Posts Tagged ‘publishing’

Book Sales Reps Rock

I’ve  reread a great article a few times over the past week and last week when I first saw it I retweeted links to it.   Dominique Raccah expressed succinctly why I believe Publishers will have important roles in the future.

What A Publisher Does

Publishing is undoubtedly going through a major transition with clear concerns from disintermediation to rights associated with both simple and enhanced eBooks.    And pricing.  And production.  And, And, And.

The processes are changing but the heart of what a publisher does remains the same.  If I were an author (and let’s face it, that’s a stretch to imagine, I’m not even a good blogger) I would want my book to be “birthed” by a Publisher.  I would want all of the groups highlighted above to be involved in getting my book out into the marketplace.

I would describe myself as a generalist with knowledge in many of those blue groups listed above but my professional experience was behind the scenes in sales – think of an internal customer service group to distribute sales & marketing materials and create tools to allow sales reps do what they do best – sell books.  In all of the positive talk of self publishers who can DISTRIBUTE your book into all imaginable channels to my knowledge there is no one at those companies who SELL your book into those channels.

Sales reps and booksellers make up the traditional Word of Mouth marketing and publicity channels.   And a lot of these smart people I know are now also very active in the social networking sites that are becoming the new Word of Mouth channels.   I’m fairly certain that I would never have picked up a lot of the books that constitute some of my favorites if not for the enthusiasm of the sales reps.  And because I was in the business and because I’ve not steered them wrong before my friends asked me for recommendations on what to read.   My answers often began with the sales reps were crazy about X, so I read it and loved it and I think you will too.

Words of Wisdom from Tim O’Reilly

Three weeks ago I went to hear Tim O ‘Reilly, the founder and CEO of O’Reilly Media, speak at The Publishing Point meetup.  I’m still thinking about the some of the things he said (and I tweeted them at the time.)

“People who are lit up by the future pursue it, those that are not, are trying to preserve the past.”

In my daily routine I read different opinions about the state of publishing, the new shiny and practical information on how to work with new tools.   It’s easy to lose sight of why we were attracted to publishing in the first place.  For me, its the storytelling.  So whether we tell the story on paper or pixels I’m just as excited about the stories we’re telling.  And I believe as Bono might put it, “The Future Needs A Big Kiss.”

“The hard part is no longer curation, the hard part is identifying all the new channels and scaling.”
Curation is still a very important function of publishers but  disintermediation is a greater challenge.   How do we sort out being present in the right places as the traditional channels of book selling are becoming smaller markets?   How do we make sure readers find books?  I know my first step in researching anything is Google followed by asking my “friends” or “followers.”  Are you paying attention to your metadata?

“It’s okay to fail, but you should try not to spend a lot of money failing.”
New tools and new formats are costly, are you making sure what you’re doing is what your readers want?  Fancy enhancements do not fall under “if we build it, they will come.”  Experiment, use analytics, and engage with your readers.

“Make books Beautiful again”
If I’m going to buy a book in print I want it to be a beautifully put together package.  I want it be a work of art and I want to appreciate the designer.  I compare this to buying music, I haven’t bought a simple physical cd in a long time, I legally download music unless I buy the pretty fancy deluxe edition.

Catching Up

July was going to be a bloggy month for me – unfortunately blogging got pushed to the wayside as other things moved to the forefront… it happens.

So, in brief things I would have blogged about:

Old Spice Guy videos – LOVED! Fantastic integrated marketing campaign. Dan Blank did a great brief synopsis.

Odyssey Books – the latest dust up in the rapidly changing publishing landscape. Booksquare wrote a smart and clear piece about it.

New Kindle – smaller, wifi only and $139. I’m likely to continue holding out until the price of a device is sub $100. I’ve been incredibly resistant to the idea of committing to a device/store but this was the first time Amazon truly tempted me. Of course, I still have a total crush on Kobo which has always been in that price range.

Mike Cane compared the cost of the ipod to the cost of the kindle. And the price of eBooks to the price of songs from the iTunes store. He makes valid points but I was one of those people who bought the iPod and continued to buy cd’s and burn my own mp3s for a long time.

The ipod was and is sexier than any dedicated eReader. I payed for the convenience of taking my music with me in the smallest possible package to the gym, for a run, in my car and wandering around town. It was a long time before my buying habits changed. Once I choose between Amazon or Kobo (or Nook) I’m stuck with that store for that device. I certainly wouldn’t be buying print books and scanning them.

I may have wide eyes at the new shiny but I’m still not ready to buy. I eRead on the go on my Blackberry and my to read pile of print books numbers near 100 (neatly stacked in 5 boxes in my best friend’s cellar.)

Lastly in news, absolutely unrelated to publishing, Friday rocked in Turin and this makes me happy. This makes me downright giddy.

Change is Good

#FollowReader had a fabulous discussion last Thursday about “What’s Good About Traditional Publishing” – I’m pleased to report the conversation overall was (pragmatically) optimistic. You can check it out all the tweets by searching the hashtag #followreader on Thur June 24th between 3-4pm EST.

Aside from the obvious things contributors cited (the people, the books and the not nearly as flippant as it reads, me ) the Twitter chat mostly focused on truly tangible variables like a dedicated staff to shape a manuscript into a book, sales reps, the relationship between editors and authors, the relationship between sales reps and bookstore buyers, bookstores and libraries.

The consensus was that there are good things about traditional publishing even if those things are currently in flux as publishing evolves into the next stage. There is a lot of yammering about the death of publishing but I think the proliferation of these laments proves quite the opposite. 

The industry has changed dramatically since I’ve entered it.  I remember when the hand wringing and teeth gnashing was about the opinion of the Indies, the next group whose outlook inspired angst was the big Chains, and now the bullhorns belong to Digital.  The current challenges with digital are more profound because they affect the whole process. But the idea of looking at the fundamental “rules” and adapting what no longer make sense is growth not death.

The best thing about all of these conversations is that they are taking place in public as well as in conference rooms. Last week Colleen Lindsay began to seriously question the traditional models of agenting on Twitter. It is wonderful that there are platforms where concerned publishing professionals, of all levels, can chine in. In fact, anyone including readers can chime in.  The wizard’s curtain has been pulled back and I beleive we will find something substantial behind it. We need to talk openly about how to curate a list, edit a book, ensure the metadata is being created, how the reader will discover it and how to sell the book.

Change is not death.  The question is how do we adapt to these changes, where do we invest, and how soon can we see a return on these investments?  I wish I had a crystal ball (or even a Magic 8 Ball ) but I don’t. Everyday we are making small choices about adapting to new paradigms or sticking our heads in the sand.  At some point we’ll see that we’ve found the answers and the undoubtedly the landscape will shift again.