Borders Books, Dead At 40
theodp writes "There will be no storybook ending for Borders. The 40-year-old book seller could start shuttering its 399 remaining stores as early as Friday (store closing map). The Ann Arbor, MI-based chain, which helped pioneer the big-box bookseller concept, is seeking court approval to sell off its assets after it failed to receive any bids that would keep it in business. Hang on to those Borders Midnight Magic Party memories, kids!"
The ad I have on this page is for 46% off at Borders. Guess they're already trying to dumb inventory.
Local bookseller Angus and Robertson, here in Australia has gone broke too. A & R has been operating in Australia for over 100 years. They bought the local Borders in an act of corporate hubris. Then the accumulated debts of Borders took down the whole thing. Very sad.
Honestly they were overpriced on everything. I have not set foot in a borders or a Barnes and Noble for 3 years now because of their price gouging. No I'm not a trendy yuppie who wants a $4.00 coffee while I browse your store trying to look trendy. Honestly they went for "upscale" instead of a model that would have survived..
If they would have stuck as a "mom and pop" ish look and had a big old book or used book section they would still be thriving today. Instead they took the "snobby U of M rich guy in a turtleneck" direction instead.....
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
...my local Half Price Books is going to be getting some new stock!
boarders did not sell the Nook... Barnes and Noble sell the nook.
I was kinda suprised when I saw they had their own ereader. Suspected it would not be a good investment...
Looks like I'll have to sell my Nook.
Why? The Nook is from Barnes and Noble, this story is about Borders.
Barnes & Noble is still in business and it is not yet clear that they will suffer the same fate as Borders. I would not give up on the Nook just yet.
The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
They're competing with Amazon. The one thing they could've relied upon, namely the fact that there are a lot of older people who like books and don't understand the internet or computers, is a lot less true now than it was even five years ago. Hell, my mom gets most of her new book purchases online, from Amazon or elsewhere.
Take note: businesses can die in this day and age even when piracy is removed from the equation. Legitimate online purchases will probably do more to kill bookstores, movie rental and music stores than bittorrent in the long run.
Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
Who needs to burn books and things that last when you have technology to do it for you?
I hate to say it but technology both gives you freedom and inherently takes other freedom away.
Books will slowly become the domain of the academic and public service, so they will gradually fade from prominence. With ebooks, you are at the whim of the ebook publisher, DRM, the ebook reader manufacturer and of course electricity.
Don't let that stop you buying ebooks though, I try own a physical version for important books. I see an ebook as a modern day convenience most certainly not an equivalent replacement.
Slashdot needs Geekcode | Can anyone recommend any good SCIFI? My tastes: Foundation, Startide Rising, CITY, Ringworld,
Lesson among all brick and mortar stores: your selection will always suck compared to online stores. Figure out a niche for yourself such that your selection doesn't suck so much, or have an online presence that's useful. I've given up a long time ago on blindly driving to a freaking store in the hopes they'd have this one thing I need and lo and behold they don't. So then I drive to another store, and another, etc. And after two hours I'm like, what the hell is wrong with me, I could've ordered this online. More and more of your shoppers will have this thinking, especially as gas prices keep increasing.
Tips for a useful online presence: I can check if something is in stock before I get there? Sweet. Even better, I can actually pay for it now and you'll have it ready to be picked up when I get there? Double sweet. I actually still buy stuff at Best Buy for this reason. Instant gratification by being able to get something right now instead of waiting for UPS is still an enticing thing, so I am sometimes willing to pay some extra markup for that (but not too much, Best Buy can be horrid but catch a sale our have a coupon, and it's not so bad).
I got the Nook Color... even if B&N (which as everyone else has said, is NOT Borders) went out of business tomorrow, it would still be an extremely useful device. Even without rooting it, it's a pretty decent tablet for $250 (I got mine for $180 from Overstock.com). And if you do root it, it's much more powerful than any other tablet I've seen in that price range.
We've got a Borders here in town... And I won't miss them when they close their doors.
It's been a long time since I was able to go there and buy a book that wasn't on some best-seller list. And they've got more movies, music, calendars, and bookmarks than they have actual books at our store. There's a reason they're going out of business.
"Work is the curse of the drinking classes." -Oscar Wilde
Visited a beautiful bookstore in the south of the Netherlands a few weeks back -- located in a redecorated church it is the best possible place to have a bookstore. It has a great feel to it.
But its likely not going to last , last I heard the company has payment problems -- shame really.
It's more geekier than Reddit or Digg. You don't get long interesting comments on Reddit or Digg. It's a bunch of kids spouting memes.
Slashdot needs Geekcode | Can anyone recommend any good SCIFI? My tastes: Foundation, Startide Rising, CITY, Ringworld,
Yeah, in my highschool only the jocks cared about books.
How is a story about a bookstore, particularly one as influential as Borders not "news for nerds." Don't get me wrong, I'm all for most of the /. hate when it's warranted but I think that you're incorrectly assuming "nerd" is a synonym for "technophile."
Keep in mine, that even if B&N were to fail, the Nook supports a number of different file types, including ePub. Which can be bought from a good number of online stores. So it's not like it goes down with the ship.
mind damn it, it's too early still.
Why is this big box store treated with such respect when others like Best Buy are treated with disdain? They're big, faceless corporate run mega-stores. If you were to blindfold me and place me in the middle of a Barnes and Noble or Borders it would be a 50/50 guess which store I'm in.
