TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
August 19th, 2009

29 million dedicated e-book readers predicted to ship in 2013: Hype or credible forecast?

By David Rothman

image “According to a recent report from survey company In-Stat of the US, total global shipments of dedicated eBook readers will hit 28.6 million units in 2013… Considering that 2008 shipments were only about one million units, this represents a 30-fold increase in only five years.” – Samsung, Google Entering Growing eBook Market, from Nikkei Electronics Asia. See charts in detail.

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2 Responses to “29 million dedicated e-book readers predicted to ship in 2013: Hype or credible forecast?”

  1. Very interesting article despite the misleading title.
    They do understand that books are, in fact, very different from music and video, so that lends some credibility to their analysis.
    Me, I suspect they may–as is typical for emerging technologies–be overly-optimistic in the short-term and overly pesimistic in the longer term.
    The way I see it:
    1- the market for “fiction-readers”, the market targetted by Sony and the K2, plus Bookeen, the Hanlin re-sellers, etc, is a good start but it will start to level-out fairly soon. Say in another two years.
    2- I am generally skeptical of newspapers and magazines as *drivers* for eReader sales, in the near term, even with subsidized hardware. Too much of the ptential market is going to be cannibalized by cellphones and computer-based reading.
    3- The textbook market will be *huge* but I can’t see it arriving until the second half of the decade. Mostly because educational bureaucracies are generally conservative; we’ll see a few universities start to ramp up in the next five years but the real money is in k-12 and that market isn’t opening up soon; the tech just isn’t there yet. (Flexible color displays with animation for starters.)

    So yes, I think 23 million by ‘13 is too high by about a third. Ten million, though, I can see. 25 million by 2015, possible. 100 million by 2020? Likely. (Possibly pesimistic, though, if anybody ever gets the K-12 readers down to under $100 list.)

    Just need to remember that PCs sell 270 million-plus *per year*. Given time, eReaders should be able to do at least ten percent of that. ;)

  2. Felix Torres Says:
    August 19th, 2009 at 7:44 am

    Of course, typos aside, if I think 23 million is too much, 29 is even less likely…

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