April 27, 2024

Fork in the Road for Barnes & Noble

He and other executives proudly displayed their new devices, talked about plans to expand and promised that the bookstore chain could go head-to-head with the giants of Silicon Valley.

“We’re a technology company, believe it or not,” Mr. Lynch said.

But only 16 months later, Barnes Noble’s digital plans are crumbling. Last month, a disastrous earnings report coincided with the company’s announcement that it would no longer manufacture color tablets. And on Monday, Barnes Noble announced that Mr. Lynch, the young, tech-savvy architect of the company’s digital strategy, had abruptly resigned. A new chief executive was not named.

That leaves the nation’s only major bookstore chain without a clear path forward, reviving fears among publishers, authors and agents — who are deeply dependent on a viable Barnes Noble — about its future.

Barnes Noble executives have acknowledged one fact: the digital business that was to be the centerpiece of its growth strategy must be retooled.

After introducing its first black-and-white e-reader in 2009, called the Nook, Barnes Noble joined the tablet race, a move that industry experts have pointed to as a source of the company’s current troubles. Barnes Noble’s inexpensive color tablets aimed for a niche in the market below the iPad. But while the company grabbed close to 25 percent of the e-book market, its digital division was getting pummeled by larger competitors, and bleeding money.

“Barnes Noble was in a Catch-22. They had to do something in digital and Nook was their best shot at it,” said Peter Wahlstrom, a retail analyst with Morningstar Equity Research. “William Lynch had a good vision, but he was overwhelmed and fighting with one hand behind his back.”

Mr. Lynch’s departure, which was effective immediately, leaves Leonard Riggio, the chairman of Barnes Noble, with a much more visible and powerful role within the company. Mr. Riggio, who built the company into a national force, is known to cherish the physical bookstores. His increased influence, analysts said, could shift the company’s focus more toward the retail side of the business.

Mr. Riggio, the public face of Barnes Noble for decades, declined a request for an interview on Tuesday. But in meetings and memos in the last two days, Barnes Noble employees have been assured that despite the recent tumult, their fundamental mission remains the same.

“As you know, we reported year-end results two weeks ago, and Barnes Noble Retail and Barnes Noble College delivered very solid performances and remain profitable businesses,” Mr. Riggio wrote in an e-mail to employees after the resignation of Mr. Lynch was announced. “While the losses were significant in the Nook business, I feel certain we will get the business back on track.”

For the fiscal fourth quarter, the Nook unit showed a $177 million loss in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda, more than doubling the loss from the period a year earlier. Sales fell 34 percent, to $108 million.

“We’re trying to figure out the right strategy, but it can’t happen overnight,” said one executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk publicly. “E-books are still expanding, and we still have a piece of that market. We just have to find other ways to grow our digital business.”

Analysts said the resignation of Mr. Lynch could increase the likelihood of a formal split of the company. In April 2012, the Nook was spun off as a separate business from Barnes Noble’s nearly 700 retail stores. Microsoft, which paid hundreds of millions of dollars for 17.6 percent of the Nook division, has expressed interest in buying the entire division, but it is unclear if a deal will be reached.

“The question is, can they truly take the Nook and sell it to someone who’s interested?” said Jack W. Perry, a publishing consultant. “I don’t know if the Nook name has the value to it. But with the customers Barnes Noble has, there’s still value there.”

In February, Mr. Riggio indicated that he wanted to buy the retail stores and take them private, but he has not publicly acted on those plans since.

On Monday, the company said it was reviewing its strategic plan and would provide an update “when appropriate.”

Michael Norris, a senior analyst with Simba Information, said Barnes Noble was “in a period of serious and meaningful transition.”

“I think that they need to really ask themselves what kind of business they want to be in,” Mr. Norris said. “And they need to figure out how they expect to make money from both the bookstore business and the e-reader business.”

John Tinker, an analyst for the Maxim Group, said the retail stores were still an attractive property, something that had been obscured by missteps from the digital division. Mr. Lynch, who came to Barnes Noble with a background in technology and e-commerce rather than book-selling, spent most of his time focused on the digital side of the company. Mr. Riggio has expressed support of the Nook business to employees, but has always devoted his energies to old-fashioned retail book-selling.

“The huge losses and the huge noise on the Nook side are masking a very interesting business on the retail side,” Mr. Tinker said. “If there’s one thing that Riggio is good at, it’s running stores.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/10/business/fork-in-the-road-for-a-bookseller.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: Barnes & Noble Reports Big Falloff in Nook Unit

Barnes Noble experienced a drop in revenue in all three of its major divisions – retail, college and Nook – for its fiscal third quarter, the company reported on Thursday morning. But the 26 percent falloff in the Nook segment, which includes digital tablets and e-readers, was particularly steep.

The company said earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization were $55 million for the quarter ended Jan. 26, compared with $150 million for the period a year earlier, while consolidated net losses were $6.1 million, compared with net earnings of $52 million.

Barnes Noble, the nation’s largest bookstore chain, had warned earlier in the month that Nook sales were disappointing, and executives had hinted that the company’s strategy of competing in the highly competitive tablet space had run its course.

“The Nook is not a failure, not technically,” said James McQuivey, an anaylst at Forrester Research. “If you go back two years and ask the Nook product managers how many Nooks they would want to sell by now, I bet they have blown past that number. The problem is not the Nook’s success or failure, it’s the fact that the overall tablet market has actually blown way past the Nook’s performance. This puts the Nook in a dim light at a time when the traditional retail business is already facing a cliff of its own.”

On Monday, Leonard Riggio, the company’s largest stockholder and the architect of the company’s ferocious and successful retail expansion in the 1980s and ’90s, announced he was considering buying Barnes Noble’s retail operation. Some analysts cheered this announcement because they felt the digital unit, meant to be the company’s savior, was in fact dragging down the worth of the retail stores, which for now remain a viable operation.

That notion got some support with the earnings report. The company said retail sales decreased more than 10 percent, largely because of store closings. But Barnes Noble had anticipated the lower revenue and, despite the sales decline, retail earnings increased 7.3 percent, to $212 million, “resulting from a higher sales mix of higher margin core products and expense management,” the company said.

Revenue in the Nook unit plunged by 26 percent, to $316 million for the quarter, compared with $426 million in the year-earlier period, while losses more than doubled, to $190 million, from $83 million. The losses were largely a result of lower-than-anticipated sales, inventory charges and higher operating expenses because of advertising costs, the company said.

One bright note was that digital content sales through the Nook unit increased 6.8 percent.

The company said that Nook was already implementing a cost reduction program.

“In terms of the Nook Media business, we’ve taken significant actions to begin to right size our cost structure in the Nook segment, while also taking a large markdown on Nook devices in order to enhance our ability to achieve our estimated sales plans in subsequent quarters,” William J. Lynch Jr., chief executive of Barnes Noble, said in a statement.

Still, Mr. Lynch emphasized that the company was not abandoning the Nook division or the digital devices.

“Nook Media has been financing itself since October of 2012 due to the strong investment partners we’ve been able to attract in Microsoft and Pearson,” he said. “Coming off the holiday shortfall, we’re in the process of making some adjustments to our strategy as we continue to pursue the exciting growth opportunities ahead for us in the consumer and digital education content markets.”

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/barnes-noble-reports-big-falloff-in-nook-unit/?partner=rss&emc=rss