Amazon launches cheaper Kindle with advertising

by Scott Bicheno on 12 April 2011, 10:38

Tags: Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qa5js

Add to My Vault: x

Added incentives

Amazon must be feeling the tablet heat from Apple as much as anyone else. Yes, e-readers are a different technology, usage model and price, but how many people will buy both a tablet and an e-reader?

With this in mind Amazon continues to innovate with the pricing of its Kindle e-reader, the latest bright idea being to part-subsidize a new version with advertising. Of course this is being euphemised to ‘special offers' and ‘sponsored screensavers'.

"We're working hard to make sure that anyone who wants a Kindle can afford one," said Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com founder and CEO. "Kindle with Special Offers is the same #1 bestselling Kindle - and it's only $114. Kindle is the best deal in consumer electronics anywhere in the world."

That $114 amounts to $25 off the Wi-Fi Kindle, with there being no such alternative for the 3G version. Our first thought was that this is a novel way of enticing the more cash-strapped consumer into the e-book world, but that $25 seems too small a lure. TechCrunch agrees, and opines that $99 is the killer price-point.

There's no doubt that moving the price of the Kindle into single-figures would make it an easier impulse-purchase, but that's something Amazon may feel ambivalent about. The advertising platform is untested, and Amazon will feel nervous about taking too much business away from its full-priced models.

The advertising seems to be based around the screensaver, with companies presenting their special offers on that platform. This means you won't get intrusive ads while you're reading, something that should have been emphasised more in the press release. Apparently there's even an app through which you can vote for your favourite screensaver.

The new Kindle will launch in the US on 3 May, and Amazon has yet to release any international guidance.

 

 



HEXUS Forums :: 8 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
Just hoping they launch this in the UK soon!
cheesemp
Just hoping they launch this in the UK soon!
I guess choice is always a good thing, and each to his own, but personally, for $25, or even £25, I'd cheerfully buy the more expensive one to avoid all the advertising.

Though I have to wonder, if you just disable wifi and 3g, and load it up via USB, just how do Amazon propose to get the adverts onto it?

The advertising seems to be based around the screensaver, with companies presenting their special offers on that platform. This means you won't get intrusive ads while you're reading, something that should have been emphasised more in the press release. Apparently there's even an app through which you can vote for your favourite screensaver.
That would be a critical point for me. I might be prepared to put up with screen-saver (.e. the notional “power-off” state) adverts if the cost saving was enough, but if they pop up at random points during use, be it in menu operations or worse yet, while reading, I wouldn't use one of they gave them away. And I certainly wouldn't buy the Ad-sponsored version without a categoric answer to that point.
Saracen
Though I have to wonder, if you just disable wifi and 3g, and load it up via USB, just how do Amazon propose to get the adverts onto it?

Buy adding them into the book?
finlay666
Buy adding them into the book?
Only helps if you get your books from Amazon, and will annoy people with the non-ad version of the book, and/or means they need to carry two version of each e-book, and serve the right one. And, of course, the adverts can't change, which severely limits the usefuness of it..

Besides, if they are screen-saver only and don't affecting the reading experience, how can they be in the book?
The article
Yes, e-readers are a different technology, usage model and price, but how many people will buy both a tablet and an e-reader?

Anyone with a smidgen of sense, at least until one with a half-suitable screen comes along, or someone who's never seen epaper.