Britannica's halt of print edition triggers sales
By DON BABWIN, Associated Press – 7 hours ago
CHICAGO (AP) — It turns out all Encyclopaedia Britannica had to do to breathe new life into the sale of its print edition was to kill it.
Since Britannica announced last month that it was discontinuing its
print editions, the Chicago-based company said sales have skyrocketed.
It has sold all but 800 of the 4,000 sets of the 32-volume 2010 edition
it had left at a Kentucky warehouse, the company said.
"We were averaging about 60 sets a week and the next thing we knew, we
were selling 1,050 a week," Britannica spokesman Peter Duckler said
Thursday. "When people thought they were going to be around forever
there was no rush to buy one and then suddenly, boom, and now there is a
scarcity and it's a collector's item."
Britannica announced March 13 that it would stop publishing print
editions of its flagship encyclopedia for the first time in 244 years
and instead focus on its online encyclopedia.
Duckler said business got so busy after that — Britannica at one point
was selling the print editions at a clip of about two sets per minute —
that a senior vice president and chief marketing officer jumped in and
started taking orders over the phone.
The company will likely sell out by the end of the month, Duckler said.
He added that Britannica — which first published its book form
encyclopedia in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1768 — will hold onto a few sets
so they can be displayed somehow or donated to museums.
As they did before the announcement, the sets are selling for $1,395. If
that sounds like a lot of money, secondary sellers online are asking
more than $3,200 a set for the 2010 edition — and that's before the
company has run out of the ones it has.
Duckler said the sudden spike in sales hasn't prompted anyone at
Britannica to rethink the decision to discontinue selling the print
edition. Though the scarcity of the 2010 edition may be making it
popular, the company has long known that the print sales were never
going to come back to anything approaching the peak year of 1990 when
120,000 were sold.
Britannica, which published the first CD-ROM edition in 1989, introduced
an online version in 1994. Online versions of the encyclopedia now
serve more than 100 million people around the world and are available on
mobile devices, the company said.
"It just makes sense to embrace our digital products," he said.
Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
"It just makes sense to embrace our digital products," Britannica spokesman Peter Duckler.
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