I suppose it's the same faulty logic as those who lambast Microsoft but pretend Apple is altruistic. If you want to make me sad over a corporate run bookstore, when Half Price books closes then I'll get a little teary eyed.
My favorite Borders was the Borders in the World Trade Center. I was working in the financial district as a programmer and I used to go there on my lunch breaks every few days to buy books on programming and finance. Borders had a better technical book selection than Barnes & Noble or Waldenbooks.
Does this mean a sequel to You've got mail is coming? "You've got mail - The revenge of sweet blondie"?
Too many stores in high-rent districts. Their shoppers were willing to drive out to the 'burbs and stay awhile, they didn't need to be in fashionable city neighborhoods.
They shouldn't have bought Waldenbooks.
Their customers had to pay sales tax, and Amazon's don't. Yeah, that situation is unfair and not their fault.
They didn't do much that I could see to distinguish themselves from Barnes and Nobles, instead it was pretty much copy-cat, with usually a somewhat weaker selection. But I admit I don't have a lot of good merchandising ideas that would've helped them.
Their rewards program wasn't nearly as good as Barnes and Nobles'. I eventually stopped presenting my card at checkout and started saying I wasn't a member.
Some of the stores trained their cashiers to harass customers into buying a book for kids, or a bag of coffee for the troops, etc. Once when I asked, the price of those things turned out to be 6-8 bucks. No thanks, Borders can donate their own money to these causes, and I'll go home and do the same (and get a tax credit).
Over the past 2-3 years many stores started cutting back on inventory, often replacing floor space with greeting cards, toys, and other fluff. That meant a weaker selection. By this time, though they were already in their death spiral, so such steps were probably necessary.
This all sounds like bitching but I did appreciate the chain and did go and buy stuff from them rather often. Browsing Amazon.com and waiting for UPS isn't the same. Oh well.
This is a story about yet another retailer going down in flames in the recession. Hardly "News", and hardly "News for Nerds". This isn't the end of books, just the end of one of many book retailers. Sheesh.
At least have an article citing the Internet or Kindle or some other technological advancement that led to the demise of Borders, and then it would be mildly appropriate.
Oh them. I think I read about them on my Kindle.
The lesson I take from this is that the local retail is doomed unless we figure out how to address the online tax advantage.
Borders is a high profile example of a brick and morter shop that can't compete in an environment where its primary competition has an unnatural advantage. Amazon doesn't pay sales tax. Sure, it had some missteps along the way, like having Amazon run its web sites. But if Borders can't compete, do you think Mom and Pop retailers will? This impacts not or future local retailing environment, but local employment, too. Sure, online stores can be more efficient, but even a local preference for local retail won't compensate for a 5-10% price penalty.
rhadc
Technology caught up with their distribution system.
But I don't think much of the long term prospects of the likes of Apple's music business and Amazon either, at least not in its current form. Sure, they're relatively hot and new now. But fundamentally, they're still all about charging customers on a per copy basis. We won't settle for less than the best forever. And I don't think the Netflix model is it either.
I think the future is the digital public library.
Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
The 40-year-old book seller could start shuttering its 399 remaining stores as early as Friday
Seriously, what's with the recent rise in usage of the word 'shuttering'. I mean, I'm gay and all.. but I'm not THAT gay to use the word shuttering.
They sold too many web development books in the 90's to Amazon employees.
Cool story bro.
(I couldn't resist.)
After I got out of grad school in the early nineties I discovered that having an advanced degree from one of the top 5 universities in the country didn't count for squat. After 18 months' fruitless search I got a job at a hedge fund fiduciary. 8 awful months later the giant hedge fund Long Term Capital Management blew up and nearly took the US economy with it then & there. People invested in hedge funds freaked, pulled out all their money, and I was without a job again.
I got a temp job in Northern Trust Bank's Private Banking division working up investment plans for rich people. The Private Banking division used Excel, of course. It was slow, and repetitious.
So I spent evenings and weekends sitting in Borders taking notes from their books on Visual Basic and VBA in order to automate the process. I couldn't afford to buy the books, I was so poor, and the library only carried books on Fortran and Basic and COBOL. I taught myself how to program that way (yes, I know it was only Visual Basic), and wound up reducing the turnaround time of the Private Banking division from 2 wks to an hour and a half. The division manager promptly fired me and stole my work, but I had found a new window of opportunity. I did more VB work, then added MS Access, then transitioned to VBScript during the dotcom days.
I switched to LAMPP in 1998 and haven't looked back. But it was those days & nights in Borders that allowed me to chart a course for a relatively stable career, given the turbulence of IT and Internet over the past decade. I dunno if their business model has any future, but for me then it was the right place at the right time.
RIP Borders
Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
What will all the Doctors do?
They will have to form a charity and call it "Doctors without Borders"
Not to mention being extremely hackable and able to run stock Android. As an absolute last resort if B&N fails (probably not likely, but possible) you could just put stock Android on it and grab Nook and Kindle readers. The Nook reader to keep your old stuff (most of it isn't DRMed, and even if it is they'll probably be required to keep the key servers up), and the Kindle reader to buy new stuff. I'd still be sad if B&N died though. That would leave only BAM around here, and I've never like their stores. Local places are long dead here, and we never had a Borders.
