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Review: PaperBackSwap.com

Wed Sep 19, 2007 3:19 PM EDT
entertainment, books, internet, web, book, trade, trading, web-2-0, swap, paperbacks, swapping, paperbackswap, paperbackswap-com
By Michael Sautter
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If you like to read then you probably have some books lying around that you do not know what to do with. Wouldn't it be nice if you could trade them for some other books that you want? That is exactly what you can do with PaperBackSwap.com and it is a free service.

I have been using PaperBackSwap.com (PBS) since April and I have received 20 books. There are over 1,500,000 books available at PBS with over 325,000 unique book titles. So how does it work and is it really free?

PaperBackSwap is easy to use. After you create an account, you post the books that you want to swap. They can be hardback books as well as paperback books (audio books are fine too). You get a credit for each book of yours that someone else on PBS requests and receives. You do not get credit until the requester confirms that he/she has received the book. You then can use your credits to request books that you want. You get three free credits for the first nine books that you post.

Books can be posted by manually entering ISBN book numbers or by uploading a file of ISBNs. When someone requests a book of yours, you print out an address label, wrap the book and take the book to the post office. PBS has instructions and tips for packing books. You have to pay for shipping. Books are sent using the US Post Office's Media Mail rate, most books cost less than $3.00 to mail this way. There are no fees to PBS, so in that sense it is free. You just pay for shipping books, when you receive books you pay nothing.

The PBS graphical interface is intuitive and easy to use. You can find books by searching for titles, authors or ISBNs. You can also browse for books by subject. Books of all types and subjest matter are listed. If a book that you want is not available then you can add it to your Wish List and you will be notified by email when it becomes available. You then have two days to request the book before it is offered to someone else. If a book that you are interested in is available but you are not sure that you want it right away then you can add it to your Reminder List. Unavailable books can also be added to the Reminder List. The Wish List has a limit of 200 books.

So all this sounds great but how does PBS pay the bills and maybe make a little money for their effort? If there is an available book that you want but you do not have any credits then you can buy credits. They cost $3.45 for each book with a minimum purchase of 3 credits. There is also the option to buy the book new from Amazon for which I am sure PBS gets something in return. If you do not want to wait for your books to be received to get credit for them then PBS has a Quick Credit option. With Quick Credit you pay 45 cents per shipping label to PBS and then the mailing label that you print will have a Delivery Confirmation (DC) bar code on it. This code is scanned at the post office when you mail the book and PBS then gives you the credit, you do not have to wait for the book to be delivered. Note that you still have to pay for the postage at the post office, only the DC is pre-paid.

Give PaperBackSwap.com a try if you like to read. It is a well thought out system that keeps both sides well informed throughout transactions.

- - - - -

If you found this article useful and are going to register an account at PaperBackSwap.com then please consider me as your referrer. My PBS Nickname is sautter . When you post nine books then I will get a PBS credit. What's in it for you? I promise to check out your books and just maybe I will request one of them. I can't promise that I will want one of your books, but I am interested in a variety of subjects.

You can check out my PaperBackSwap profile right here: http://sautter.paperbackswap.com .

At PBS: How to Swap Your Books .

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  • Public Discussion (8)
Michael Sautter

Anyone else a member at PaperBackSwap? I could use some buddies.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Wed Sep 19, 2007 4:51 PM EDT
Michael Sautter

I just got this in my email this morning from PaperBackSwap.com:

Members who join after October 5th will get 2 startup credits for the first 10 books they post. We believe that this small change will increase the viability of PaperBackSwap.

This means that if you know of anyone who has been thinking about signing up but hasn't, tell them to do it now!

Join now and you can get 3 credits for 9 books posted.

  • 2 votes
#1.1 - Thu Sep 20, 2007 9:49 AM EDT
Reply
Elliot Vos

Interesting.

It's a very similar concept to lala.com, except that at lala you pay lala for receiving CDs (shipping them out is free, you use their packaging) and you can't get "credits" for anything other than shipping CDs (though your first CD you can get without shipping any).

I'm curious how this whole buying extra credits thing works. Doesn't that mean that some people end up shipping a lot more than they receive? Isn't that a bit unfair, especially since they have to pay to ship the books?

  • 2 votes
Reply#2 - Wed Sep 19, 2007 6:46 PM EDT
Michael Sautter

By 'extra credits' I assume that you mean the buying of credits. An example, if you buy credits to use on PaperBackSwap and request a book of mine then I still get a credit for sending the book to you. Neither of us ships more than he receives although you are receiving more than you ship.

The people behind PaperBackSwap also have a web site to swap CDs at SwapACD.com . Here you pay a small fee to receive a CD (I think it's about 50 cents). I haven't tried it so I can't really say how good it is.

  • 1 vote
#2.1 - Wed Sep 19, 2007 7:22 PM EDT
Elliot Vos

Neither of us ships more than he receives although you are receiving more than you ship.

That doesn't work mathematically. Someone is shipping more than they are receiving.

  • 3 votes
#2.2 - Wed Sep 19, 2007 7:34 PM EDT
Michael Sautter

I think when you buy a credit PBS creates one just for you.
You are not taking away anyone's credit.
Does that help your math?

  • 1 vote
#2.3 - Wed Sep 19, 2007 8:48 PM EDT
Elliot Vos

No, the credits work out fine, but the shipping doesn't.

If I've received more books than I've shipped, then someone must have shipped more than he's received. Here's why:

Every shipment has a shipper and a receiver.
Begin scenario with no shipments.
Person A ships a book to Person B.
Person C ships a book to Person A.
Person B ships a book to Person C.
Person B buys more credits.
Person C ships a book to Person B.

Even if Person B got their second book from Person D, Persons C and D would have shipped more than they received. Yes, when you ship a book, you get a credit, so you are eligible to receive another book, but that will only happen if someone ships a book to you, thus perpetuating the need for people to ship. If credits are thrown into the system without shipments being made, the imbalance of shipping to receiving is going to mount up to more than just one book for any individual, because people will be receiving more than one book more than they ship.

  • 2 votes
#2.4 - Wed Sep 19, 2007 9:36 PM EDT
Elliot Vos

Persons C and D would have shipped more than they received.

That's what you get for going back and changing your example. That was supposed to be "Person D would still have shipped more than he received."

    #2.5 - Wed Sep 19, 2007 9:37 PM EDT
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