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Regulating the Bookstore

May 1, 2009

Among the hundreds of new regulations in the Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA) passed by Congress in August 2008 are new mandates that require colleges -- and, more specifically, college owned or operated bookstores -- to publish the ISBN numbers and retail prices for textbooks, other trade titles, and related course materials that faculty recommend and students buy for classes. The new HEOA mandates reflect, in part, Congressional concern, echoed in many state legislatures in recent years, about the rising cost of textbooks. The ISBN mandate becomes operational in July 2010.

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No question that the ISBN mandate will fuel changes already under way that affect how and where college students buy textbooks. Student Monitor’s fall 2008 survey of full-time undergraduates reveals that 16 percent of undergraduates “bought most of their textbooks online,” up from 12 percent in fall 2007. Additionally, Student Monitor reports that “the share of students who purchase most of their textbooks from their on-campus bookstore continues to trend down: fewer than six in ten students (57 percent) purchased most of their textbooks at their on campus book store,” compared to 64 percent in fall 2006 and down from 72 percent in fall 2005.

College bookstores are (for-profit) service organizations: Prior to the emergence of Internet book sellers just over a decade ago, college students were largely a captive market for the (often one) campus store, usually owned and operated by the college or university (or operated under contract on behalf of the college by an agent such as Barnes & Noble or the Follett Higher Education Group). The money saving options were not where to buy (which store) but what to buy (new or used). Until recently, for most students at most institutions, the primary source for new or used books and related course materials was the “college” store.

Enter the Internet. As with other products and services, Internet merchants provide price and service competition for local providers, in this case college bookstores. The emergence of Internet book merchants -- initially Amazon, followed by Web-based resellers specifically targeting college students such as BigWords, CampusBooks, TextBooks, and others -- offered students new options: the Internet brought a new transparency to the prices of both new and used textbooks. Case in point: in fall 2008 my daughter, a UCLA student, purchased a new accounting book from Amazon for $135 that the ASUCLA store was selling for $176.

There’s little argument that the HEOA mandate to publish ISBNs and retail prices brings a new transparency to the textbook market. It facilitates the efforts of students to shop for books based on price. Concurrently, the ISBN mandate poses new challenges for colleges, college stores, and the firms that operate college stores (and the store Web sites) under contract.

Ahead of the regulations due later this year from the Education Department, campus administrators, college store directors, and, yes, even campus lawyers are parsing the HEOA legislation (Section 133) and also reviewing bookstore operations, Web sites, and current contracts to assess compliance issues. For example, as reported by Theresa Rowe, the CIO at Michigan's Oakland University in a recent Educause listserv post, the campus counsel at Oakland recently rejected an ISBN–link-system solution incorporated into the campus portal provided by Barnes and Noble, the contract operator of the campus store for Oakland.

Campus counsel at Oakland ruled that the B&N link-solution is "not legally acceptable [under HEOA] given that [the university’s] contract with Barnes and Noble does not obligate [B&N to provide the ISBN linking service]; hence, if [B&N] fail[s] to comply with the statute Oakland would have no one to point the proverbial finger at.… if we did, [simply] saying that B&N screwed up is not a good defense to a claim that [the university] failed to comply with federal law."

No doubt lawyers at other institutions may have different perspectives on the linking solutions provided by store operators. Still, it is a safe bet that these contracts will be carefully reviewed -- and many will be revised -- following the release of the regulations governing the ISBN mandate later this year.

While the new transparency that accompanies the publication of ISBNs may be good for Internet book sellers, it will also be a catalyst for new services that target college students and also colleges and universities.

For example, Apple’s student-oriented iPhone ad broadcast during the NCAA men's basketball championship game on April 6 highlighted SnapTell, an iPhone app that supports “photo commerce:” take a picture of a book (including college textbooks) and the SnapTell app will link you to multiple Web sites that sell the book. On the institutional side, Verba Software, a Cambridge, Mass., firm launched by some recent Harvard grads, offers an application that links course lists to IBSNs and then searches the Web for the best prices for new and used textbooks and course tomes.

Internet book resellers that target college students and the textbook market proclaim that they save students money. (Hey, Amazon saved me and my daughter $40 last fall!) So we can expect the ISBN mandate to foster more competition between bricks and clicks -- the campus store on (or near the quad) vs. the on-screen Internet reseller. The ISBN mandate will accelerate the demise of a once captive market: college students buying books and course materials at the local college bookstore.

Many will applaud the increased competition because students will save bucks on books. Still others who lament the decline of “community bookstores” to chain stores, big box stores, and Internet booksellers will also lament what may be the demise of campus stores, as they continue to lose the annuity-like revenue stream from textbooks and course materials that has been essential to their operations.

But let’s also acknowledge that the HEOA mandate to publish ISBNs will not resolve the recurring complaints about (and some might add structural problems affecting) the suggested retail price of textbooks and course materials -- and by extension the wholesale price of course materials.

