Just saw this on Twitter - Lexham Press books being offered for sale on Kindle:
http://www.lexhampress.com/bible-study-flash-sale?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_content=bsmflashsale&utm_campaign=lexhampress2016q1
Thank you Floyd but this just bugs me... they are selling their resources in other places for cheap but are neglecting to sell them at the same rate on Logos. Not sure what gives there
I agree - but still thought others might be interested. It might be a marketing test to judge interest in Kindle books. I know FL has done similar things in the past to judge interest in Twitter and Facebook.
... this just bugs me... they are selling their resources in other places for cheap but are neglecting to sell them at the same rate on Logos. Not sure what gives there
If I thought there was no difference (or no 'extra value') in a book in the Logos environment vs the same book from Amazon, and Amazon was selling it for $0.99 and Logos for $whatever+, I'd simply buy it at Amazon.
The SINGLE "value added" feature for me has always been, and will always be, a unified search library. Even Vyrso books bring that to the table, albeit with lesser capabilities.
My buying habits are currently:
Most fiction, history, business, biographies, etc. are purchased through Kindle (including ones sold in Vyrso).
Most "Christian Living" and "Theological" books are purchased through Vyrso or Logos, unless 1) it isn't sold by Faithlife OR 2) the cost is greatly different, using price comparison websites tells me it is a good and infrequent deal, and I think the book worth purchasing twice.
using price comparison websites tells me it is a good and infrequent deal
Can you share that site?
using price comparison websites tells me it is a good and infrequent deal Can you share that site?
My buying habits are currently: Most fiction, history, business, biographies, etc. are purchased through Kindle (including ones sold in Vyrso). Most "Christian Living" and "Theological" books are purchased through Vyrso or Logos, unless 1) it isn't sold by Faithlife OR 2) the cost is greatly different, using price comparison websites tells me it is a good and infrequent deal, and I think the book worth purchasing twice.
My buying habits are very similar. One thing I've learned from buying ebooks from Amazon through the years (and using eReaderIQ!) is that almost everything eventually goes down to $2.99 or less (or free!) at some point.
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