I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
Borders suffered the problem that many stores seem to suffer. If you're not the online giant (Amazon) or don't have an overwhelming physical footprint (Barnes & Nobles) you just can't go for the mass appeal selling. I think I purchased a total of 2 books at Borders because they had a better selection of a very niche market I'm interested in, they ask me if I want to sign up for their discount club, and I say why not. WORST MISTAKE EVER. Upwards of 40 emails a week with significant (40~60% off) coupons to come in and purchase something. If they're able to make those kinds of discounts on one item it typically means that they're marking everything up by either half that amount or more.
I acutally love going to the independent bookstore nearby because I know that the 5 niches that I peruse are gaurnteed to have decent selections and even some things I hadn't considered buying.
Borders went out of business in the UK at the end of 2009. I lived ten minutes walk from a big store for about five years. I buy quite a few book but until their last day when they had 90% off on the little stock they had left and I picked up a few bargains, I only ever bought one book from there and that was because someone gave me a book voucher and it was the easiest place to spend it. Anything else I wanted was significantly cheaper on Amazon. Extrapolate that mindset by most of their entire target market, I guess that's why they went out of business and are now doing so in the US. They also stocked CDs and DVDs but I honestly wonder how much they sold given how high they priced them even compared to other bricks and mortar stores. I remember looking at some DVD boxsets in there once and thinking that the only people who would buy them at that price must be completely unaware that other DVD retailers existed.
I mainly shopped for DVDs in borders stores but lately they have reorganised and made it really difficult to find stuff. I could never work out their system so I wound up doing alphabetical searches in each small category. It would be easier if they just had a big stack of titles, alphabetically sorted. I assume this was some MBA inspired technique to get me to discover something else to buy in the other categories, or to spend more time in the store. In practice I couldn't find what I wanted so I went to JB.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
Speak up kid! Come a bit closer so I can hear you... closer... closer... *whacks arcite over the head with the fully annotated works of Tolkien in hard cover* try that with your kindle. See, the blood and pieces of brain just scrape off while your kindle would have broken as the cheap plastic toy it is.
Whacking whipper snappers, just one of the many reasons books are better.
I got a bible from my great-grandfather that went around the world and survived two world wars on the front lines. Your drm'ed bible is not worthy.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
The Borders shops in Australia have already closed down in the last few weeks.
I don't know how they lasted for so long. They were 25% more expensive then other book stores, and at least 50% more expensive than online book shops. Not to mention their huge shops in expensive shopping centers. Including American style in-store coffee shop (who wants to walk through a book store to get coffee? stupid people, thats who).
But hey, I got some cheap networking gear, a label printer and some cool comic-style posters for a pathetically low price.
You feel sleepy. Close your eyes. The opinions stated above are yours. You cannot imagine why you ever felt otherwise.
Why? The Nook is from Barnes and Noble, this story is about Borders.
And that could be part of the problem... The two stores are awfully difficult to distinguish... I certainly have trouble. I know where the locations for a few are, but remembering which is which is hard. Even inside they're mostly pretty similar. If one closes, then I can carry one less loyalty card in my wallet. More convenient for me...
Doesn't surprise me. I worked for a chain bookstore (not Borders) when I was at uni, and they put me in the Motivation and Health section. By the way, let me introduce myself, I'm a teacher who specialises in working with gifted kids, and one of the things that I'm really good at is picking good, relatively advanced books for young kids who are beyond the books that their librarians and teachers use for other children. I read a lot of kids and YA fiction, and textbooks and educational texts, of course, but also scifi, fantasy and historical fiction, as well as non-fiction books in a number of areas. Notice something missing? I don't fucking read Motivation or Health! I can't even take those fucking books seriously, let alone sell them!
This wouldn't have been a problem, if it weren't for the rigidity of the PHB's that ran the place. My role was to stand by a shelf, and only help people who needed help with that section. One of my colleagues' spot was to stand by the self-service information computer behind a shelf, and almost literally jump out at people if they were having trouble with the search functionality (which only googled the bookstore's public website). As much as possible, I wasn't to move, and I had to do things as quickly as possible. One day, I spent 20 minutes upselling ~$150 worth of photo books and Australian kids' books to a tourist and I got a formal warning for walking away from my section and leaving it in the hands of two of my colleagues.
Let's talk about my colleagues, though. There was a guy hired at the same time as me who I was speaking to one day... Me: "So, what books do you read?"; Him: "Oh, I don't."; Me: "You don't... Read books?"; Him: "Yeah, they're boring." Awesome. He was Employee of the Month at some point after I left. I haven't been back there in a while, but I think he's probably still working there.
Their buying policy was brilliant, also. They bought hundreds of copies of things that they thought fit with the Australian psyche, i.e., obsessed with sport. So we were always left with hundreds of copies of the latest ghost written biography of some cricketer that we could literally not give away in the end. These books were always such an albatross around our necks that our PHB's were insisting that we keep them on the shelves, and sending newer, more popular books to storage or to the warehouse. If you wanted one of those newer more interesting books? You have to wait for it to be retrieved (a couple of days, usually), but please take a heavily discounted the 3rd volume of Warwick Smythe's test cricket antics that he paid someone from South Africa to write.
