In times past, campus bookstores could count on student traffic and revenue since there really were no alternatives within reasonable reach. Students could only buy textbooks and most course materials at the campus store. The Internet has changed all that for many captive markets, as it has for this one. Dogged by new competition within easy reach of students—even from within the dorm—campus stores have been undergoing massive changes in recent years.
Rapidly increasing textbook prices are driving students online to find better deals, taking associated revenue to other retailers. Despite this online pressure, campus stores can count on some level of sustained business by students who choose not to risk the complications of purchasing the wrong textbook or course materials through another merchant. Indeed, the ability to return these to the campus store and obtain other textbooks if they change courses within a few days keeps some students coming back. Even so, the stark budget of most students presents strong motivation to find lower-cost alternatives.
The textbook industry is showing cracks due this and other pressures. The June 2013 Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing of Cengage Learning, a textbook publishing company, may be evidence that the limits of traditional textbook pricing have been reached. Free learning materials through movements such as open educational resources (OER), the Open Course Library, and OpenStax College all compound the revenue evaporation from textbook markets.
Striving to replace the lost revenue, many bookstores have introduced new merchandise categories and engaged vendors to provide campus-branded online stores of their own.



