In a publishing environment increasingly shaped by platform innovation, AI-driven curation, and evolving institutional procurement strategies, Simba Information’s Professional & Scholarly E-Book Market Report 2025–2029 offers an essential benchmark for decision-makers across the global publishing landscape. This comprehensive assessment examines the state of the professional e-book market, with in-depth forecasting and strategic insight grounded in quantitative modeling and qualitative publisher analysis.
The report evaluates performance and projections across five core subject categories - scientific & technical, medical, legal, business, and social sciences & humanities - each marked by unique usage patterns, content demands, and digital adoption timelines. Scientific and medical e-books, for example, have seen accelerated integration into university systems and professional training platforms, while legal and business titles remain deeply tied to subscription-based services and institutional licenses.
Leading publishers such as RELX, Springer Nature, Wiley, Thomson Reuters, Informa, McGraw Hill, and Wolters Kluwer are adapting to these shifts through bundled licensing, analytics-enhanced reading environments, and AI-supported user interfaces. The report provides detailed analysis of financial performance across both direct publisher sales and aggregator-facilitated access, noting clear distinctions between transactional, perpetual, and subscription-based pricing models.
Emerging themes include the rapid expansion of AI-enhanced workflow platforms, which embed e-book content into real-time decision support tools used in clinical, legal, and academic settings. Institutional e-book bundles are also evolving, with libraries increasingly favoring cost-transparent models such as evidence-based acquisition (EBA), demand-driven acquisition (DDA), inclusive access, and consortia licensing agreements.
Geographic market differentiation is another critical focus: while North America remains the dominant revenue generator, the Asia-Pacific region is forecast to see the strongest growth due to rising R&D investment, expanding university infrastructure, and increased medical publishing demand. European markets continue to invest in open access and subscription hybrids, while currency volatility and regional mergers (including the De Gruyter–Brill deal) impact both pricing and access.
The report also includes a detailed breakdown of e-book title output and digital format adoption, alongside market consolidation trends and innovation case studies. Whether evaluating product strategy, planning cross-market entry, or responding to evolving institutional needs, this report offers actionable insights for publishers, platform developers, librarians, and investors alike.
Scholarly & Professional E-Book Publishing Report Methodology
Sources of Information
Primary Research
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Interviews of executives in the industry.
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Trade associations, such as Association of American Publishers (AAP), and country-specific trade associations.
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Government data sources in the US and worldwide, i.e., US Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
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Specialized industry databases, such as Books in Print and Ulrichs.
Secondary Research
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Business, publishing, library, and information industry trade publications.
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Annual reports and SEC filings.
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Company websites and marketing materials.
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Presentations made by publishers to investors, earnings calls.
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Company press releases.
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Analyst conferences and reports.
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Industry surveys.
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Industry conference proceedings and events.
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Blogs, webinars, and podcasts by industry experts.
Methodology for Estimates and Forecasts
When reported information is not available, Simba develops estimates using the preceding sources. Other inputs include historical trends, general guidance provided by executives, scale of competitors, estimates of relative sizing based on customer observations, number of titles, library spending studies, trade press, and scope and quality of online presence.
Estimates of sales and projections are based on the classification of revenue into component categories and geographic splits. Guidance from analysts, annual reports, 10-Ks, and industry observers is applied. Currency movements and M&A activity are also considered.
Simba’s forecast methodology is similar to its approach to building global market size numbers. Trends and insights are reviewed with industry experts and research is conducted in secondary sources, analyst reports and industry studies
The principal drivers of the forecasts are extrapolation of recent trends, M&A activity, global and national GDP forecasts, industry forecasts, company forecasts, and publishing trends. All Simba estimates in this report are marked (E) and all projections are marked (P).