I shouldn't complain too much though. The 50% employee discount was awesome. Most of the long term employees were great people. Some of the supervisors were genuinely cool people. I laugh as I remember back to thinking back over having to help people "find a book, it has like a blue cover and words, I think", or "choose a motivation book for me, I don't know which one to choose."
These book chains are dying because they're trying to do business as if nothing has changed. They're hiring the cheapest, dumbest possible labour when people are only willing to go to a bookstore and pay a bit more than they would at Amazon because they want to talk to someone knowledgeable and well-read about books.
The one in Utrecht has a large number of cash registers and still you frequently got to cue. Lets not forget that Holland has no Amazon, importing from the US costs a fair amount at the border in taxes, duty and admin costs and bol.com can't escape sales tax like Amazon can in the land of unfair competition.
ABC also moved to a bigger location in the heart of amsterdam (Spui) and has 2 bookstores in spitting distance.
As for the post below, a dutch bookstore selling mostly dutch books... gosh... the SHOCK! Don't ever go to France... they speak FRENCH!
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
Nook doesn't need a key server - the DRM is based around a hash of name/CC#, so as long as you still have those you'll be able to unlock your books on any machine with a supporting reader installed.
Benford's Corollary to Clarke's Law: "Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced."
That's the temperature I calculated a Kindle will melt at.
Gently reply
I looks like another one that missed that a lobby group for bookshop chains including Angus and Robertson set that policy decades ago and have been lobbying to continue it ever since, right up until at least a few months ago. It was nothing but a barrier of entry to small bookshops that were left with little choice but to buy from the big distributors. It was like that in the 1980s (when I worked in a small technical bookshop) and it's been kept in place ever since purely for the benefit of the chains.
I'm sure everyone in the /. community will miss them—even if you didn't shop their stores, there's no denying their contributions to popular culture. Truly an American icon.
Books at brick and mortar stores tend to be overpriced compared to those sold online. That's not because Borders is gouging them, but because the publishers demand so much. Retailers' margins are thin. So yes they are expensive but Borders didn't "do it to themselves." Borders and B&N have a quaint, warm, relaxed experience but the most hard core book buyers go online now for better prices.
B&N actually survives because they have a good website in competition with Amazon, and frankly their selection has always been better than borders. B&N also has Starbucks in their stores, which gives them a hipster mystique for those who just want to come in and sit and read and have some Starbucks coffee. Funny enough, Borders tried to get early in the game of book selling online and who did they contract with?... Amazon. Most people don't realize this fact seriously delayed Borders' web strategy rather than enhancing it. They didn't have the vision to see web commerce coming and Amazon did to them what they did to mom and pop book shops. And they spent no time getting any experience in marketing and selling on the web because they contracted with Amazon in the early days. I'm betting Amazon knew this and went ahead hoping to basically steal sales from Borders original paltry websites. So in a sense, Borders did to it to themselves, it's just it had everything to do with not getting online fast enough.
"All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"
I love books, don't get me wrong, but I love books if they are hardback, paperback, or epub.
I FUCKING LOVE BOOKS!
Sadly, I could go into a local Borders and the people were knowledgeable, kind and generous with their time. They bent over backwards to help my wife find books and get them shipped to the house while she was on the mend after surgery.
I have lost many a day in a Borders, drinking tea and reading and it is a sad day when there is one less place to do this.
Speaking for me, where Amazon dominates is in selection and in *used* books (and used videogames, etc.). If I want a book on a particular subject, I can drive to my local Borders and hope they have a decent book on it (usually not the best on the subject) and pay full retail price on it. Or I can go to my library and look at a bunch of books that are usually years out of date and hope that I can find a decent one that isn't checked out. Or I can go online to Amazon, see every book ever published on the subject, read reviews to find the best one, and then buy it used for a small fraction of what it would have cost new. And the same applies to videogames, DVD's, etc.
The only real advantage that brick and mortars enjoy is that I can get a book immediately (but the Kindle is making even that point moot), and that I can browse. But, since my tastes are not exactly mainstream, browsing isn't really much of an advantage to me. I have no desire to browse isle after isle of Harry Potter knockoffs and vampire romances, thank you. And I'm not a big coffee drinker.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Kathleen Kelly, thou art avenged!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Since we now know for certain that Borders is getting shut down, how do the employees who stick it out feel? Any stories? Gallows humor?
and the library only carried books on Fortran and Basic and COBOL
You point to a larger issue with public libraries here. With Amazon they've become almost worthless. Their collections are usually laughably out-of-date and small. Back in the day this wasn't so much a problem for them, because the only alternative was the local bookstore. But now Amazon has a selection that puts even university libraries to shame, and you can buy CHEAP from them (used copies of books often cost just a few dollars, even with shipping). Now there is really no need to settle for a crappy library book that's way out-of-date when I can *buy* the best book on the subject for next to nothing on Amazon (and no due dates to worry about).
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
I live in the Lansing, MI area, about 60 miles from Ann Arbor. I've never seen a Borders book store.
The booksellers I see here are Barnes & Noble and Schuler Books & Music (based in Grand Rapids, MI, 60 miles in the other direction).
Apparently we DID have some in the area under Borders other name, Waldenbooks, but those were tiny compared to the huge, sprawling stores the other two have... the closest Barnes and Nobles is a two-floor building in the middle of East Lansing, across from the Michigan State University campus.
GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
They were offered 215M for most assets and 220M to cover liabilities, the offer was rejected. They believe they can get more from being liquidated.
