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Fear and Loving at TOC

It’s that time again, when the digi-literati convene on the Marriott Marquis in Manhattan and gleefully frighten the hell out of everybody. (One year, after Seth Godin gave a presentation, a CEO muttered to me, “Now do I slit my wrists?”)

TOC is one of those conferences that is simultaneously exhilarating and depressing. Exhilarating because so many possibilities are gaily strewn across the immediate future like lights on a Christmas tree. Depressing because…when you get down to the nitty-gritty of implementation, that “immediate” future becomes further and further away. “Now” begins to look like next year. The glitter wears off the possibilities and they become work, just like everything else.

It’s an unnerving experience if you’re not prepared for it. And although this is TOC’s fourth incarnation, many publishers are still not prepared for it. Which seems to be part of O’Reilly’s job in this industry – to push the business past its comfort zone, even just for a couple of days. Enough pushing, the theory goes, and eventually what was unnerving last year is the way of doing business this year.

SBook publishers are a tough bunch to push. Conservative by nature, cautious to the bone, book publishers do not embrace change – and that’s putting it mildly. It was winter of 1999 when ONIX was adopted as a BISAC standard. It’s now 11 years later and…we are still lecturing publishers on the importance of good metadata (when it’s more important now than it was in 1999!).

This is a quality very difficult to explain to vendors who come into book publishing with great solutions, and who frequently leave book publishing with extreme disillusionment. Will book publishing ever move beyond ink-on-paper? (When it wants to.) Does it want to? (Not particularly.) Will it survive? (Yes.)

But O’Reilly’s right, and vendors need to pay attention. Looking back on the presentations for TOC 2009, many of the ideas offered up then have just begun to trickle out into the mainstream. Decent formatting for ebooks is a good idea. Social networking helps call attention to your titles. Women read loads of ebooks. Do consumer research. XML is a great tool that will help a publisher create books and other materials in any number of formats.

Vendors should not be discouraged by this seeming slowness – on the contrary, many publishers are only just now ready to hear what you have to say. There are so many of you who have such great tools – DAMs, editorial tools, production and XML tools, social media platforms, workflow management – and the emphasis on progress and innovation at TOC drives home the very points that you are making daily to prospective clients.

Yes, publishing is behind other entertainment industries – notably the music business, notably in issues like piracy and pricing. But it IS moving ahead. Maybe not under its own steam – recently, the mere fact of the Apple iPad led publishers into a strong enough position to finally negotiate with Amazon over ebook pricing – but it is being hauled, kicking and screaming, into the 21st century.

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Digital Strategies: Getting More Bang For Your Buck

Yesterday I gave a presentation at the Publishing Business Conference & Expo called "Digital Strategies: Getting the Most Bang For Your Buck". LOLcats! Norm Abrams! Do you have a hammer strategy???

Find it here. My lame notes are also included – I need to be tightly scripted or I’ll come out with just about anything.

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Register at LibreDigital to get your white paper!

LibreDigital and I have collaborated on a white paper called "The Insider’s Guide to Internet Viral Marketing for Book Publishers" – you can register to receive it here.

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HP: There is no other news this week

No, there is no other news this week. My poor daughter, who turns 9 on the 18th of this month, is watching her birthday get swallowed up in Harry Potter madness. It’s all her friends can talk about. Meanwhile, we’re scraping the bottom of the barrel here for book-tech news, but nobody’s going to make product announcements this week.

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POD at TOC

O’Reilly’s Tools of Change conference was a smashing success (and mercifully the next one will be in New York – thank you!). Peter Brantley, whose blog we quote often here, has posted some notes and exchanges here.

Some highlights: 

A POD machine can print 1 book in 5 minutes. A sales rate of 12 books per hour isn’t going to keep a store in business strictly with POD – the store has to sell other inventory as well.

POD manufacturers can develop new efficiencies, products, etc. much better than a shop with a POD machine can. In other words, the idea of having your own POD machine might not be cost-efficient in the long run, when you can order the same book from Lightning Source, who next month might have features that make their print copy better than yours.

