Buy book: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 06:56, 29 February 2004
To buy books without consulting at least some review or comment on them is probably a bad idea. Amazon.com has proven that simply compiling reviews and marketing books based on them, and on product affinity, is very effective (they were one of the few dotcoms to actually survive the bust).
Consumerium Services can obviously and easily support lookup of reviews and other commentary on a book by barcode, and possibly get a better price on the same book, via a worn device lookup. Perhaps in exchange for not offering a better price, a friendly retail location can be convinced to support Consumerium Service access onsite to look up related books that the reader might enjoy - boosting sales.
Additional value is added by faction participation, as the reviews can be filtered according to who one trusts in general on buying decisions, not just who one trusts "about books". The whole basis for book buying advice may well be factionally defined and have nothing in common from faction to faction.
Revenue sharing from this kind of arrangement might help to make the service self-funding, and pay for deployment in many non-book applications.
See also: Wikitravel