What Apple’s textbook vision means for publishers

In New York yesterday Apple announced their big play for the textbook market. It consists of three elements: a new iBooks Author tool, an update to the iBooks app, and an update to the iTunes University app.

iBooks Author

This is a completely new app for Mac OS, with a fair number of similarities with Apple’s KeyNote app for building presentations. It’s clearly designed with simplicity of use in mind, and allows users to build well presented books in a simple way. The focus of the announcement was on textbooks but the app can clearly be used for other types of content as well.

Content created with this tool can only be consumed through the iBooks app on an iPad or other iOS device, although it also provides the option to export to PDF (losing any interactive features) or to plain text (losing everything but the unformatted text).

iBooks

The existing iBooks app is updated to support books produced by the iBooks Author tool, which can include interactive diagrams and custom HTML widgets; also user-generated notes and highlights which can be synced through iCloud and exported as flashcards. There’s also a new section of the store dedicated to textbooks.

iTunes U

Another update to an existing app, the updated iTunes U expands the media types that can be bundled as a course, supports progress tracking, and allows the course creator to send notifications to students using the course.

Currently all content is free, although Apple haven’t given any guarantees that it’ll remain that way.

Apple’s vision

It’s easy to see how Apple intends this set of apps to be used. The Author tool will make it easier for a much wider group of people to create textbook content, making iBooks a key resource for students. Educators can assemble their course materials through iTunes U, including links to required textbooks in iBooks. A generation of students – and the institutions educating them – suddenly find that an iPad is an essential study tool. And anyone who wants to create that content will need a desktop or laptop Mac to run the Author tool as well as an iPad or other Apple mobile device to test it on.

The huge potential upside for Apple here is the boost this could give to hardware sales; if their strategy takes off, that will be vastly greater than the 30% revenue cut on textbook sales through iBooks.

It’s far from certain that it will play out this way though. School administrators will baulk at providing students with iPads as standard school equipment; even at university level, few educators will want to provide course materials in a form that’s only accessible to those of their students who own Apple equipment. Factor in possible IP complications and piracy concerns and Apple have their work cut out for them.

What does this mean for publishers?

iBooks Author is not designed as a specialist tool for publishing professionals – it’s for the everyman. It’s easy to get going with it and straightforward to use. People no longer need training in specialist software tools to be able to produce great looking content; nor do they need to pay expensive licence fees. For all those reasons, Author will no doubt be a huge boon to a great many people.

However, professionals will find it frustratingly feature-light compared to existing creation tools. It’s also much more suitable for creating content from scratch than for re-purposing existing content. In any case, publishing houses are (and should be!) very reluctant to tie themselves in to a tool that restricts their content to a single distribution channel, on a single OS – particularly when that leaves them paying Apple 30% on all sales.

Textbook publishers will doubtless experiment with putting their content on iBooks, but will be wary of lock-in; even Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, one of Apple’s launch partners for the new apps, was quoted in the press emphasising the need to not restrict their content just to the iPad. As with magazines and other print content, the suspicion is that Apple’s game plan leaves them as the sole point of contact between authors and consumers, gradually marginalising publishers.

And with the Author tool, Apple don’t need to rely on the big publishers to fill iBooks and iTunes U with content; they’re hoping that individuals and small-scale content creators will swarm to the new tools. Many of those creators have previously been barred from publishing by the cost, and will be delighted to get their content out to the public at all; they’ll care much less that it’s only available through Apple’s ecosystem.

So where does that leave publishers? While these tools are focused on the textbook market, the same question applies more widely, to any publishers of books with richly formatted content: childrens’ books, cookery books, coffee-table picture books, and many more. They need to be able to deliver cross-platform; they need to be able to stand out from what may be a sudden influx of self-published content; they need their content to be easily discoverable by users who may not be searching for their brand specifically. They need to be able to charge for their content. They want a workflow that fits well with existing print workflows. And they need to not end up producing each publication repeatedly, once for each of the many formats and distribution channels now available.

