I can't understand some of the comments here saying this is too expensive. Seriously folks, William has put together a great into to Bootstrap for a less than the price of a billable hour and it's too expensive? Sure all the information is out there - if you want to spend a few more billable hours finding it - plus a someone who is just now getting up to speed on Bootstrap - most of the tuts out there are for Bootstrap 2. I think the timing is right. The sample chapter is great. Williams product will hopefully save me many multiples of the purchase price by not wasting time seeking the right information and that is a point lots of people seem to be missing.
Exactly. The complaints are wildly off-base; it doesn't matter whether it costs more or less than a college chemistry textbook; it matters whether or not it will save you more than $60 worth of time.
I mostly write native apps, but happen to have started to make a website for the first time in several years the other day. Having decided to start with Bootstrap, I spent at least an hour chasing down blog posts about using Bootstrap, and then googling to see how things had changed since v2, how people do X and Y, finding conflicting opinions of unknown provenance, etc etc... and was expecting to have to do more of that to finish getting up to speed with Bootstrap (especially since I'm starting with v3 and most of the info on the inter web tubes pertains to v2).
So of course I bought this book. In order to be a worthwhile investment, all it has to do is save me from the hassle having to do that again, one single time. Perusing the site it really looks like it will. Sold!
From an economic standpoint, I don't think that argument holds water. You don't have to support readers the way you do SaaS customers. Is there such a thing as a parasitic reader?
To the author: For a book with plenty of substitutes (as opposed to a presumably specialized SaaS product), I think it's much more likely that the demand curve is extremely elastic, meaning that as price decreases, quantity sold increases much more than enough to compensate for lower total revenue. And since marginal cost of each unit sold is effectively zero, this is all profit.
Add in the fact that since you're early to the party, you could acquire these customers before substitute products hit the market. By the time they do, you could be the established product.
I think Two Scoops of Django [1] got it right. They priced it to move. I bought it as an impulse purchase when they were in beta, and absolutely loved it. I can tell that many, many other people did the same, because I see it cited as an authority all the time on StackOverflow. It's up to "full price" now, but it's still affordable.
+1. Don't change your pricing until the results say you need to. And don't let the commenters here that feel the need to shit on someone's hard work get to you.
I'm on the cusp of buying it - the $59 for the package is probably a bit much, the $29 is alright, but definitely not an impulse buy.
I guess you've done your pricing research - but the consensus, at least on HN, seems to be that $20 is a price most people would just go for, but as you get higher, people really want to know what justifies the higher price. It is a free-market economy, I know, but if you can somehow justify the higher price, then you'll have a lot more sales, and a lot more happy people willing to spread the word.
The fact that most O'Reilly/Pragmatic Programmer/Manning books - which are generally very good quality, well-proofed and technical - are priced around the $20-$30 mark doesn't help things.
Maybe $10 for the book (kindle books about bootstraps are around $5-$10 at Amazon) and $30 for the whole kit? There are so many free templates out there and also 5-10 commercial bootstrap bundled templates for only $10. Although they are not the best designs, but are good enough to learn how it's used and coded with live samples.
I agree with so well documented official documentation, it's going to be hard to sell.
Edit: BTW, there is even Bootstrap 3 video course at lynda.com.
The price is inadequate. I would pay $10, maximum $20 for it, especially taking into account that the subject is well documented in blogs and official documentation.
That's certainly a good point of view. Thanks for the feedback!
I wrote the book exactly to help who finds the official documentation too difficult to grasp as a whole.
I was in that very situation two years ago when I started with Bootstrap, and I thought that people out there will be in the same situation starting with Bootstrap 3 now.
Agreed. The pricing is ridiculous. $79 for an ebook, git repositories (which should be on GitHub in the first place!), and a few Bootstrap themes (many of which are open source) is laughable. There's no way in hell I'm buying this, which is a shame, since I'm in the middle of redesigning my personal website to use Bootstrap 3.
I spent this Thursday and Friday migrating a pretty complicated site from 2 to 3, and boy it is a pain. My word of advice to anyone reading, do not use v3 for a desktop oriented website unless you specifically desire new hybrid grid system. It doesn't have fixed width elements anymore. It doesn't have truly flexible elements either. Form inputs are now screwed up (flexible) by default, lots of things are screwed up, some examples on the official website are still screwed up. It wasn't worth it, it looks and functions worse than it did, even with a bunch of new custom CSS.
I agree it's expensive, there is no way I would pay that price and I would like to read it. I read a lot and it just feels inadequate to me, I never actually paid that much for a single book. The themes on the pic don't look any great either.
It looks interesting but for $30, there's just not enough meta-info for me as to what all it contains. I'm guessing it walks through the construction of the examples mentioned (landing page, blog). But is there an overview of the different classes, and when to use them? Customization ideas? Advice on migrating a site from version 2 to 3?
I believe a table of contents would be a huge help in knowing what it covers. I don't think I will purchase personally (especially at the $40 non-discounted price), but I've wanted a good Bootstrap-specific book for a while. If you had a mailing list for the book I would subscribe, especially to watch for further editions or promos.
How is it spam? The whole point of "Show HN" is showing off products people have made. What could you have possibly expected clicking on a Show HN with ebook in the title?
E.g. a typical search query can be "bootstrap ebook". Currently, you use "ebook" word only once in the smallest font. Your title has neither of this words.
