Rare Book Monthly

Articles - February - 2006 Issue

Biblio Announces New Pricing Schedule

Biblio offers choice of pricing schedules.

Biblio offers choice of pricing schedules.


By Michael Stillman

The third largest old book site on the internet recently announced a new pricing schedule for its dealers. No, it is not a simple price increase. It is an option. Biblio now allows its dealers to choose from two pricing schedules, and for some of them at least, it could mean a price decrease. It all depends on how the dealer sells.

Biblio, in the past, has worked on a straight commission schedule. You pay 15% of sales up to a certain point, 7.5% on sales over that level (the threshold depending on how many books you list). Nice and simple, and no cost if you make no sales.

Biblio has retained a commissions only structure, but has now added a combination commissions and flat fee option. That is option, not requirement, as sellers may remain on a risk-free commissions only structure if they wish. The use of a combination structure is one that has gained popularity among the selling sites. Abebooks previously moved from a flat fee only to a combination structure, and now Biblio goes to a (optional) combination structure from a commissions only structure. The popularity of a combined fee schedule by the sites makes sense. Commissions allow them to participate in the success their dealers enjoy on their sites, while flat fees provide a predictable, guaranteed flow of monthly income. Both are important to any business.

Biblio's two structures work this way. Plan A is a flat 15% of sales. This is not quite so favorable as the old commission structure, at least for those with higher sales. The old formula was 15% up to a certain level of sales (based on number of books listed). After that the rate dropped to 7.5%. Now, it no longer drops.

However, larger dealers can opt for Plan B instead. This adds a flat monthly fee, ranging from $10 for up to 10,000 books listed, to $25 for 40,000 books listed, plus $5 per additional 10,000 books. Under Plan B, all commissions are at the 7.5% rate. None are charged at 15% any longer.

For the smaller dealer, there is effectively no change. Those who did not sell enough to reach the cut off rate where commissions drop from 15% to 7.5% can choose Plan A and they experience no change at all. They pay the same 15%, including zero if no sales are made in any given month.

For larger dealers, the structure actually offers a price reduction! When was the last time you saw that? For example, under the old schedule, a seller who listed 25,000 books, and made $300 in sales ($300 being the cut off between the 15% and 7.5% rate) would have paid $45. Under the new formula, that dealer pays a $20 flat fee, plus 7.5% of his $300 in sales, or $22.50 in commissions. His total is now $42.50, versus $45 under the old formula, a savings of $2.50. Since both structures charged 7.5% on sales above $300, that $2.50 savings will remain no matter how much larger his sales might be.

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