Here other factors are at play that include accelerated updates to stem the used book market, the costs of developing ancillary materials for faculty and maintaining web sites for students and professors, routine and appropriate development and production costs, modest author royalties and, yes even a little profit. Regardless of what I paid for my daughter’s accounting textbook last fall, these factors and others all affected the wholesale price that both Amazon and the UCLA store paid for the book assigned for my daughter’s accounting class. (Note: This article has been updated from an earlier version to correct an error.)

Kenneth C. Green is the founding director of the Campus Computing Project. Disclosure: Amazon, Apple, Follett Higher Education Group, and Verba Software are corporate sponsors of the project.

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Comments on Regulating the Bookstore

  • Posted by Mike , assistant proffessor, English at St Louis Community College-Meramec on May 1, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • I don't understand why more colleges don't go to a rental system for textbooks. I taught at Southern Illinois Univ Edwardsville for three eyars, and they operate a rental system for all undergraduate courses. Faculty have to commit to a textbook for three years (though there is some flexibility), and they can select several books for the same course (our English composition courses had up to five); the price to the student is the same. It was wonderful knowing that all the students had all their books when they walked in to the first class. Sure, there were glitches, but they were few and far between. I wish all colleges offered such an option, if not for major-specific courses, then for gen ed courses as a minimum.

  • Resell Royalties are Key
  • Posted by Rick Olsen , Communication Studies at UNCW on May 1, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • This is a classic case of doing what is easy instead of what is needed. The last paragraph speaks to the issue of royalties associated with reselling used books. This is THE issue. Authors and textbook companies must make three years of profit off of the initial sale. Then they must find ways to change the book and create a next edition to be sold about three years later. In some disicplines and courses this is necessary anyway because of the pace of change on the topic. In other cases, this is simply a means of generating revenue at the expense of students and the environment.

    Why can iTunes and other sites effectively split up the 99 cent download so that Sony, the artist, the producers, the studio musicians, etc. all get money and we can't do the same for textbooks? If the government really wants to make a meaningful impact on textbook prices they should require appropriate intellectual property rights and fees from book resellers/sales of used books. That will do many positive things for students, authors and the environment.

  • Posted by Chris on May 1, 2009 at 11:15am EDT
  • "Prior to the emergence of Internet book sellers just over a decade ago, college students were largely a captive market for the (often one) campus store"

    Every university I've attended has had at least one off-campus compeditor to the official bookstore.

  • Posted by Chris on May 1, 2009 at 11:15am EDT
  • "If the government really wants to make a meaningful impact on textbook prices they should require appropriate intellectual property rights and fees from book resellers/sales of used books."

    I don't think this is going to work.  If the bookstore has to pay a substantial fee for reselling textbooks, it will just push students looking to sell towards student-to-student sales on ebay or Craigslist.

  • Why sell out?
  • Posted by Math Prof on May 1, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • The reselling issue is real, but I approach it from a different angle. Why do students sell their textbooks? Why don't they see them as valuable for life long learning? Why are they in college if they want to forget what they learned as quickly as they can? Textbook rental systems undermine the very purpose of going to college. (I got interested in college when I found my parents' textbooks boxed up under the stairs.)

    On a more practical level, why do most of my calculus students sell their precalculus textbooks? Being able to review topics like logs and graphs would have great value. But, when I suggest that they go and buy it back they think I'm nuts.

    So, at least part of the solution should be getting students see long term value in their textbooks. How can we (faculty & publishers) better do this?

  • iTunes? Odd analogy
  • Posted by Prof. G. , Assistant Professor at Shenandoah University on May 1, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • iTunes doesn't sell used music. Shops that sell used CDs (yes, they still exist) don't send a share of the profits to the "rights holders," whoever they may be.

    Your argument might lead to the demise of libraries, as it challenges the "first sale doctrine." If I buy a book, I can do with it what I want, short of copying it. I can give it as a gift (a $0.00 transfer of ownership), will it to my heir, lend it to a friend, or sell it to a customer. It's mine.

    I appreciate your desire to maximize profits, now that you're on the content-creation side of the academy; however, students should be free to sell what they've purchased -- or keep it, as the case may be.

  • Posted by Don on May 1, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • "The ISBN Mandate becomes operational in 2010, following the release of specific regulations later this year from The Department of Education."

    How is the department of education going to issue regulations on this section later this year when the HEOA itself prohibits the Secretary from issuing regulations?

    Section 112 (i) states "The Secretary shall not promulgate regulations with respect to this section."

  • Posted by Fred Sullivan on May 2, 2009 at 12:30pm EDT
  • When lamenting the loss of college book stores as community book stores because of online sales, one must keep in mind that many smaller institutions simply outsource their bookstores to large firms, so that in many communities, there won't be much impact. As a result of an incident last year, I have become much more sensitive to the prices of textbooks that I adopt. Last fall, I adopted a new textbook, only to find that the bookstore was selling it for $180, when the online store for the megaseller that manages our bookstore sold the same book for $120. I now let my students know, before the semester starts, the approximate online prices of books, and I work hard to find affordable textbooks.