It just means more straight people are discovering the joy of shuttering. Pretty soon everyone will be doing it! Sure someone might get hurt, and there will be the usual Congressional hearings. I'm sure some Republican Congressman (He knows who he is) will be caught shuttering like crazy in a men's room of some airport. But you know how it is with any fad, once the initial thrill wears off, everyone will just hose the santorum off the walls and ceiling and move on to whatever the next thing is. Now would be a good time to bring the Rusty Venture back!
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
Borders and B&N are the same big-box stores that pushed your locally-owned stores out of business. Everyone hated them at one time, so why shed a tear at their demise now?
All hail the long tail!
Now, if there was some way that technology could kill off SBUX ...
*rimshot*
a) Focus on the mainstream. The mainstream will carry you forever. The people which swallow any literature shit will be you most loyal customers. No need to keep world literature in the original language in you store.
b) Decorate your windows just according to the newest trend. Try to blend in with the other stores. Dont allow your employees to bring in their own competence.
c) Under no circumstances put chairs in your store.
d) Students are good are good and cheap as personal. And they can read the list of the current mainstream literature.
e) Be picky about the topics presented in the store. Don't present any topic which could disturb somebody, and if, only after it hase been a major topic on TV.
f) Under no circumstances sell ebooks. (Actually i thought at some point I could buy an ebook on an SD card, without registering with my name at a big company. That never happened.)
Watashi ha jeri-do-natsu desu.
Du bist ein berliner?
William of Ockham had no beard. The most likely explanation is that it was chewed off by squirrels every morning.
I was looking to see if the one by Wall St. in Manhattan was going to close but NY state isn't even on that map!
Borders is the store that pulled copies of an issue of Free Inquiry magazine from its shelves because it contained some cartoons of Mohammed. Now we have more room for real bookstores.
borderisdead, bordersisdead
good. another corporate entity goes the way we all go... into death.
40 years. early heartattack
but that's a lot of jobs down
and it's unforgiving ground
but there's always collateral damage, my friend
there's always collateral damage
and the poisonous snakes we've released on the planes
could not be more appropriate hounds
captcha: "ambition"
borderisdead, bordersisdead
good. another corporate entity goes the way we all go... into death.
40 years. early heartattack
but that's a lot of jobs down
and it's unforgiving ground
but there's always collateral damage, my friend
there's always collateral damage
and the poisonous snakes we've released on the planes
could not be more appropriate hounds
captcha: "ambition"
I'll always prefer places like "A Clean Well Lighted Place" in Cupertino.
I'm not sure if it still exists but many memories of searching for Don Lancaster's CMOS Cookbook.
All but one of the Borders stores in my area had already closed, and the one that remained is inconvenient.
In any case, I used to visit Borders on a regular basis, looking for (gasp!) computer-related books. I liked the ability to browse through the books to see if they actually answered the questions I had on the subject I needed them for, and if they were laid out in a fashion that let me find answers, as well as read for content. But, as their computer section dwindled from hundreds of books on subjects from assembly language to compiler design to communications protocols to ???, to a selection of a dozen of books on how to use MS Office and get the most out of the mail app on your iPhone, I stopped going.
They probably figured out that most of the people who buy computer books do so online, for better prices, so they tossed away what was their ace in the hole against that - check it out before you buy. Oh, well!
I find that I like FBReader a little bit more than the stock Nook reader and FAR more than the Nook app. YMMV.
I loved Borders, even though they kept reducing their selection of technical books and moved them farther and farther from the front door. There's a lesson herein. I won't miss their computer books; the selection had devolved into pure crap.
Circle the wagons and fire inward. Entropy increases without bounds.
Why do I need a bookstore when I has the interwebs to look up the stuff verses using a *gasp* old fashion book? Really, you all supposed to be tech folks sheesh
It would be way cool if someone LOCAL in Ann Arbor bought the brand name and the flagship store and operated it as an INDEPENDENT COLLEGE-TOWN bookstore, just like 40 years ago.
Even cooler if the buyers were the pre-conglomerate owners or one of the former owners of one of the bookstores Borders bought or took over prior to selling out to Corporate America.
See Wikipedia article as of a few minutes ago and its citations (or sadly, lack thereof) for more on Borders's history.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
The map is only accurate to within about 50 miles!
This is sad indeed for those of us who don't need to buy every electronic gadget that hits the market. Those of us who we spend 8-12 hours every day on our computers for work and to relax, we want to turn pages and actually READ a book. The joy is in the experience---not just in the reading of the printed word. But, the e-book generation doesn't understand that.
However, it's my generation's fault. We've raised you to do more, multitask (though scientists say there is no such thing), have instant lunch and instant oatmeal; fast food, etc. You hire a landscaper to put in plants for you, instead of digging in the dirt yourself. You don't hunt, fish, camp or canoe but you will take that $100,000 boat (that you can't fix) out and go tubing. You can't fix your own car---hell, most of you can't even change a tire. I've stopped along the highway and helped plenty of you (male and female) under thirty change a tire. You were going to call a tow truck..wasteful
In short--we've raised you to depend on everyone else...so no wonder you don't want to turn your own pages in a book.
In America today you can murder land for private profit. You can leave the corpse for all to see, and nobody calls the c
Normally I am pretty free-market, but it looks like this was just pure greed. This s*** should be illegal.
