The future of the book is here
May 24, 2012 at 1:45 am | Posted in Conferences, Publishing | Leave a commentby Patricia Vaccarino, organizer of Seattle Book Summit
I picked up a traditional hardcover book on education, but when I opened the book (Creating Innovators by Tony Wagner) it was smart phone friendly and full of QR codes that could dynamically link to video, audio, website and other material. The book’s author noted that he wanted his book to be a blend of the best of 15th century technology-the printed page – with the best of 21st century technology, QR codes to Facebook fan pages.
Authors now have the option to have social media apps connected to their eBooks so their fans can get updates about their favorite characters and build community on Facebook. If you are a blockbuster author, you can have a music video embedded in your eBook where the characters come to life in a full-scale movie production.
As the traditional publishing industry continues to meltdown, some unlikely new players are jumping into the game and changing the playing field. Esquire Magazine just announced they will publish boy books, a new series of eBooks called “Fiction for Men.”
NBC News has launched into book publishing to capitalize on the growth in eBook reading devices and tablets, coupled with the low cost of eBook production. Their new move is also intended to repurpose their backlog of over one million hours of video content.
Everyone is jumping into the publishing pool, which is a scary prospect. After all, when everyone else is in the pool it can get awfully crowded and there is no room to swim. It usually means it’s time to get out.
Authors of today will now have to decide not only how they will publish, but also if they want to be tech-friendly and create interactive books. Authors will have to think about whether they want to take product placement to a new level by mentioning brands, such as Prada, Pepsi or Target. An app from eBooks to the brands’ shopping cart will result in another revenue stream for authors and publishers. Authors will have to consider that if they cash-in and allow their books to become advertising vehicles that they could realize more money from advertising revenue than they would from the actual sales of the books themselves. And finally, authors can still choose to be pure artists, focusing on the craft of being a wordsmith, and write plain old beautifully bound books that are meant to be treasured through the ages.
Make it your business to know why the future of the book is already here. Join us for the Seattle Book Summit on Friday, June 1st, 11:30 am to 6:30 pm, Art Institute of Seattle, South Campus, 2323 Elliot Avenue, Seattle, WA 98121. The focus of this event is on the business side of publishing. We have over 20 highly credentialed panelists and our keynote speaker is NYC’s top comedian and author Wali Collins. For complete details check out our Facebook PR for People fan page or our Seattle Book Summit event page on Facebook.
Registration for this event is available on EventBrite — check for BPNW discount too.
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Patricia Vaccarino has over 20 years’ expertise working with a wide range of national and international clients, in all areas of public relations. We thank her for allowing the reprint of this article. If you would like to submit an article to Book Publishers Northwest, please email bpnwnew at aol.com.
June meeting: a sampling of IBPA Pub U
May 21, 2012 at 2:24 am | Posted in IBPA, meeting, Publishing | Leave a commentOur IBPA Pub U scholar Heidi Marks returned from San Francisco with the “hot buzz” from this industry gathering. She’ll provide a “taste sampler” of the advice from industry leaders on Amazon selling, social media, e-book production at Smashwords, taking advantage of industry changes from Dan Poyntner, blogging to create traffic, publicity pointers from “The Publicity Hound” Joan Stewart, and connecting to your readers on Goodreads.
Marks is one of the owners of Arago Press, a new publisher based in Seattle. Arago publishes titles that speak to the joy of living and expansion of mind to educate, empower, and inspire. Their first title, Your Magical Soul: How Science and Psychic Phenomena Paint a New Picture of the Self and Reality by Jeffrey A. Marks, is a finalist for the 2012 IBPA Benjamin Franklin Book Award in Body/Mind/Spirit and received the 2012 Nautilus Silver Book Award in the Science and Cosmology category.
IBPA board member and past BPNW scholar Mary Ann Kohl also is expected to join this meeting to discuss some of the programs that IBPA offers independent and small press publishers year round.
Book Publishers Northwest June 21 meeting takes place from 4 pm to 6 pm at Good Shepherd Center, room 202, 4649 Sunnyside Avenue North, Seattle, WA 98103. All are welcome. Time is reserved after the formal meeting ends for networking. We encourage members to share news about current projects as well. Feel free to bring your latest book to show off.
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Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA)
The Independent Book Publishers Association is the largest not-for-profit trade association representing independent book publishers with more than 3,000 members. Founded in 1983, it serves book publishers located in the United States and around the world. Book Publishers Northwest is a regional affiliate of IBPA and its members may join IBPA at a discount.
