Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - The difference between newsstand and traditional bookstore
The difference between newsstand and traditional bookstore
Newsstand refers to a small mobile house that sells and buys newspapers and magazines in public places. Previously, there was a post office to manage production, and now it has developed into an urban public facility, and its function and appearance have undergone major changes. Newsstands can buy daily necessities such as newspapers, drinks and snacks, and most newsstands have public telephones to use.
Traditional bookstores have a wide range of contacts, are familiar with the market, master all kinds of complicated sales situations, and are sensitive to whether the variety, quantity, price and time of published books can meet the market demand. They can feed this information back to the publishing department in time to make the books published by the publishing house more marketable.
In fact, the main difference between the two is that one is the product of rapid development, lacking the precipitation of books, and the other is the culture of historical precipitation. Every stroke is a statement of history.
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