For the serious players, this makes apps a still more appealing option, particularly if the app can be rolled out across multiple platforms. In the absence of any clearly dominant textbook platform on Android, the app route can provide consistency of experience across platforms and a lasting channel of communication with users. There are ways to publish to apps that avoid Apple’s 30% revenue cut (such as Yudu’s dual subscription system :-) ). The app needs to be easily discoverable, but publishers have the marketing clout to achieve that, through tie-ins to print products or direct targeting of relevant educators. Since iTunes U courses can link to iOS apps, publishers can even get users through Apple’s eco-system without getting locked into it.

Apple’s announcement is great news for students and consumers, and will allow many more people to produce and consume digital content. It will further boost tablet ownership (already in rude health!) and ups the standards for what a digital book should be able to do. However, it should be a danger sign to publishers – if they stay still they’ll find they get increasingly squeezed out. The big winners will be those who can rise to Apple’s challenge and succeed in innovating aggressively with their digital strategy – while managing to achieve a good return on that investment.

The Apple iPad Trends & Statistics 3

Nine months since YUDU Media presented Trends and Statistics 2 we’re back with our latest report: Trends & Statistics 3.

In this third trends and statistics document, we will look at Apple’s current and projected position in the market and display that although Apple is set to face increasingly stiff competition; all signs suggest that the device will continue its tablet dominance for the foreseeable future.

Although the tablet landscape has changed dramatically throughout 2011, the iPad and the iPad 2 remain the benchmark by which all other tablet devices are judged, and if the quarter has proven anything, no device is yet to meet the lofty standards set by Apple’s devices.

Both the current and projected sales figures have proven that the iPad is still king in the tablet market, and will remain the key player in an industry that is set for unprecedented overall year-on-year growth up until at least 2015.

But the newest threat to the iPod’s tablet dominance is perhaps the largest. Amazon’s Kindle Fire looks set to be able to offer a unified service that rivals the iPad’s own. Its established presence as a content-delivery channel has resulted in 95,000 devices being pre-ordered on day one.  2012 therefore looks set to see the continuation and escalation of the battle for tablet device supremacy.

While this may be slightly troubling news for Apple, the larger pool of tablet devices can only be considered as a positive for digital magazine publishers.

As we reported in a recent blog post, the Kindle Fire will be geared towards media consumption, and in particular, interactive colour reading experiences. It is truly exciting and encouraging for Amazon to put their name to hardware that allows for this kind of reading.

Perhaps what it emphasises more than anything however is the enduring potential of the industry, and how important digital reading experiences will be in this overall growth. If Amazon’s faith is well placed, 2012 looks set to be a huge year for tablet magazine publishers and the devices they are viewed upon.

iPad/iPhone users can download the document directly from the free YUDU Media App, by selecting “iPad Trends and Statistics 3″  once inside the App. For anyone without an iPad, iPod touch or iPhone, the document can also be read online by clicking here. We’re also made a nice little infographic to help you visualize the information.

 

The YUDU Report – May 2011

Going live today, we (the YUDU team) have published the first of our quartly reports investigating how users interact with apps for the iPad and iPhone.

The creatively titled YUDU report takes a look at stats from a cross section of YUDU customers’ Apps, and reports the key findings across 6 chapters.

Amongst other important discoveries, we have found that approxomately 40% of customers using these apps supply opt-in data when given the option to do so. This fact is particularly interesting for magazine publishers interested in venturing into Apple territory, however there is plenty more info in the document including data on edition return rate,  user reading time, monthly app downloads and in-app purchasing.

All in all, this is a document publishers can ill-afford not to get thier hands on. With digital publishing growing at a huge rate, the YUDU report presents the realities of publishing with Apple in one clear, concise and informative document.

To read the free full text, please use the flipbook below or follow the direct link here.

To read the report on the iPad, download the YUDU App and you will find the report under latest editions.

The iPad is increasingly being used for eCommerce

The fourth section of our whitepaper, ‘Trends and Statistics 2′, we identify the growing use of the iPad as a tool to generate eCommerce.