IBPA provides cooperative marketing programs, education and advocacy within the publishing industry including the annual Pub U. Affiliate groups like BPNW are offered one complete scholarship annually to help its members attend and BPNW members have taken advantage of this program since it began.
A simple plan for publishing success
April 22, 2012 at 10:40 pm | Posted in PNBA, Publishing | Leave a commentby Thom Chambliss
Reproduced with permission from Pacific Northwest Book Association Footnotes. Chambliss will be the speaker at the May 17 meeting of Book Publishers Northwest.
With the lawsuit filed against several of the largest publishers in the country challenging the way in which those publishers decided to adopt the “agency plan” for selling their eBooks, all kinds of people are speaking out about the demise of publishing as we know it. Maybe they’re right. My guess is, though, that at least some publishers will figure it out, will go their own way, and will eventually adopt agency plans–not just for eBooks, but for all of their new releases, new paperback editions, and new eBooks.
Why would publishers set minimum prices for their books? Simply to accommodate those authors who want to protect the value of their work, and in doing so, to protect the broadest and deepest ways of distributing books in a free market. Let me explain.
The movie industry has dealt with the issue of digitized product now for more than twenty years; perhaps the book industry can learn from its model. The movie producers, comparable to our publishers, decided early on NOT to release their movies directly to video at the same time as they released the films to theaters. Why? To maintain the value of their long and expensive work. Any movie released “direct to video,” without first being run in theaters, was assumed to be so bad that it would lose money in theaters. Over the years, the film industry has established a logical, progressive marketing pattern for their products: first a film is released only to theaters, only at full price. Then the movie is released to video at full retail, and simultaneously to pay TV at premium prices. Finally, usually after a few years, the film is sold to network TV and the DVD is re-priced for mass-market sales.
What is the lesson for publishers? I believe that many publishers of quality books will soon begin selling their front list on an agency plan, meaning the book’s price will be set by the publisher, NOT by the retailer, so that those people who most want the book will pay a premium for it. This would allow ALL retailers to sell the books competitively; no one vendor would be able to discount the book lower than its competitors. Perhaps, for many front-list titles, sales quantities would initially decline, because an author’s book would not be available anywhere at massive discounts. However, after a reasonable time set by the publisher, that hardcover edition could be sold at discount by whomever. If the book had been well-received by the book buying public at its premium price, the newly discounted copies might see massively increased sales. Then, with the release of the first trade paperback edition, another wave of marketing would take place, dictated by the success of the total premium and discount-priced sales of the hardcover, and sold initially only at the premium paper price, under agency pricing. Again, within a time adopted by the publisher, those editions would eventually be sold at discount. At that point, the eBook versions would be released, many initially sold at publisher-set agency prices, before eventually being offered at discounts set by the retailers.
What advantages would such a system offer? Basically, the same advantages that it offers to the movie industry: the publisher maintains its income and control over the initial release of the product, provides itself with upcoming opportunities to re-market each new edition of the book, and assures the author that he or she will continue to provide the editorial and promotional opportunities, and income, that direct-to-eBook releases don’t offer.
Some people complain that publishers should release their books at the lowest possible price, because the public shouldn’t have to pay a “premium.” Are these same people complaining that the movie studios should release all of their new movies to DVD, at the lowest price based on the cost of transferring the data to disc? If not, why not? Probably because they know that that model would be disaster for the movie producer, and would mean that no one would be able to produce movies at a profit. That is the dilemma facing publishers today: they cannot make a profit by releasing their new books direct to eBook at the lowest cost of data transfer. Some of us respond to that with “Well, duh.”
God forbid that I, or anyone else, should tell publishers what to do. I mean this as a suggestion that publishers look at what is working and why. Yes, if publishers moved to agency plan sales for all of their “new releases,” in every format, it would mean that independent retail bookstores could again compete on the sale of books, and a lot more of them might survive in such a rejuvenated industry. And, yes, I work for some of those book retailers, so I have a vested interest. But I also believe that publishers, big and small, provide enormous benefit to their authors and thus to the public. Almost every book they publish is chosen not so much with profit in mind, but to share ideas, often at a loss.
Publishers pay up front to acquire books; invest in editorial processes to improve them and make them even better than their first drafts; invest in sometimes wide and sweeping marketing and promotional programs to help the books reach their widest audience; and print, package and distribute the books, all in the hope that they will make enough money to pay for the investment. And, if they are enormously lucky and successful, additional profits may just help pay for the publishing of other books that might not ever make back the expenses. That is the nature of publishing.
If Amazon, or any one discounter, ever becomes the only source of publishing and distribution of books in this country, free speech will become a lost dream. I encourage my publisher friends to think for themselves, and to save themselves while they still can.