However, a POD machine like the Espresso will eventually cost about as much as a copy machine, and in fact can be hosted in office supply stores – people can order books and go pick them up at Kinko’s or Staples. A proliferation of POD machines contributes to a proliferation of books – or at least, that’s the thinking of some.

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The Big Picture

In this issue of The Big Picture:

THE DOWNLOAD: – by industry consultant Laura Dawson
TIA – THIS ISSUE’S ACRONYM – BISAC/BISG
INTEL: COMPANIES – R. R. Bowker buys Medialab Solutions by Amsterdam
INTEL: PEOPLE – SirsiDynix names new CFO
THE JOB EXCHANGE – Listing the hottest jobs in the sector

"Amazon’s Kindle shows no sign of being born and the thundering hordes are not stampeding to buy Sony’s Reader.

Meanwhile, the digital revolution in publishing is happening…more or less around this e-book problem, the elephant in the living room.

As Mike Shatzkin et al told crowds at Klopotek’s Digital Asset Distribution conference last week – and as a host of panelists parsed at O’Reilly’s Tools of Change conference – publishing is taking a great leap forward into the realm of the technological.

(Well, there’s some argument as to whether publishing is leaping or being pushed, but that’s another column; I’ll let Jim Lichtenberg address that one.)

This, despite a viable e-book reader…"

Click here to access our newsletter archives and read the June 26, 2007 issue in full.

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Who’s your DADdy?

Unfortunately I had to miss yesterday’s Klopotek conference over at the Hilton, led by Mike Shatzkin, about digital asset distributors (DADs). My oldest daughter was graduating from middle school, a ceremony peppered with buoyant speeches from local dignitaries, and a variety of performances.

I have to say, the speech given by the valedictorian was ridiculously boring and predictable, and I wondered if this poor kid had sacrificed all personality and quirk to please his teachers and parents. He seemed to have nothing to bring to the podium but good grades. I’ve been listening to Seth Godin’s "Small Is the New Big" on my iPod, and he elaborates a little on his Purple Cow theory – what differentiates you (or your company) from everybody else? How do you stand out and show that you are like no one else, so that people will notice you and hire you/buy your product – as opposed to hiring someone else or buying something else.

Once this kid gets out of school, his grades will be pretty meaningless. I hope he spends high school actually living a little and developing as a person…because that’s ultimately what people will pay attention to and hire.

Meanwhile, I’ll be in the park pretty much all day today, as both Miss Personality and her little sister have class picnics….I’m expecting reports from the DAD conference to trickle in and I’ll be posting more next week.

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BISG talks to libraries

One of the great things about Michael Healy’s directorship of BISG is his attentiveness to issues in the library market. As former director of the ISBN agency in the UK, Michael’s got a lot of library experience, and it’s terrific to see him applying that to BISG, which has traditionally focused on the bookselling market. For too long in the book industry, there’s been this weird wall between the two sectors, and as technology invades and makes new things possible, it seems that the wall should be breached…and BISG seems poised to do that.

At any rate, BISG has teamed with NISO to give a presentation at ALA on Friday. It’s called "The Changing Standards Landscape: Creative Solutions to Your Information Problems", and essentially it will tackle how new developments in digital asset management and distribution are affecting the library world. In addition to Michael and Todd Carpenter of NISO, one of the speakers there will be Carolyn Pittis from Harper, who has given many presentations on how she’s using new technologies (widgets, XML) to expose more Harper books to more people.

Cool beans!

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BEA gettin’ all podcasty up in here

Staying true to the "holy shit, everything’s digital" theme of this year’s Book Expo, BEA has released podcasts of the show. According to the press release that came out this morning:

BookExpo America’s goal to become a “convention without walls” has become a reality with the announcement of its ambitious podcast and digital coverage of the recent trade event which took place in New York City, June 1 – 3. Podcast coverage of BEA has been a key part of an aggressive program to provide digital and online services and entertainment not only to book industry professionals, but to the general reading public as well. BEA put a dedicated podcast team in place during the convention which spread itself out to cover all aspects of the show in order to provide a record as well as a permanent history of the significant and entertaining content that the show provides.

Get’cher podcast here.

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