"Borders' attempt to stay in business unraveled quickly last week, after a $215 million "white knight" bid by private-equity firm Najafi Cos. dissolved under objections from creditors and lenders. They argued the chain would be worth more if it liquidated immediately."
In the end - I find it often comes down to a simple fact: Americans like crap. Barbie dolls will always outsell Erector Sets. McDonalds and Burger King will always outsell (insert big-chain healthy restaurant).
Also - Where I live (Nashua, NH) - They have a Border's store, about a half-mile from a B&N. The B&N is in a fantastic location - intersection of two main streets, right off the highway. To get to the Border's store, you have to drive past the B&N store, through a very highly congested strip with a lot of traffic and traffic lights to an out-of-the-way strip mall. It's often not worth the trip.
I really like my local Borders. It's much better than the B&N. I've probably bought 200 books there over the last 5 years. Not to mention a few hundred coffees. I suspected this was going to happen after the first round of closings a few months back, though. I hope the workers all find good jobs, as they've been great with me when I shopped there.
With the exit of physical books, it seems like the idea of having an editor and publisher may be going by the wayside. Originally, these people were around for quality control to make sure only decent books made it to the publishing equipment -- making sure the publishing money was spent well. (Honestly, being a fantasy, sci-fi buff, the bar is set pretty low in these genres.) But if you can self publish with the click of a mouse, the only thing you need to worry about is the marketing and collection of money. Like the RIAA where the physical CD is less important than the original recording, it might be that the market will be flooded by AppStore-priced ebooks (99 cents...) and authors will earn money through peer-review reputation system rather than a marketing company.
Interesting times.
I was amazed and annoyed that they didn't even have real sodas! No Coke or Pepsi or Mountain Dew or Sprite or 7 up.
Instead you had to buy strange expensive caffeine free root beer or fruit sodas etc.
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
The key to a really good branch of a Borders or a B&N is to have a "top shelf" (pun intended) selection buyer. The times that the buyer of my branch has put A level stuff on the shelves it sold.
I am a different type of buyer than most of the people in this thread. In particular, I am amazed at the chorus of "I like reviews". I have never read a review in my life. Instead, look *at the book*. It's right there.
Look at it with a Reverse Teal Deer (too long didn't read) - instead for me it's "too short - didn't buy". I spent cumulative days at each of several sections. All told my private library is retail over $2000. At different points I knew the gist of practically every book in the entire store for those sections. Only then was that enough context to know what to have them special order.
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
They are releasing a new director's cut that ends with Tom and Meg in an alleyway, sobbing while they are forced to eat cat food while living in a cardboard box after the Fox Books empire has collapsed.
Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.
I used to refer to them collectively as Borders and Noble - But Borders has been losing ground for a long time.
Your color nook will probably be obsolete by the time Barn & Noble auger in.
All generalizations are false, including this one. Mark Twain
For god's sake you cannot even cancel a backordered book order on your own through their website! Seriously how did they survive this long?
Having frequented Borders over the past decade or so they deserve to have gone out of business. I don't understand what it is about American retailers that they can't run a successful business and continue making the same old mistakes. And when things go south they blame everyone but their own ineptitude.
Borders, like a lot of retailers, don't play to their strengths over an online store like Amazon. Namely that means having an informed and courteous staff. Instead I routinely ran into listless employees who barely knew anything about the books they carried and always sent customers to the in store kiosks. Far too often it would turn out the book in question was not in stock. So why waste my time? Might as well stay home, go online and find what I want every single time.
Secondly, they were always shifting inventory based around whatever flash-in-the-pan genre came along. Inevitably this meant they constantly cut into established genres. For me the established genre was sci-fi. Ten years ago they had a fairly large. In the intervening years it's given way to teen novels, mysteries and romances so that in the end it's a joke with not much of a selection. But then they waste an entire part of the store on music and movies, another desperate attempt for a little extra revenue. Except that nobody in their right mind would ever consider buying that sort of thing from them given the outrageous markups.
The problem with a physical store is that they can't possibly stock everything customers might want. But if they hired knowledgeable managers and staff then they could make more informed orders. It would enable them to balance inventory between what's popular, new and any recommended standouts. Of course, if they had a streamlined process for acquiring books not available in stores it would give consumers and incentive over shopping online.
There are a million and one things they could have tried. Maybe a more viable model would have been a superstore model, a massive warehouse with nearly every book you can imagine. Fewer actual retail locations, but each one is larger.
The point is that Borders seems to have done everything it could to drive consumers away.
I don't shop at Borders because they don't have any locations in my state. But I did visit one in GA a while back. I was really impressed with the selection of computer books they had compared to the book stores around here. It's really sad to hear this now that my local Barnes & Noble has also closed.
Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
strange expensive caffeine free root beer
What? They don't sell Mug or A&W?
I have great height-of-dot-com-era memories of the downtown Bellevue (WA) Border's in the early 2000's, before it all fell apart. Open Til 11pm or midnight, a great computer books section that was useful for meeting other local geeks as well as for instant gratification.
The Redmond store that was pretty convenient to Microsoft took up where the Bellevue branch left off when it was closed. Expensive? Not in recent years. Every few weeks it seemed I had a 30 or 40 percent off coupon, and although the coupon said it did not apply to special orders, the manager did honor it for orders.
