After 244 years, the
Encyclopedia Britannica will cease publishing its flagship encyclopedia and
concentrate on its digital offerings. "We'd like to think our tradition is
not to print, but to bring scholarly knowledge to the people," said Jorge
Cauz, president of Encyclopedia Britannica. Britannica has printed the
encyclopedia, which now runs to 32 volumes in length, since 1768. The 2010
edition was the last edition the company published. It has decided not to print
what would be the 2012 edition, which would have been out by the end of the
year. The company has about 4,000 sets of the 2010 edition still available for
sale. Overall about 2 million sets have been printed through the entire run of
the encyclopedia. Britannica's move to stop printing encyclopedias is a telling
moment in this point in history, when print is being superseded by websites and
network-connected applications.
Over the past few years,
the print edition accounted for less than 1 percent of Britannica's revenue.
"The market is not there," Cauz said. The amount of material the
company has amassed online has dwarfed the print edition. The effort it takes
to pack the most relevant of that information into book form is considerable
for the company. Even pricing-wise, the online edition makes better sense -- at
least for consumers: The basic subscription to the online version runs US$17 a
year, or $1.99 a month, while the print set costs $1,400. Even though the print
edition hasn't been a significant form of revenue for the company for some
time, Cauz admitted that the volumes are iconic for the company. The volumes,
lined up authoritatively across a bookshelf, imparted a sense of gravitas about
the material they contained and the mission of the company that published them.
As a student, "the encyclopedia for me was the shortest time between doing
homework and starting to play," Cauz said. The company has offered an
online edition of the encyclopedia for the past 20 years, and now makes the
majority of its revenue from online products and mobile applications. The
online editions have served more than 100 million students, Cauz said. The site
gets 580 million visitors a year.
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