Edwards Brothers Malloy supports World Book Night
April 21, 2012 at 10:15 pm | Posted in Member News, Publishing | Leave a commentEdwards Brothers Malloy supported World Book Night by donating prepress services, printing, and binding for 35,000 copies of Friday Night Lights by H.G. Bissinger, published by Da Capo Press, a member of the Perseus Books Group. The books will be given away during World Book Night on April 23.
“We’re pleased to support the efforts of such an ambitious project that promotes a love of books and reading,” said John Edwards, President and CEO of Edwards Brothers Malloy. “The fact that volunteers will be attempting to reach new or light readers, who might be encouraged to go on to become lifelong lovers of books, is an especially important aspect of the program. We have long supported literacy efforts in our community and are pleased to be a part of this initiative.”
World Book Night was introduced in 2011 in the United Kingdom and Ireland to bring attention to books for adult readers and is spread to the United States this year. A half million donated books will be distributed by volunteers to communities with reluctant readers or lacking access to books.
Formed in 2012 by the merger of Edwards Brothers, Inc. (est. 1893) and Malloy Incorporated (est. 1960), Edwards Brothers Malloy is the sixth largest book and journal manufacturer in the United States and has been a service member of Book Publishers Northwest for many years.
ASI seeking nonfiction author to open meeting
March 4, 2012 at 3:39 am | Posted in Publishing | Leave a commentFrom Book Publishers Northwest’s e-mail:
Hello, you probably recall my inquiry from last summer, when I was looking for a speaker for the Pacific Northwest chapter of ASI (American Society for Indexing) fall meeting.
With your help in getting the word out, we were able to land James H. Keeffe III, the author of Two Gold Coins and a Prayer, as he helped to kick off our fall meeting in Vancouver….and it went absolutely spectacular! You can read about his presentation at this blog post – More Than Simply Gold Coins and a Prayer: Stories of heroism and lessons from history by James H. Keeffe III at the 2011 PNW-ASI fall meeting. I was happy to give a callout and thank you to Book Publishers Northwest and Keeffe’s agent.
So….I was wondering if you could post another inquiry for an author to kick off our late spring meeting, which takes place on Saturday, June 9, at Bastyr University….it’s a bit closer to Seattle this time!
As I mentioned before, we are interested in having a nonfiction author kick off the meeting, to speak to the room for 20 to 30 minutes. Someone who has some prior experience either working with an indexer, or has written their own index is preferred….or simply some entertaining thoughts about indexes or indexers in general would be wonderful! It is also preferred that the author be promoting a book release, and might know a bit about working a room with some anecdotes and a little humor.
The author is invited to stay for our meeting all day to learn about aspects of indexing; the day’s food fare includes a continental breakfast, a lunch at Bastyr University’s renowned organic cafeteria, and afternoon snacks. Also, as a return for the author’s valuable time, we can offer exposure; the engagement will garner the author’s book online references, acknowledgement, discussion, and cross-pollination from various online media such as Twitter, blogs, and the PNW-ASI e-newsletter.
This meeting will take place June 9 at Bastyr University in Kirkland, WA.
I can be contacted at Paul@TopHatWordandIndex.com, and am happy to work with the author directly or their agent to explain further details. Thank you kindly and let me know if you have any questions.
Paul R. Sweum,
Indexer | Technical Writer | Editor | Owner
Vice-President, Pacific Northwest chapter of the American Society for Indexing (ASI) Marketing Liaison for the ASI Digital Trends Task Force
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www.TopHatWordandIndex.com
Sharply dressed documents
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Changing face of publishing: epub and print-on-demand
February 13, 2011 at 9:01 am | Posted in Publishing | Leave a commentAt the MWA dinner Feb. 12, Book Publishers Northwest web editor Rosemary Jones spoke about the changing face of publishing in the Northwest — and across the United States.
She also talked about many of the resources now available for publishers and writers interested in expanding into e-books or print-on-demand. Notes from her talk can be found on her website.
Changing face of Northwest publishing
February 6, 2011 at 11:58 pm | Posted in Publishing | Leave a commentRegional and small press publishing is exploding. More writers are inspired to work with local publishers and some are even venturing into the business themselves. Rosemary Jones will talk about her experiences working with publishers located in the Northwest as well as her role as web editor for Book Publishers Northwest at the Feb. 12 meeting of Mystery Writers of America.
See MWA Northwest website for registration information: reservations required.
