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Kiosks Bring BookSense.com In-Store
February 11, 2004
Rather than hope customers will use and/or buy from their Web sites when they
can't get to the bookstore, some booksellers have decided to bring their BookSense.com
Web sites to customers by creating Web kiosks in their stores. Booksellers who
spoke to BTW about their kiosks have found the axiom made famous in W.P.
Kinsella's Shoeless Joe on target: Build it, and they will come.
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Kiosk
at The Regulator Bookshop in Durham, North Carolina
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Tom Campbell of The Regulator Bookshop in
Durham, North Carolina, told BTW that the store has had a BookSense.com
Web kiosk for about a year and a half.
"I noticed [stores] like Borders moving in the direction of kiosks,"
he explained, "enabling people to look books up." Additionally, the
bookstore is just a few blocks from Duke University, so "lots of young
people would ask about a book and ask, 'Why don't you have a computer where
I can look it up?' People are used to that." Campbell said that, at the
time that he was deciding to create an in-store Web kiosk, he already had a
Windows network and a high speed connection. "I had an old computer sitting
at home, and I bought a little computer hutch and had a carpenter put a base
on it to increase the height."
The kiosk was integrated into the store's computer network and made secure.
At the kiosk, the store provides a special order pen and a pad for customers
to use if they don't wish to order directly through the Web site. Campbell also
noted that because he uploads the store inventory onto the store's BookSense.com
Web site, customers using the kiosks have a good idea of what is in stock.
To deter users from surfing or checking their e-mail, signs are placed around
the kiosk, such as, "Look up BookSense.com Here," and "For use
on our Web site Only." There have been few problems with surfers. "[The
kiosk] is in a very visible part of the store," Campbell noted.
Regulator's kiosk has been a hit. "This is the best advertising for the
Web site that we can do," said Campbell, who also noted that the store
has received a fair amount of special orders since the kiosk went up, and, overall,
orders have increased through the site. "Seventy-five to 100 customers
access the site each day, which is significant," he reported. "It's
probably right up there with phone calls. So people are obviously finding it
useful and helpful -- it's spreading the word."
At Mysterious Galaxy in
San Diego, California, Maryelizabeth Hart told BTW that the store launched
its Web kiosk in December in time for the holidays as a marketing and customer
service tool. "People will see it and ask, 'What's that?' We advertise
in our print newsletter as well," she said, adding that it reminds people
they can order from the store 24/7. "It's also for self-service" as
many customers access the store's site in order to find a book, though Mysterious
Galaxy does not upload its inventory to its BookSense.com site.
Mysterious Galaxy's kiosk set-up is simple: a computer equipped with Internet
access set to the store's BookSense.com site placed on a small computer desk.
Thus far, Hart said, it's been a success. "It's making people realize that
there is an online alternative to the big one," she explained. "We've
seen online traffic increase since we set up the kiosk. It's a nice marketing
tool."
Village Books in Bellingham,
Washington, has had a TitleSmart Web kiosk for two years that allows customers
to look up books through TitleSmart and "on that kiosk is a key that one
can push to go to [Village Books'] BookSense.com site," said store co-owner
Chuck Robinson.
Robinson noted that the store's inventory is not uploaded onto their Web site
due to the large number of used books the store sells. However, he acknowledged
that he foresees a day when they will provide customers with access to the store
inventory. Either way, he believes it is important for Village Books to offer
customers an access center. "I like the idea of having a kiosk on the floor,"
Robinson said. --David Grogan
Topics: Internet Commerce, Book Sense, IndieCommerce, News - Bookselling,
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