  • Posted by NJD on May 4, 2009 at 9:30am EDT
  • Math Prof:

    Students resell textbooks because they usually are worth less than the pittance bookstores will pay to have them back. Most textbooks used by undergraduates are published by commercial houses instead of university presses, and are bloated with unnecessary sidebars, frivolous color, useless DVD-ROMs, and other junk to justify charging $100-$200. They're only worth buying at all because they are often necessary for problem sets. The only textbooks I kept to which I ever refer are a couple mathematics books and university editions of Shakespeare's plays. Most others, including those in my major field, are collecting dust.

  • Posted by Karen , bookstore manager on May 6, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • So Congress is regulating free trade now - when will they do something about the even higher cost of health care, which impacts everyone? If they manage to severely restrict the publishing companies, where will all the educational materials and supplements come from? And bookstores, the ones that research and double check all the ISBN's from professors, and the place that informs many of those professors that there is a new edition coming out or that they have the wrong ISBN - they are expected to do all this work and give the information away so their customers can search elsewhere? This will lose/change a lot of jobs and affect the economy in more ways than the students can even imagine.

    I'm also tired of hearing about the "pittance" bookstores pay for used books - if they have an order for that book for the next term, most bookstores will pay the student 50% of the new price, whether they bought it new or used. If books are reused for a number of terms (and the professors get their orders in before buy back), the students will end up paying less than they would if they had text rental systems. Lower prices are paid for books that go back to the wholesalers who then have to hope they will be sold to other bookstores, and those prices are determined by the age of the book, popularity, and many other factors.

  • Posted by Ruth , Director, Bookstore Services at Allan Hancock College on May 6, 2009 at 2:45pm EDT
  • I am in total agreement with Karen, I've spent 25 years being beaten up by faculty, students and parents as if I personally am responsible for the prices of textbooks and the buyback value. When I first became a bookstore employee textbooks went into new editions on a 5-6 year cycle, prices changed by .25 to .50 cents a semester. As publishers began buying one another out prices began to escalate, someone had to pay for these expensive acquisitions. The textbook publishers are now down to 3. All those different imprints belong to one of the "Big 3". The bookstore is only the middleman just like any retailer is. Bookstores work on a margin of 25% over cost. Out of that .25% we pay freight, we repay the institution the for our own salaries and benefits, the cost of utilities, and all other costs we incur. We pay rent to institution for our space as well as supplies for the department that pays our bills. And with the pennies (4.4 cents according to the National Association of College Stores) we have left we pay state, local and federal taxes, fund athletics, our student government and a scholarship or two. Most college bookstores are not Big Box stores run by national wholesale book companies who are the ones who pay a pittance to students at buyback, then sell their own used books back to themselves! We give 50% of the price of books back to our students if our facultychoose to use them again. We buy others at national values (set by these very same Big Box wholesalers) and guarantee to buy back any book purchased in our store by students even if they are old editions even if it isn't much. Did you ever take into consideration that college bookstore people are not making mega-bucks like the CEOs of those online services? How many mansions, fancy cars, trips all over the world are funded by students dollars buying on Amazon? By purchasing books at the institutional store students dollars stay on campus and fund those parties and celebrations the student government puts on, e.g. food, prizes entertainment, and helps defray the costs of those winning football teams. Maybe its time to think about that a little bit and stop treating bookstore people as the enemy instead of the friends who are trying to help you complete your education.

  • HEOA
  • Posted by Catherine Scott , Director of College Stores at Community Colleges of Spokane on May 6, 2009 at 5:00pm EDT
  • Just a note of clarification -- the HEOA bill does not mandate that college bookstores post isbns and prices -- the HEOA bill requires colleges receiving federal funds to have this information available. While this responsibility may fall the the bookstores on some campus, it is the responsibility of every dean & faculty to submit their orders in a timely manner so the information can be published, in compliance with the law. If we are to communicate with students so they can shop for the best pricing, it also means that once published faculty should not change their minds on the books they are using; nor should the class schedule change and the publisher can't decide to package the book differently or change editions or students will be stuck with internet books that cannot be returned. Students still have the best option of getting the correct books by shopping at their bookstore or at the very least have the option of getting a refund if changes have occurred.

  • It Boils Down to the one paying....
  • Posted by Kelsey , Student at TCC on May 14, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • Bookstores may not be making a huge profit but I don't think that's the accusation from students. I myself don't really care where the money goes if I'm getting a better deal on my book. In an economy like this students would much rather pay 120 over 170 even if the seller is pocketing most of the money. As for selling books back, school is expensive and contrary to popular belief there isn't much financial help. Especially if you aren't some kind of "minority" and can't boast that you have millions of children. The money students get back on the books they sell goes towards the next one needed.

  • Who voted this on this?
  • Posted by Misty , Sales Associate at McKendree on July 28, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT