MagazinesUSA.com puts a tremendous price tag on the value of the printed word and bucks at the notion that technology will eliminate magazines and books in their hard-cop...
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MagazinesUSA.com puts a tremendous price tag on the value of the printed word and bucks at the notion that technology will eliminate magazines and books in their hard-copy form.
That aforementioned price tag is one that is riddled with discounts on every magazine or book you could want. Gone are the days of high-priced subscriptions to such periodicals as Reader’s Digest, Time, Details or People Magazine. In its place is a company like MagazinesUSA.com, which eliminates the overhead and instead delivers all of your favorites for around $1 per issue in most cases.
As far as magazines go, MagazinesUSA.com allows customers to browse by a specific title or under a particular subject heading (i.e. sports, leisure, cooking, etc.). MagazinesUSA.com, with its price points being what they are, asks a very simple question: Why pay $3-4 news stand prices on one magazine, when $10 can get you 10 issues?
That question usually is met with resounding approval from a customer base that still loves to hold an actual magazine or book in their hand – instead of option for an anti-glare reader or high-end tablet. Those options certainly have their place and are growing significantly, which explains the price paradigm shifting to the hard-copy versions being less expensive.
In addition to magazines, MagazinesUSA.com goes above and beyond its name and features an array of award-winning books but equally famous authors, along with periodicals from around the world, with the more popular ones being Variety and Billboard.
If $1 per issue isn’t enough to satiate your appetite to buy or reinvigorate your reader prowess, MagazinesUSA.com also matches prices and offers a section on its web site that suggests remarkable gift ideas.
Cheap pricing and a wide selection is a win-win in any business model and MagazineUSA.com subscribes to that formula on a daily basis, thus keeping the notion of reading magazines, books and periodicals surprisingly relevant.