At the very least, change your title to something like "Bootstrap in Practice — ebook and step-by-step examples"
That's true, but I'm not sure I'd really like to be found via that query.
Maybe I just have to do it and live with it :)
On the other hand, I recently searched for "bootstrap 3 grid" and "bootstrap landing" and was amazingly surprised to be on first and second place.
That really means a lot to me, because even with the ebook I wanted to share what I learned and be helpful to someone.
As I read all the comments complaining about the pricing I just can't wait for the recap post coming in a week or two saying how he made 5-10k today :-)
This isn't priced off of how much paper or bits cost people. If it saves a developer even an hour it is easily worth the price of admission.
[+] [-] edbloom|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] veidr|12 years ago|reply
I mostly write native apps, but happen to have started to make a website for the first time in several years the other day. Having decided to start with Bootstrap, I spent at least an hour chasing down blog posts about using Bootstrap, and then googling to see how things had changed since v2, how people do X and Y, finding conflicting opinions of unknown provenance, etc etc... and was expecting to have to do more of that to finish getting up to speed with Bootstrap (especially since I'm starting with v3 and most of the info on the inter web tubes pertains to v2).
So of course I bought this book. In order to be a worthwhile investment, all it has to do is save me from the hassle having to do that again, one single time. Perusing the site it really looks like it will. Sold!
[+] [-] steveklabnik|12 years ago|reply
Well done actually releasing something. Your price is fine. Don't let people get to you.
[+] [-] acjohnson55|12 years ago|reply
To the author: For a book with plenty of substitutes (as opposed to a presumably specialized SaaS product), I think it's much more likely that the demand curve is extremely elastic, meaning that as price decreases, quantity sold increases much more than enough to compensate for lower total revenue. And since marginal cost of each unit sold is effectively zero, this is all profit.
Add in the fact that since you're early to the party, you could acquire these customers before substitute products hit the market. By the time they do, you could be the established product.
I think Two Scoops of Django [1] got it right. They priced it to move. I bought it as an impulse purchase when they were in beta, and absolutely loved it. I can tell that many, many other people did the same, because I see it cited as an authority all the time on StackOverflow. It's up to "full price" now, but it's still affordable.
[1] https://django.2scoops.org/
[+] [-] packetslave|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] victorhooi|12 years ago|reply
I guess you've done your pricing research - but the consensus, at least on HN, seems to be that $20 is a price most people would just go for, but as you get higher, people really want to know what justifies the higher price. It is a free-market economy, I know, but if you can somehow justify the higher price, then you'll have a lot more sales, and a lot more happy people willing to spread the word.
The fact that most O'Reilly/Pragmatic Programmer/Manning books - which are generally very good quality, well-proofed and technical - are priced around the $20-$30 mark doesn't help things.
[+] [-] marveller|12 years ago|reply
I agree with so well documented official documentation, it's going to be hard to sell.
Edit: BTW, there is even Bootstrap 3 video course at lynda.com.
[+] [-] solomatov|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] trumbitta2|12 years ago|reply
I wrote the book exactly to help who finds the official documentation too difficult to grasp as a whole.
I was in that very situation two years ago when I started with Bootstrap, and I thought that people out there will be in the same situation starting with Bootstrap 3 now.
[+] [-] jackmaney|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Demiurge|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] michalu|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] trumbitta2|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lesbaker|12 years ago|reply
I believe a table of contents would be a huge help in knowing what it covers. I don't think I will purchase personally (especially at the $40 non-discounted price), but I've wanted a good Bootstrap-specific book for a while. If you had a mailing list for the book I would subscribe, especially to watch for further editions or promos.
[+] [-] trumbitta2|12 years ago|reply
http://www.williamghelfi.com/blog/2013/09/06/bootstrap-in-pr...
[+] [-] arityfn|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jackmaney|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] victorhooi|12 years ago|reply
If you're still reading this thread, and have any time, I'd really value your advice on this:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18671572/multiple-stacked...
I'm trying to get multiple full width disavowed images going in Bootstrap using your background image CSS, not sure how to make it responsive.
[+] [-] andmarios|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jackmaney|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] clarky07|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jonaslejon|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] trumbitta2|12 years ago|reply
Also, I think the best use of the book is to read it on a PC / Laptop and copy/paste to try the examples as you go :)
But, as always, your mileage may vary!
[+] [-] yurylifshits|12 years ago|reply
E.g. a typical search query can be "bootstrap ebook". Currently, you use "ebook" word only once in the smallest font. Your title has neither of this words.
At the very least, change your title to something like "Bootstrap in Practice — ebook and step-by-step examples"
[+] [-] trumbitta2|12 years ago|reply
Maybe I just have to do it and live with it :)
On the other hand, I recently searched for "bootstrap 3 grid" and "bootstrap landing" and was amazingly surprised to be on first and second place. That really means a lot to me, because even with the ebook I wanted to share what I learned and be helpful to someone.
[+] [-] trumbitta2|12 years ago|reply
Head to the sales page, the form is where you download the sample chapter about the grid system :)
[+] [-] clarky07|12 years ago|reply
This isn't priced off of how much paper or bits cost people. If it saves a developer even an hour it is easily worth the price of admission.
[+] [-] clarky07|12 years ago|reply