Biblio has grown to be the third most popular book listing site.
By Michael Stillman
If Number 2 needs to try harder, what must Number 3 do? This month we posed that question to Biblio, the online bookselling site that has moved into third position in this extremely competitive and narrowing field. Perhaps they are the ideal candidate to ask this question, as somehow, Biblio has been defying the odds and managing to grow in an environment that ought to be choking them.
At the turn of the millennium (a literary-sounding way of saying 2000), there were dozens of online bookselling sites competing for market share. Biblio wasn't one of them. They arrived in 2003, long after most bookselling sites were deep into retrenchment. To understand how remarkable their success has been, just take a look at the normal evolution of new technologies. New technologies spawn new businesses in a predictable manner. In the early stages, dozens compete to get a foothold. Soon, a very small number, perhaps just one or two, emerge as leaders. The others hang on, hoping for a miracle, or at least a combination or buy out which will enable them to make another run at the top. A few may evolve into something else, perhaps surviving by serving some highly specific small niche. But, for the most part, it is over for those who were not among the first few to emerge as leaders.
If you look back to the pre-2000 internet "bubble" days, you will find there were many search engines that people selected among. Today there is Google. Sure, some people use the searches on major destination sites like Yahoo and MSN, but for pure search, who else is of significance? "Google" has even become a verb. We may "google" something, but does anyone ever "altavista" something, or "lycos" it? Once upon a time there were several online auction sites. There still are, but can you name any that don't begin with the letters e-b-a-y?
So into this maturing online bookselling environment, with Abebooks and Alibris already established as the leaders, and the rest fighting for either a niche or mere survival, Biblio was born. Born too late. By all logic, the game was already over. This baby should have died in infancy. Yet here it is. Biblio is not only still around, it is growing. It has managed to leapfrog the entire field save the two megalisters at the top. And, its environment is even tougher than having two strong market leaders ahead of you implies. There may be only two pure competitors ahead, but there are also the likes of Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and eBay/Half up there. They aren't pure competitors in that they do much more than old books, but they compete for old book listings nonetheless, and each carries far more market recognition than any of the pure book listing sites.
From its beginnings in 2003, Biblio has grown from nothing to carry 25 million listings from 3,500 dealers today. The market leaders are Abebooks, with a stated 75 million listings from 13,000 dealers, followed by Alibris with 50 million listings. After Biblio, the next in line is believed to be ZVAB/Choosebooks. While Biblio still has a long way to go to catch the top two, their growth has been extraordinary. Besides which, they really aren't that focused on Abe's and Alibris' numbers anyway. Perhaps that explains their surprising success while most book listing sites have been slipping into oblivion. To discover how Biblio has done so well in a seemingly impossible environment, we went to Kevin Donaldson, Biblio's Director of Sales and Marketing.
Sotheby's Fine Books, Manuscripts & More Discover Upcoming Auctions
Sotheby’s, Dec. 9: Coronelli, Vincenzo Maria. "Epitome Cosmografica." With the 6 circular celestial and terrestrial charts. 7,000 – 10,000 USD
Sotheby’s, Dec. 9: Hurley, Frank. Collection of 69 photographs taken during Ernest Shackleton's Endurance Expedition. 80,000 – 120,000 USD
Sotheby’s, Dec. 10: Sendak, Maurice. Original artwork for the inaugural "New York is Book Country" poster, 1979. 300,000 – 600,00 USD
Sotheby’s, Dec. 10: [Brontë, Emily, and Ann Brontë] — Ellis Bell and Acton Bell. An outstanding survival of the sisters' debut novels Estimate. 90,000 - 130,000 USD
Bonhams, Dec. 18: A Very Fine Composite Atlas Magnificently Illuminated and Heightened with Gold in a Fine Contemporary Hand Throughout. $300,000 - $500,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Saint-Exupéry's Revised Ending for Wind, Sand and Stars. $40,000 - $60,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Edith Wharton's Gold Medal from the National Institute of Arts and Letters, 1924. $20,000 - $30,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Salinger on the Glass Family and on Detachment. $10,000 - $15,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Fanny Burney's Groundbreaking First Novel. Evelina, Or a Young Lady's Entrance into the World. $10,000 - $15,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Kafka's Earliest Extant Piece of Writing. Autograph Note Signed ("Franz Kafka"). $10,000 - $15,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Wagner Signed "Ride of the Valkries." $6,000 - $9,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Dickens on the Death of Little Nell. $5,000 - $8,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Sylvia Plath's Copy of Joy of Cooking. $4,000 - $6,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Walt Whitman and Friends: Whitman to James Russell Lowell. $8,000 - $12,000
Bonhams, Dec. 18: Walt Whitman and Friends: The Genesis of his Lincoln Lectures. $6,000 - $9,000
High Bids Win, Dec. 4 – 19: Lot 212. Kelsey Letterpress
High Bids Win, Dec. 4 – 19: Wood & Metal Type. Many fonts and faces.
High Bids Win, Dec. 4 – 19: Print Shop Miscellany including type, tools, and equipment.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: A Rare Complete Run of the Cuala Press Broadsides. €5,500 to €7,000.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Rare First Edition of a Classic Work. [Stafford (Thos.)] Pacata Hibernia, Ireland Appeased and Reduced…, 1633. €1,500 to €2,000.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Yeats (W.B.) The Poems of W.B. Yeats, 2 vols. Lond. (MacMillan & Co.) 1949. Signed by author, limited edition. €1,250 to €1,750.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Fishing: Literal Translation into English of the Earliest Known Book on Fowling and Fishing, Written originally in Flemish and Printed at Antwerp in 1492. London (Chiswick Press) 1872. €1,500 to €2,000.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Fishing: Blacker's - Art of Fly Making, etc., Comprising Angling & Dying of Colours..., Rewritten & Revised. Lond. 1855. €250 to €350.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Joyce (James). Finnegans Wake,, London (Faber & Faber Ltd.) 1939, Lim. Edn. No. 269 (425) copies, Signed by the Author (in green pen). €3,000 to €4,000.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Synge (J.M.) & Yeats (Jack B.) illus. The Aran Islands,, D. (Maunsel & Co. Ltd.) 1907, Signed Limited Edn. €4,000 to €5,000.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Meyer (Dr. A.B.) Unser Auer -, Rackel-Und Birkwild und Seine Abarten, Wien (Verlag Von Adolph W. Kunast) 1887. €2,500 to €3,500.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Carve (Thomas). Itinerarium R.D. Thomas Carve Tripperariensis, Sacellani Maioris in Fortisima iuxta…,, Moguntia (Mainz) impriemebat Nicolaus Heyll, 1639. €1,500 to €2,000.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Grose (Francis). The Antiquities of Ireland, 2 vols. folio London (for S. Hooper) 1791. First Edition. €3,000 to €5,000.
Fonsie Mealy’s, Dec. 11-12: Heaney (Seamus) & Le Brocquy (Louis) artist. Ugolino, D. (Dolmen Press) 1979, Signed Limited Edition No. 87 (125) Copies. €3,500 to €4,500.