BookStream, New Wholesaler, Comes on Stream This Year
BookStream, a new wholesaler that will focus on supplying independent
bookstores in the northeast, plans to open in the "late fall." The company
has signed a lease for a 100,000-sq.-ft. space in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.,
which is currently being remodeled. Initially BookStream will stock
40,000 titles but will expand the title base as business growth permits.
The company aims to help level the playing field for indies, as its president, Jack Herr, a former Random House distribution executive, put it when speaking with Shelf Awareness. "We will offer 42% off retail for every bookseller in the region, with no minimums on orders or volumes. We also won't negotiate better deals with some customers that other customers would in effect subsidize." The company will offer free freight on orders $150 retail or above. "It's an excellent discount for most booksellers," Herr commented.
BookStream aims to run a "lean and mean" operation, attract customers via its flat-rate policies and get a "slight edge in costs relative to competitors" because of a strong computer system. In several years, Herr plans to develop technology that will allow the company to make "major cost reductions," help the wholesaler ship efficiently ones and twos from an array of titles in shipments of all sizes and do such things as "make it easier for customers to put orders on shelves. Our motivation for going into business drive from the idea that we can achieve technological and economic benefits to our customers and to the company."
Herr said that he has been working on the project since 1998, and had finally received sufficient funding to open. Rich Stone, a former banking executive, is the CFO.
Other personnel include v-p, sales and marketing, Maury McClelland, who until recently was head of sales at Koen Book Distributors; buyer Ken Abramson, also from Koen; and another buyer who is currently a bookseller.
Herr acknowledged that the company's timing, following the closing of Koen this summer, is "serendipitous," but added, "We couldn't have anticipated Koen going out of business. We've been planning this for a long while, and it just happened to coincide." He continued, "I know Bob [Koen], and I'm saddened he didn't make it." Herr pointed out that Koen's business with booksellers had always been solid.
BookStream has been meeting with publishers this week and talking with some booksellers, whose response, he said, was "very positive."
Interested booksellers should contact Maury McClelland at 908-789-2596 or Maury_M@hotmail.com.
The company aims to help level the playing field for indies, as its president, Jack Herr, a former Random House distribution executive, put it when speaking with Shelf Awareness. "We will offer 42% off retail for every bookseller in the region, with no minimums on orders or volumes. We also won't negotiate better deals with some customers that other customers would in effect subsidize." The company will offer free freight on orders $150 retail or above. "It's an excellent discount for most booksellers," Herr commented.
BookStream aims to run a "lean and mean" operation, attract customers via its flat-rate policies and get a "slight edge in costs relative to competitors" because of a strong computer system. In several years, Herr plans to develop technology that will allow the company to make "major cost reductions," help the wholesaler ship efficiently ones and twos from an array of titles in shipments of all sizes and do such things as "make it easier for customers to put orders on shelves. Our motivation for going into business drive from the idea that we can achieve technological and economic benefits to our customers and to the company."
Herr said that he has been working on the project since 1998, and had finally received sufficient funding to open. Rich Stone, a former banking executive, is the CFO.
Other personnel include v-p, sales and marketing, Maury McClelland, who until recently was head of sales at Koen Book Distributors; buyer Ken Abramson, also from Koen; and another buyer who is currently a bookseller.
Herr acknowledged that the company's timing, following the closing of Koen this summer, is "serendipitous," but added, "We couldn't have anticipated Koen going out of business. We've been planning this for a long while, and it just happened to coincide." He continued, "I know Bob [Koen], and I'm saddened he didn't make it." Herr pointed out that Koen's business with booksellers had always been solid.
BookStream has been meeting with publishers this week and talking with some booksellers, whose response, he said, was "very positive."
Interested booksellers should contact Maury McClelland at 908-789-2596 or Maury_M@hotmail.com.