This section examines case studies of retailers who have had great success connecting with consumers using the iPad. It highlights the growing trend for consumers to shop through retailers iPad apps, and displays evidence of a surge of traffic being driven to retail sites through the iPad in 2010. Evidence of this trend is the success of the bay app on the iPad. They reported that iPad users who make a purchase, spend on average 50 percent more than PC users.

For all the facts, graphs, stats and analysis included in this section, see the full document ‘The Apple iPad: Trends and Statistics 2′

Advertising on the iPad is More Effective Than Print

As part of our release of the “Trends and Statistics 2″ report, we are offering a brief insight into the various sections featured in the free white paper.

Section three, titled “Advertising on the iPad is more effective than print” provides compelling evidence to suggest that iPad advertising is already more effective at attracting customers, as well as encouraging them to make a purchase, than print advertising.

For the specific figures and analysis, be sure to check out the free report “Trends and Statistics 2

Revenue Generated From In-App Purchase Is Increasing

The second section of the ‘Trends and Statistics 2′ report looks at the growing trend of consumers making in-app purchases.

Our research found that developers are becoming more keento allow their apps to be downloaded for free, with purchases being made inside the app once downloaded. The analytics company Distimo found that 15 percent of app revenue on the iPad was generated by in-app purchases on free apps.

For more statistics, graphs and analysis about this trend, read our free white paper ‘Trends and Statistics 2‘.

Apple's App Store continues to dominate the App Store market

As part of our ongoing research into iPad usage, we at YUDU media have created our second  handy document containing all the key iPad trends and statistics titled, funnily enough, “The Apple iPad: Trends and Statistics 2“.

Every day this week we will be going through the white paper to give you a quick overview.

The first section of our white paper,  “Trends and Statistics 2″ presents facts and figures that highlight the Apple app store’s continued dominance of the app market. We have used Gartner research to support this claim, which found that an astonishing nine out of 10 apps downloaded in 2010 were from Apple’s app store alone.

That’s not all though. For all the facts, graphs, stats and analysis, see the full document “The Apple iPad: Trends and Statistics 2“.

Apple iPad Trends & Statistics 2

YUDU Media has produced a free whitepaper report which highlights all the key iPad trends and statistics that have emerged since its last iPad report in September 2010.

In just under a year, the iPad has redefined the way we think about personal computing.  Its fresh take on mobile media has left customers desperate to become a part of it all, and competitors scrambling to get in on the tablet revolution. It seems no one can get enough of the iPad.

It’s no wonder then that iPad facts and figures have been coming thick and fast since it hit the market, revealing a number of fascinating key trends. With an ever-updating torrent of information, it’s easy to get swamped by all the statistics and analysis on the device.

So us YUDU Media folk have taken all the important trends and statistics that have emerged since our last report, and compiled them into one free, easy to understand whitepaper report. We’ve also provided some useful updates to the info included in the first report.

iPad/iPhone users can download the document directly from the free YUDU Media App, by selecting “iPad Trends and Statistics 2 report”  once inside the App. For anyone without an iPad, iPod touch or iPhone, the document can also be read online by clicking on the link below.


Click to launch the full edition in a new window
Publishing Software from YUDU

Apple iPad: Trends and Statistics

YUDU has produced a free report highlighting the key iPad stats and trends in one easy resource.

The Apple iPad is fast redefining mobile media. In just a few short few months since its release it has conjured up a storm of excitement and opened endless possibilities for a new era of publishing. With the buzz and excitement comes a multitude of new research surrounding the iPad, its usage and its future potential, so much research in fact that it can all get a bit confusing.

So, to help make everything nice and clear YUDU have created a useful report that highlights all the key iPad stats and trends, in one easy resource, we’re good like that!

The Report can be read for free on the iPad/iPhone by downloading the YUDU Media App and then seleting the “iPad Trends” report within the App.

For those of you who dont have an iPad you can read the report online by clicking below.


Click to launch the full edition in a new window
Publishing Software from YUDU