Plain words, uncommon sense

Category: News: Arts & Entertainment (Page 21 of 25)

Publishing News Roundup

It was a rather busy week in publishing news:

Rebecca Godfrey took home the second annual British Columbia Award for Canadian Non-Fiction. The award was presented last Friday afternoon for her book Under the Bridge: The True Story of the Murder of Reena Virk (HarperCollins Canada). The $25,000 award was presented by the British Columbia Achievement Foundation at a Vancouver luncheon attended by writers, publishers, members of the literary community, and Premier Gordon Campbell.
More on Rebecca Godfrey and the BC Award for Canadian Non-Fiction.

The Scotsman reported on Monday, 29 May, that the world’s first audio-only novel is being launched this week, aimed at iPod and MP3 users. Brian Luff’s Sex on Legs is a sci-fi thriller. The novel is published by Audible.
http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=796482006

Lost novel has found its way to bestseller lists. The Book Standard reports that Bad Twin sold 5,000 copies in its debut week putting it at 98 on the Nielsen BookScan chart.
http://www.readersread.com/cgi-bin/bookblog.pl?bblog=510061

Salon.com has a story on ex-nun Karen Armstrong. It’s Da Vinci Code time. As an ex-nun, Armstrong’s writings resonate with people who’ve fallen out with organized religion. Armstrong argues that sacred texts yield profound insights if we read them as myth and poetry.
http://feeds.salon.com/salon/index?m=285

The Value of Reader Programs

Sometime back in January I wrote about the book Daniel Isn’t Talking by Marti Leimbach.

I enjoyed the book and it has been fun watching it appear on store shelves and to see it reviewed, such as last weekend in the Globe and Mail.

I enjoy programs like M&S’s 100 Reader’s Club and Harper Collins’ First Look because they raise the profile of certain titles in my mind. I might have missed or ignored Daniel Isn’t Talking but instead it is like a beacon for me. I see it on bookstands and tell people what a great book it is, I read the reviews and then blog about it. I even read Marti’s blog. I find the insights into her life and her own son’s autism experiences fascinating–sometimes sad but there are moments of triumph that are great to hear about.

I appreciate that I’m not bombarded with books in these programs. I pick the Harper Collins’ books I want to read, and M&S selects a few titles a year that they want large groups of people to read: in fact on Friday I recommended David Bergen’s The Time in Between, which is the first book I read in the M&S club (May 2005 post).

These books stick with me.

As a book reader I love these programs. As a book marketer, I wonder how publishers measure the programs’ value?

I suspect publishers want to see sales lift for the titles in the programs. What I imagine, though, is that sales are not easily correlated to reader program activity. I fear is that publishers will abandon these programs because they perceive the program as a lot of work for very little pay off–pay off being measured only in sales.

So what are the costs? Here’s my imaginary scenario.

By my estimate there’s the cost of the advance reading copy, which could be anywhere from $3-7. Let’s use $5 for this example. Plus the shipping, let’s say $5 per title. Then there’s the admin stuff–staff to oversee the program, mail out the packages, post reviews, etc.–not a wild guess entirely but let’s say it takes one person 8 hours per month to manage the program and we pay them $15/hr. And, we’ll release 4 different titles a year to approximately 100 people each time.

Each title costs $5 + $5 shipping = $10 x 100 people x 4 times per year = $4000
Plus admin costs of $120/month x 12 months = $1440

Total cost to run our imaginary program would be $5440 per year.

Is that a lot?

If a new paperback costs retail $24.95 and we give the bookstore a 50% discount, then we earn $12.48 per title, but we have to pay for the printing, production and overhead costs, plus royalties to the author. Let’s guess our further costs are 50% of that so we earn $6.23 per book. We’d have to sell 873 copies of the book just to cover the cost of our reader program. That’s breakeven, no profits. Then considering the typical volume for a paperback in its first year–3,000-10,000 copies–you can see my fears about “is it worth it?”

It’s hard to guess at the real costs, revenues and profits so I’m open to corrections on the above math.

Regardless, I’d like to argue against only measuring the success of the program by book sales.

I believe that if the publisher can cover the costs of the program then the true value is in the branding of the reader program and the authors involved. Remember the books in these programs stick with me. I have recommended the titles to at least 10 friends. Every book buying survey I’ve ever read shows that book readers are more likely to buy a book recommended by a peer than because of an advertisement in the newspaper. So $5400 could buy a publisher one or two small newspaper ads or 100 people talking about a book they loved and the publisher’s reader program. For $5400, the publisher gets increased recognition of an author name, awareness of the book on store shelves, in reviews and interviews, and recognition of the publisher name.

Brian Quinn in his Thursday newsletter on sales strategies, “Selling the Sizzle” (MediaPost Publications), uses the metaphor of fajitas in a Mexican restaurant. He opens with “Have you ever been to a Mexican restaurant when patrons at the table next to you receive their sizzlin’ fajitas?” You can hear the sound. All eyes in the restaurant turn to check out the “crackling, smoking plate of spicy delights.”

Reader Programs to me are the sizzle in the publishing industry. The right kind of sizzle can mean sales but the huge payoff for the publisher is in brand awareness–increasing their portion of the market’s attention for their targetted books.

With an integrated marketing campaign–single message to multi-channels (book readers, reviewers, booksellers, teachers, librarians)–a publisher can significantly enhance overall brand awareness and relationships with key members of the book-buying population.