First meeting of 2011: Foreign rights
January 9, 2011 at 8:58 pm | Posted in meeting, Publishing | Leave a commentBook Publishers Northwest’s first meeting of 2011 delves into the income potential of foreign rights. Our guest speaker will be Foreign Rights Publishing Consultant Bob Erdmann, who will be interviewed via Skype by BPNW board president Tom Masters. This meeting takes place January 20 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., Room 223, Good Shepherd Center, 4649 Sunnyside N. [please note new room number for this meeting]
Erdmann’s distinguished career spans five decades and has included all phases of book and magazine publishing. More than half of his long tenure in the publishing industry has been as consultant to literally hundreds of publishers of every size and shape. His clients have ranged from small, one-book, self-published authors to very large Fortune 500 companies.
After working in senior management, executive capacities with well-respected high-profile publishing companies such as Macmillan Publishing, Peteresen Publishing, Pfeiffer & Company, and World Publications, Erdmann decided to share his successful publishing experience by opening his consultancy in 1978.
As a two-term president of the Independent Book Publishers Association-IBPA (Formerly Publishers Marketing Association-PMA), Erdmann played major roles in many of the successful programs that IBPA members enjoy today. He created IBPA’s Trade Distribution Program, which has resulted in more than $50,000,000 in sales for its members. He was also instrumental in guiding the organization onto the successful track that its Publishing University at BookExpoAmerica enjoys today. He has been an invited speaker at many publishing events throughout the world, and is the author of countless articles in several respected industry publications.
The environmental impact of e-publishing
August 15, 2010 at 5:34 pm | Posted in Ebooks, Publishing | 2 CommentsThe jury’s still out on the environmental impact of e-books according to Raz Godelnik, co-founder and CEO of Eco-Libris. In the article “Is E-Reading Really Greener?” published in the Independent Book Publishers Association’s (IBPA) monthly journal, the Independent, Godelnik reviews the environmental issues surrounding e-publishing.
“Turning conventional wisdom on its ear is one of the independent publishing community’s greatest strengths, and Mr. Godelnik’s article does just that,” comments IBPA president Florrie Binford Kichler. “In keeping with IBPA’s educational mission, the association is proud to introduce a new perspective on the sustainability of book industry practices.”
According to Godelnik, “Consumer electronics are notorious for containing a variety of toxic materials. Some companies are more transparent than others and make it relatively clear that their e-reader devices are free of toxic materials. But e-readers are something of an unknown variable.” In fact, he notes, “except for Apple, none of the companies that sell e-readers makes environmental data available.”
In addition, the environmental impact of electronic waste is growing. Although many companies such as Apple and Amazon have recycling programs, as Godelnik points out in his article, “according to the EPA, Americans generated about 3 million tons of electronic waste in 2007. Out of all that waste, only 13.6 percent was recycled. The rest ended up in landfills or incinerators, even though, as the Electronic TakeBack Coalition explains, the hazardous chemicals in them can leach out of landfills into groundwater and streams.”
In comparing the Apple iPad (used just as an e-reader) to paper-between-covers, Godelnik says that in terms of carbon footprint alone, “the iPad becomes a more environmental friendly alternative option for book reading once its user reads the eighteenth book on it.”
Physical books also are becoming more eco-friendly as publishers learn that greener practices benefit the environment and business and Godelnik believes that “the future of the book industry will probably include greener versions of both physical and electronic books. And, with more pressure from consumers, companies may not only start revealing all the information about their e-readers, but actually compete on which one has the greenest e-reader to offer.”
Founded in 1983, the Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA) is the largest not-for-profit trade organization for publishers in the United States, serving more than 3000 book publishers of all sizes. IBPA’s mission is to help independent publishers market their titles, to provide education on all aspects of publishing, and to act as an advocate for publishers’ rights.
Raz Godelnik is the co-founder and CEO of Eco-Libris. Founded in 2007, Eco-Libris is a green company working with publishers, authors, bookstores, and book lovers worldwide to green up the book industry by promoting the adoption of green practices, balancing out books by planting trees, and supporting green books. For more information, go to www.ecolibris.net.
Bob Erdmann launches new company to handle foreign rights
March 28, 2010 at 6:30 pm | Posted in Publishing | Leave a commentIn an recent e-mail, Bob Erdmann said that he is celebrating 50 years in publishing by refocusing his work on managing foreign rights for others.
“In recent years my foreign rights work has taken on a life of its own to the extent that it has become our main focus. Because of this we have decided to devote 100% of our time on foreign rights and this week launched our new web site completely devoted to foreign rights. Our goal with our new site is to make it very simple, easily navigated, and inviting to new clients as well as foreign publishers and agents,” he wrote.
Further information on Columbine Communications new services can be found at www.columbinecommunications.com.
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