old and trusted print versions.
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Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self
Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East.
He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI)
Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central
East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
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