Awww, now I am nostalgic. I'm not even on the proper side of the world to visit the Redmond store one more time, for old times sake. I have always preferred Border's to Barnes and Noble.
I wonder if they'll subdivide the Redmond Town Center space and turn it into restaurants, like they did the one at Bellevue Square Mall.
Suing the sun?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candlemakers'_petition
Borders was the last bookstore in downtown Palo Alto, in Silicon Valley, except for a place that sells "collectables". A decade ago, there were three big bookstores and three small ones. Now there are no bookstores, but five phone stores.
...they were cheaper than audible.com and amazon with bestsellers.
I hope they don't close the online store
Your used books and games from Amazon mostly come via their affiliate network. But because of greedy, desperate states, the network is being chopped away like the Black Night as Az refuses to give into state-based extortion. Until the Supremes rule on this - and given Scalia and his shadow, it won't be good - this used market won't be around for much longer.
I was a graduate student in Ann Arbor at the beginning of the 90s. At the time, the Borders brothers still owned Borders, and there were just two Borders stores: one in (I think) Plainfield (a Detroit suburb), and the original store on State Street. I loved that store like I've never loved a bookstore. The best thing about it was the staff that worked there. To get a job there, you had to pass a written test; and if you showed expertise in a particular subject area, you got to take some responsibility for ordering and stocking that subject area. The result was that if you walked in looking for a book on numerical thermodynamics, or differences in translations of The Inferno, you had a pretty good chance of being able to ask questions of someone who knew about the topic and had ordered the books and could provide you with useful info. Under no circumstances at all were you being helped by a high school kid who didn't know much of anything about the merchandise.
Then the brand got sold (to Waldenbooks/K-Mart, I believe), the State Street store moved into larger quarters (the old Jacobsen's store), they exploded coast-to-coast, and I found myself wandering into Borders in other cities that were certainly big, but didn't have the single biggest thing I liked about Borders: an exceptionally competent staff. Their newer owners had decided to compete purely on price and selection; it was inevitable that an internet vendor was eventually going to be able to beat them on those.
Which leaves me missing what I liked about them in the first place, something no internet vendor (even Amazon) has really replaced.
You point to a larger issue with public libraries here. With Amazon they've become almost worthless.
Only if you have lots of money to buy books with or actually want to own the books. There are plenty of books out there that I want to read but have no interest in owning. Libraries do a LOT more than just store books. Libraries offer much that Amazon cannot and will not ever offer. Something like 20% of Americans don't even have a bank account or a credit card. Exactly what value is Amazon to these people?
But now Amazon has a selection that puts even university libraries to shame,
You mean I can get actual (not scanned) 300 year old books, subscriptions to obscure peer-reviewed journals, microfiche of old newpapers, access to a Bloomberg terminal, read thousands of magazines without paying a subscription and the library staff to help with research? Can you point me to the URL where Amazon does all of that?
I think you have no idea what actual university libraries do.
But now Amazon has a selection that puts even university libraries to shame, and you can buy CHEAP from them (used copies of books often cost just a few dollars, even with shipping)
And the selection at a library is FREE. And if they don't have a book, virtually every library can order it for you from another library. Libraries are changing but they are not remotely obsolete.
I really liked Borders. At least, I did at first. I was excited when they opened a "big box" bookstore in my town, but that was a good 15-20 years ago. They were a "big thing" back then. We'd had a couple of small Waldenbooks mall stores, but the Borders standalone store was so much bigger and seemed to have such a wider selection of, well, everything. They had magazines I had seen occasionally when I'd visit a big book store elsewhere, with the convenience of being "right here". It was clean, but the store wasn't that convenient. It was awkwardly located and I had to plan my trips well or the lot was too much hassle. As it was located, it was easier to hit the mall first and Borders last, so it was easier to burn any spendable money before I made it to Borders.
Best Buy opened right across the street, attached to the mall, and easier to access. Street traffic got crazy congested nearby, making Borders all the more in-accessible. Plus, even Best Buy was beating Borders on prices for music.
There was a golden time for Borders when all the Waldenbooks locations closed up and the small bookstores in town, except for one big used bookstore, closed up. Then came Barnes & Noble with an even bigger store, a better location, more parking, and a much better selection. Then came Amazon. Then the used bookstore moved, expanded, and parking became so much easier. Borders quickly became the LAST place that I would go to find a book, and then the place that I would NEVER go.
I like to browse books, so Amazon isn't my favorite - even though I do have a Kindle. I like to browse B&N to see what is new. I like to browse used books too. Then its a choice: do I want a hardback on my bookshelf, do I want an e-book on my Kindle, or do I want both. If I want to read it NOW and "collect" it later on the shelf, I'll buy it on the Kindle and then shop for it as a used hardback later. Thats cheaper and more convenient than buying it as a hardback. If I want the hardback, do I get it from Amazon or B&N? Who has the better deal?
Borders seemed to go downhill over the last decade. B&N had better customer service and a friendlier atmosphere. The shelves at Borders seemed poorly stocked by buyers who didn't seem to care about what they were putting out. I could pick a random technical subject, and it would be hit or miss at Borders: either a wide selection of craptastic books, or nothing at all. B&N might have what I was looking for, but if not then at least the shelves would suggest that they MIGHT have had it. Either one could order it for me, but if I'm going to wait for a book I may as well order it from Amazon.
