According to in-court reports from Reuters, Amazon's vice president of
Kindle content Russell Grandinetti testified that his company told publishers it
may have to modify business relationships as a result of adopting the agency
model.
Further, Gardinetti said publishers came to Amazon with an "ultimatum"
after reaching deals with Apple in 2010, demanding they be allowed to set
e-books prices on Amazon.com. Unless an agreement was made, Amazon would have
been barred from selling Kindle-ready e-books on the same day that hardcover
versions of the titles were released, he said.
Citing a particular offer from MacMillan in 2010, Grandinetti said the
pubisher's CEO Jon Sargent offered a choice between moving to the agency model
or being forced to delay an e-book's sale until seven months after a hardcover
version had been on the market. "I think I expressed how unpalatable the choice
presented was." - Russell Grandinetti, Amazon VP of Kindle content
"I think I expressed how unpalatable the choice presented was," Grandinetti
said.
On Tuesday, Penguin Books CEO David Shanks described a similar discussion
he had with Amazon over a proposed pricing strategy shift.
"They yelled and screamed and threatened," Shanks said. "It was a very
unpleasant meeting."
Shanks also noted that Amazon would routinely price new titles at $9.99
through its Kindle store, when the same book would sell for $26 as a hardcover.
Wholesale pricing was cannibalizing profitable hardcover sales, he said.
Amazon resisted the pressure exerted by the publishing houses for a short
time before finally submitting to their demands, inking a 3-year deal based on
the agency model.
"We wanted to avoid losing most or all of their titles from our store,"
Gartinetti said of MacMillan.
The agency model, and its most favored nations clause, is central to the
Justice Department's case against Apple, which alleges the company colluded with
five major book publishers to fix e-book prices in the iBookstore. As part of
its argument, the DOJ has framed Amazon as one of the parties hurt by Apple's
purported scheme, asserting that the company's wholesale model was impacted by
the alleged conspiracy.
Under Amazon's wholesale pricing, retailers buy content from publishers in
bulk and are able to set resale prices at or below cost. In some cases, this
strategy resulted in highly discounted e-book pricing for new books which would
otherwise sell for much more. Amazon used the savings to move Kindles, which
according to court documents controlled as much as 90 percent of the market by
2009.
Other publishers began to move to the agency model in what Grandinetti
believes were decisions made, at least in part, to "slowdown the success of the
Kindle." Amazon apparently made attempts to stop the exodus from wholesale, at
times threatening to end relationships with certain publishers.
In another testimony on Wednesday, Simon & Schuster CEO Carolyn Reidy
said that Grandinetti himself issued a threat against her company after it moved
to Apple's agency model, reports CNET. Reidy testified that Grandinetti said,
"If you're going to do this, we have to look at the whole business."
She recalled that the first two calls regarding the shift in pricing
strategy were amiable, it was in the third that Grandinetti "threatened [their]
business."
Wednesday's proceedings ended with Grandinetti on the stand, meaning he
will once again testify on Thursday.
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