After years of struggling to compete with the likes of Amazon’s Kindle business, Barnes & Noble is moving forward on a plan today to split off the company’s Nook Media business from its retail segment.
Barnes & Noble first launched its Nook ebook reader back in 2009 as a way to take advantage of growing consumer interest in digital books. The company later produced and launched a line of low-priced tablets as well as a digital media store for books, movies, games, and TV shows. But the Nook struggled to take off among consumers, leading the company to rethink its strategy by pushing Nook operations into a joint-venture (called Nook Media) with Microsoft and textbook publisher Pearson.
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“We have determined that these businesses will have the best chance of optimizing shareholder value if they are capitalized and operated separately,” said Barnes & Noble CEO Michael P. Huseby in a statement. “We fully expect that our Retail and Nook Media businesses will continue to have long-term, successful business relationships with each other after separation.”
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The decision to split the two businesses seems like the best course of action. Anyone with a set of eyes can see how much the overall Nook platform has floundered over the last two years. For example, it took the Nook until April 2013 to enable in-app purchasing (and even then, it did this through Google Play). And as you can see from a quick scan of Nook news dating back to 2011, Barnes & Noble has consistently dragged its feet when it comes to adding new features and new functionality to the Nook platform.
Basically, the Nook is perpetually the last one to show up for the party. If the Nook platform was a grade school student from the ’90s, it would be that kid bragging about his new pair of Reebok Pumps when everyone else had already moved on to the much cooler L.A. Lights.
Hopefully, the split will give Nook Media the kind of maneuverability and fresh leadership it so desperately needs to start seriously competing with the likes of Amazon, Apple, and Google.
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