Borders collapsed years ago. Barnes & Noble only stayed afloat by selling real estate, then got bought out by a UK investor primed to restart the brand... until COVID19 slammed them into the toilet Small book stores died under both corporations and again under COVID What next?
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One serious consideration will be a shift from global readers to local readers Instead of the big publishers who tanked the corporate stores filling your shelves, moving back to the classics plus featuring big authors in your region or even in your city Capitalize on local
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Once the pandemic crawls to an end and every store is open, I strongly encourage writers to reach out to their local shops and offer to do book signings to reinvigorate public attention toward book stores Capitalize on that local feel of supporting both a local store and writer
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It could be that the future of book stores will be a partnership between shop owners and their local creators Similar to how craft stores and thrift stores operate People bring their creations to the shop and market their goods on the store's racks This could be one future
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COVID forced people to recognize the importance of local leadership and their local community It could be that shops and writers alike capitalize on their local appeal to generate major interest Instead of national bestsellers, we might see regional balkanized bestseller lists
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All of this is fun speculation, but it highlights one important fact: Local book stores are dying right now If you read this thread and thought about how much you hope book stores are a part of your future, go to your local shops and support them immediately Keep them alive
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Nothing on Earth smells like a book store. Some might think, "That's silly." It's not. Smell is powerful and lasting. (In b4 someone tries to sell me a "bookstore scented" candle).
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It won't be ebooks that reduces book stores to used book shops over time. It'll be Print On Demand. Paperbacks are already there. Once Amazon offers POD hardcovers, it's over for OldPub and its paper monopoly- and that death will take unlikely also-rans with it.
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I've considered a large comic/card store, but the problem is volume and audience. Honestly, I don't believe the guys would come out to buy the books I'd be selling. There has to be some sort of hook, like a cat cafe.
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Comic and card shops operate on such razor thin margins, it's a brutal market
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