The only good thing about Borders is the way their magazine section was organized with big long wooden magazine racks in parallel rows making it easier to browse without buying. B&N, in contrast, organized all of their magazines along a big wall in a well-lit zone making it easier to find a magazine, but less convenient to casually browse it.
Some say print is dead
Oh, that's very fascinating to me... I read a lot myself. Some people think I'm too intellectual, but I think it's a fabulous way to spend your spare time.
I also play racquetball.
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borders gift cars last weekend.
Spend'em if you got'em, people.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Kinda sad that they're going out of business. That was my first job, and damn, was my manager hot.
What they stocked and sold ended up being irrelevant when they over-extended and couldn't pay their debts. Highly profitable branches closed along with the rest of the business.
But very few people realize this.
First demise of Mom N Pop stores and then of stores like B&N and Borders is signaling demise of America as we know, leader of the first world.
Why? First exemplifies loss of small businesses and independence that came with it in favor of Big Corporations. The second shows loss of quality of life associated with the relaxed feel that you had in these stores. American have no time to relax because they are working their ass off, god knows for whom, because their quality of life is deteriorating day by day.
When I came to America in 97, I was impressed. Not any more. The jobs, knowledge and wealth are moving out of this country so rapidly that very few people realize. Everything seems to be going the wrong way. I am afraid that by 2016 elections the situation will become so grave that I will have to leave this country for my own safety.
at Boarders, I asked do you price match? I had one book that I wanted to match the Amazon price and I would have purchased the rest. Fact is they didn't -want- my business enough to sell an old tech book at the current value. Tech books have particularly volatile values and they are unable to cope with that fact. The three times before that I went in they didn't have current books in stock, again unable to cope. I could have ordered it online from them or cheaper online from Amazon. If Amazon wasn't afraid of the tax man so much it would be ideal for them to own the Borders stores.
The eBook trend with DRM loss of rights management will always be a bad thing. Long term rentals are wrong on so many levels and it severely hurts book value. When are we going to demand legal rights for transfer of ownership of all digital media? It might bump up the cost of some items, but value is retained and the e-purchases won't just be money down the drain. Perhaps that price bump will justify the B&M stores again.
The problem is that DRM media is for rentals and Boarders is for sales of goods. Both offer nearly the same experience but only one offers you the ability to share that experience. Now that the publisher gets money from every person for a given item under DRM edicts, the publisher doesn't have to be as good as it used to be in order to make sales quotas. So we not only don't get to own the item it is now mediocre too. I'm talking about the averages.
There are lots of good reasons for e-media but they are all nullified without right of resale when you are done. Your child will be laughed off the block when he gets an heirloom 2011 Kindle when you die. I would have rather have gotten a set of first edition books.
Going into the absurd now, the only time the Kindle heirloom gift would be of value is for rebuilding civilization after the fall of man where someone has rediscovered how to make a five volt current from a bunch of lemons and a couple slivers of metal.
After microprocessors arrived and writing software for personal computers became interesting, the Internet hadn't made it bug yet, and book stores were where you went to get books abut programming. Things were still moving slowly, and there was time time write a book about a version of something, get it published, and still have a window of opportunity to sell it before the next great thing arrived. The books were selling for $35 which seemed a little expensive, but if you needed it to work, what the heck. As things sped up, that window of opportunity got much shorter and conventional publishing houses could not get the books out fast enough to address the current technology, always in motion. Hence the rise of Microsoft Publishing. As Microsoft programmers wrote the next version, their publishing arm was readying the books to go with it. Since they were the ones with the content "on-time" they could charge $50, then $75 per book and get away with it. Then they learned some new tricks, like spreading out the material across a number of titles so you had to buy an entire series of books to get critical mass on a version. Eventually, even Microsoft press could not get the books out fast enough to keep up with Microsoft's rush from one version to the next. At that point I didn't even need to buy the books because only the on-line material was up-to date enough, if even that. Now I don't even buy books any more, except books that I once loved that I want to read again, and then from Amazon at $1.99 plus shipping from the closest affiliate.
It has been envisioned a long time ago that the digital age would eventually catch up with some of the retail stores. It started with the CD music retailers. Borders Books were paying two hefty overhead expenses that online book retailers didn't - rent and real estate tax. Each and every stores they had either paid rent/mortgage and real estate taxes. Since their target market were upscale, their rent were not low either. They had to be in high traffic and high end shopping centers. So, who shall we blame for their demise?
Ramyphotography a portrait and wedding photography
Border's was THE bookstore in town (Ann Arbor) when I was in college. I was really surprised when they tried to B&N themselves a few years ago, but stupid business decisions no longer shock me.
I am sad. They always were a little overpriced but their Ann Arbor store was willing to take risks. I remember seeing a self-published physics book at the checkout counter which maintained that our understanding of physics is all wrong - that matter was really made of a different kind of atom, tiny sticks of dynamite that rotated around a central mass. I've always regretted not buying a copy. I wanted to see how it all ended, never dreaming that it would end with the death of the bookstore!
"What? They don't sell Mug or A&W?"
Nope! Those would make business sense!
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
To be fair, most root beer is caffeine free, as it's not really a cola in the traditional sense. Expensive and/or strange? Yes, I'll give you that one. (Full disclosure, I was a Borders Cafe barista through most of my college career and shortly after)