The changing ways Americans read books
- Sara Fischer, author of Axios Media Trends

Photo: Jan Woitas/picture alliance via Getty Images
In the era of on-demand video, consumers are still looking to engage with feature stories, mostly by listening to audiobooks, or in some cases by reading them through an app.
Why it matters: Like any traditional medium, books have needed to evolve in the digital era to meet consumers where they are. The popularity of books in digital formats speaks to a willingness from users to engage with written stories, even when the options are endless for them to consume videos or music more passively.
Driving the news: Scribd, one of the first digital subscription reading services (think of it like a digital library), announced Monday that it that had more than one million paying subscribers globally.
- It launched its unlimited subscription plan last year for $8.99 a month and says it has since grown its subscriptions over 40% year over year.
- It's seen an 100% increase in audio users over the course of 2018, with more people on its platform listening to audiobooks than ever before.
Audiobooks is the fastest-growing sector within the book publishing industry, according to The Association of American Publishers.
- The latest consumer study conducted by Edison Research for the Audio Publishers Association estimates that audiobook sales have experienced double-digit growth for six years year-over-year.
- Amazon-owned Audible, unsurprisingly, is driving a large chunk of that growth. It's one of the biggest producers and retailers of audiobooks via a subscription service, with over 400,000 titles. The company says members downloaded almost 2 billion hours of content in 2016.
- Amazon-rival Google launched an audiobook product last year called Google Play Books that does not require a subscription.
Yes, but: The rise of audiobooks could be eating at the growth of eBooks, which decreased in sales by 4.8% in the first six months of 2018, per the American Publishers Association.
- Still, the number of Americans who say they read eBooks has slightly increased over the past six years, according to the Pew Research Center.
- And very few Americans say they consume digital books exclusively. Most digital book consumers say they also read regular books, per Pew.
1 fun thing: Although not derived from books necessarily, storytelling chat apps are also growing. Chat-fiction apps like "Yarn" and "Hooked" have grown in popularity over the past few years, particularly amongst teen audiences.
Go deeper: Americans still read books