If users are prepared to tolerate adverts, they can get their hands on a cheaper Kindle, as Amazon seeks to push the e-reader segment.
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, in a note placed prominently on the online retailer’s American landing page, suggested that a Kindle with “special offers and sponsored screensavers” will help “make sure that anyone who wants a Kindle can afford one.”
Buick, Chase, Olay and Visa are early sponsors of the ad-happy device, which retails for $114 (£70), a slight but noticeable reduction from the basic Kindle model at $139 (£85) and the Kindle 3G at $189 (£116). It is unclear at this time whether this device will appear in the UK.
“Our goal is to display screensavers that customers want to see,” Bezos added in his note. “Anyone who’s interested can download AdMash and help pick future screensavers. Two prospective screensavers show up side-by-side, and you pick the one you find most attractive.” Those with the most picks, apparently, become sponsored screensavers.
An ad-supported Kindle, by virtue of a lower price point, could make the device appealing to a broader demographic of potential customers. The question is whether that price is low enough, and if customers will tolerate ads on their e-reader the same way they do on virtually every other entertainment medium.
Amazon is fighting to hold a piece of an ever-growing pie. Analytics firm In-Stat predicted in September 2010 that e-reader shipments will grow to an annual 35 million units by 2014. “Tablet PC shipments are taking off, fuelled in particular by the Apple iPad introduction. Yet there will still be a revenue opportunity for e-reader suppliers and OEMs since tablet PCs and e-readers target different consumers,” Stephanie Ethier, an analyst with In-Stat, wrote in a research note. “Standalone e-readers will address the needs of avid readers, to whom the reading experience is central. Tablets are better suited for consumers who prefer a stronger multimedia experience and only light reading.
Amazon could also plunge into the tablet market directly, building an Android-based device to tackle the iPad head-on. That’s the theory of a handful of analysts, at least.
“Amazon could create a compelling Android- or Linux-based tablet offering easy access to Amazon’s storefront (including its forthcoming Android app store) and unique Amazon features like one-click purchasing, Amazon Prime service, and its recommendation engine,” Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps wrote in a 10 March blog posting. “More consumers considering buying a tablet say that they would consider Amazon (24 percent) than Motorola (18 percent).”
In that scenario, the Kindle’s existing customer base would come in handy.
“A Kindle-Android device could prove popular, building on the large installed base of Kindle users,” added analyst Jack Gold. “And Amazon clearly has the largest ‘store’ out there (bigger than the iTunes/app store world) so that could be a swaying factor if they got aggressive with offering special deals on their own device.”
Whether Amazon ever considers building an Android device, it seems focused for the moment on pushing any angle it can with its regular Kindle.
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