I think there is incredible value in the branding opportunities for authors and publishers. What do you think?

Abebooks Celebrates 10 Years

Victoria-based Abebooks is celebrating its 10-year anniversary.

It recently bought a share in LibraryThing.com as a birthday present to itself.

LibraryThing.com is a pretty cool project. It pulls bibliographic data from Amazon.com and other sources and lets users attach comments, tags, ratings and reviews to the books they catalogue in their virtual library.

According to Quill and Quire, Abebooks “is looking to integrate LibraryThingís user statistics and features into its own site ñ creating, say, Amazon-style customer recommendations.” It will be interesting to see how the adoption stage of this project goes. I currently use Amazon’s Listmania to make my book recommendations and share booklists. I use Amazon.ca because it has Canadian source information and pricing so I likely won’t gravitate to LibraryThing.com, unless of course the service just rocks.

In other Abebooks news, they are running a contest to visit 10 booksellers around the world. There are smaller prizes too. Utne is the contest sponsor. You have to collect a bookmark with an instant entry code from a participating bookseller.

Here’s the contest goods. It runs until July 15.

Emily Carr Grad Exhibition

Sandals

On Friday I went to a preview of the Emily Carr Graduation Exhibition 2006. I only saw part of the show so I’d like to go back. I posted some photos on Flickr.com but I must say I wasn’t paying much attention to the artistic nature of my photos.

Things I like the most:
1. Walking sticks. There were all sorts of coloured walking sticks. You could select your stick and use it all around the exhibition. Some had little wheels on the bottom.
2. The Girl in the Moon. There was a huge wall with a purple background and a yellow circle. It looked like a moon to me. There was a yellow ladder and the artist was wearing a purple dress and painting little purple and yellow creatures on the wall.
3. The animations. There were a couple of short animated films that I loved. Tree for Two by Joel Furtado was the winner of the Electronic Arts Reveal 06 Canadian 3D animation showdown. It think his film was shorter than the title of the award he won. I was a fan of A Hamster Tail by Andrea Shimizu. The characters reminded me of the Moomins, which apparently no one in North America has heard of.

I want to go back and watch all the animations. JumpTrumpRumpBump looked really cool but I only watched the preview.

One of the things I didn’t like was that lots of the animations ripped off the circle of circles used in Bugs Bunny’s exit. Maybe that was a required element.

That’s all for now folks!

Saturday is Free Comic Book Day

Find a participating store at
http://www.freecomicbookday.com/

What’s Free Comic Book Day?
Free Comic Book Day is a single day when participating comic book shops give away comic books absolutely free to anyone who comes into their stores.

Where was this day when I was a kid!

Remember it’s not what you read but that you read. Now go get your comic.

UPDATE: In my excitement I forgot to mention that the Canuck Librarian is the cool source of this info.

100 Mile Diet Is Done — Book Is Coming

I posted previously about the two Vancouver folks doing the 100-Mile Diet. Well now there’s a book coming, but, in the meantime, check out the website. I love the design.

http://100milediet.org/

Learn about eating locally. Get started on your own “eat local” diet. Tell your stories. Find your 100 miles.

It’s a cool site.

And it’s true, you can live in places where it’s harder to eat locally. The point is to think about your food. To think about how far its travelled. The average North American meal travels at least 1,500 miles from farm to plate.

I do believe that lots of small changes can help make big change. So if you’re in Prince George or Winnipeg in the winter … maybe chosing grapes from California is better than grapes from New Zealand. Or maybe you buy a bunch of cheap, end of harvest berries in the fall, freeze them and eat them over the winter instead of those grapes. I don’t know. You have to find what works for you.

CBC Words At Large

CBC has a subsection on their website, CBC.ca/wordsatlarge. I discovered it in the intro section of my daily headlines email. I like receiving the CBC Headlines email because sometimes I miss the morning news on the radio.

The subsite has some interesting content on literacy, bestsellers and a blog. But there doesn’t appear to be a RSS feed for the blog so perhaps it’s just labelled a blog. I read almost everything in a RSS Reader so it’s unlikely that this subsection will be a regular visit for me. What about you? How do you read blogs: visiting the actual blog pages or reading things in a Reader?

Pen World Voices Festival of International Literature

Bud Parr, of MetaxuCafe, sent me an email about an exciting week long writing series they are doing about the Pen World Voices Festival of International Literature. There’s a write-up on the Orhan Pamuk and Margaret Atwood event. Orhan is a famous Turkish author. He was in my Lonely Planet, which I read extensively last September when James and I were travelling about Greece and Turkey.

Here’s the link to the MetaxuCafe post. Photos included.

More details from Parr: “In conjunction with the Words Without Borders blog, MetaxuCafe will be covering over 30 events this week and posting at MetaxuCafe and other places around the Web.”

Check it out at:
http://www.MetaxuCafe.com

Camilla Gibb wins Trillium Book Award

Congratulations to Toronto’s Camilla Gibb, who won the 2006 Trillium Book Award for Sweetness in the Belly published by Doubleday Canada. The Trillium Book Award honours books written by Ontario authors, and the prize is $20,000. Not a bad prize amount.

Click for what Amazon.ca says about the book.

My friend’s book club read it and enjoyed it very much, but I haven’t read it yet. I know it is a haunting novel set in Ethiopia. Anyone read it?

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