So Misguided

Plain words, uncommon sense

Page 82 of 123

Mike Shatzkin on New Models for General Trade Publishers

Book Expo America is going on this week in New York. I wish I was there listening to the brains of the industry pontificate.

Luckily they many of them have websites and blogs.

This is a really long speech, which I’ve only had time to browse. It’s not nice webcopy with pull quotes and subheads that allow for easy scanning. I’ll try to pull out the interesting bits if I have time.

End of Trade Publishing Houses by Mike Shatzkin on May 31, 2007. Presented to the 2007 Book Expo America in New York City.

Join the Tyee: An Independent Newspaper

Independent newspaper. Does anyone recall what that means?

The Tyee has a new campaign this summer to get 5000 new subscribers. There’s a video component and a website all about spreading the word.

I like the design but there are a couple of things that don’t work for me.

1. I like to indulge in crappy entertainment fluff, I mean news. Mocking the garbage in favour of pristine news doesn’t appeal to me, but maybe I’m not the target market.

2. In order to enter to win prizes for telling my friends, I have to send them an email using a form on the Tyee site. There’s no privacy statement. Are they going to spam my friends after? I don’t know. Why can’t this blog post count?

The part I do really like is the design of the site. Nice, clean layout. Easy to read text. And the text content is good. The video though is a little too earnest for me. Maybe we should AdHack it.

See The Tyee Video.

One Degree, Kate and The Personal Technologist

My friend Kate, of MyNameIsKate.ca, recently gave me the honour of talking about my company Work Industries and the Personal Technologist service on One Degree, which is a fabulous site for internet marketers and those who want to know more about internet marketing.

One Degree is a phenomenal resource and I’m pretty thrilled to be part of the “5 Questions” series.

You can read my interview here.

The other big news is that Kate recently bought One Degree, which was owned by Ken Schafer, VP Product Management and Marketing at Tucows.

It’s pretty exciting and you can read Kate’s post “Why I bought One Degree”.

Congratulations Kate!

Orca Book Publishers Announce “So You Think You Can Write?” Contest

image

So You Think You Can Write?
Orca Book Publishers Novel Contest

$5000 Cash Prize

Orca Book Publishers, publishers of outstanding books for youth and teens, are on the hunt for great Canadian fiction writers.

Orca publishes many of Canada’s most popular writers for teens:
– Eric Walters
– James Heneghan
– Carrie Mac
– Shelley Hrdlitschka
– Katherine Holubitsky
– Beth Goobie
– Don Trembath

Do you want to be added to the list?

Orca invites Canadian writers (new or established) to submit manuscripts of contemporary realistic fiction for readers aged 13 to 18.

The deadline for submissions is October 31, 2007.

The prize-winning novel will be announced in spring 2008 and published in fall 2008.

In case you missed what I’m saying, the prize is a publishing contract with Orca Book Publishers plus $5,000 cash.

The rules:
For complete contest details and to download a submission form, please go to Orca’s website www.orcabook.com and click on Contest.

Here is the direct link to the contest rules.

Good luck!

Better Books Part 5

In Part 5, Dan and I talk about the marketing of books.

With the many multimedia channels that are being explored by publishers is it creating a move away from point-of-sale in-store marketing to direct consumer marketing?

Quote: Dan:
In a Wall Street Journal article earlier this year, Jim Warren, the Chicago Tribune’s managing editor/features said publishing is “The last industry in America to go to for any wisdom about marketing!”

So I suspect the question is not ‘digital vs POS?’, but rather ‘how do we market books better?’,

Quote: Monique:
It’s a strange question. As Dan mentions below, I’m not sure POS materials were ever really for the consumer. They look good in the store, maybe they help customers notice certain titles. But are we talking about displays and posters? They don’t have any interaction or engagement on a customer level, not like a blog, online review, podcast. That to me is more about having a conversation with potential readers. A poster is a poster.

In your opinion, are in-store materials still as effective as they have been in the past?

Quote: Dan:
Are in-store materials for customers or for the store themselves? Isn’t POS marketing a way of giving the bookstore something other than a bigger discount?

I’m sure customers like freebies too, but I am not sure it is about selling more books directly.

As long as there are bookstores I am sure there will continue to be POS marketing.

Quote: Again, I agree with Dan. If we’re talking about bookmarks, posters and displays, it’s not the same as a shampoo sample in the drugstore. And I’m not sure if it was ever meant to be.

Perhaps that’s why they are ineffective, the purpose behind them is unclear.

Do most customers respond to the digital content, traditional advertising, or POS materials?

Quote: Dan:
Nobody really believes advertising works and yet everybody still does it just in case it does, So whilst I’m not sure any of these things work by themselves, they probably don’t hurt, so we’ll keep on doing them , I point you back to that Jim Warren quote ,

Quote: Monique:
Digital content: people respond to digital content that is engaging.
Traditional advertising: people respond to advertising that is creative.
POS materials: people respond well to point-of-sale materials that make sense.

I refer you also to the Jim Warren quote.
I think publishers get it, perhaps they just don’t get it right.

Does this represent an opportunity to reach out beyond the traditional market for books, to reach potential consumers that traditionally may not have been prone to walk into a bookstore?

Quote: Dan:
Yes for sure, but also it allows you to appeal to niche markets that aren’t necessary in one geographic area. It ties in quite nicely to Chris Anderson’s long tail ideas in that sense ,

Quote: Monique:
Where did the questions come from this week?
Who is this “traditional” market and when did we only include bookstore customers in that market. Geez.

I don’t have numbers on this, but I suspect that non-traditional or non-book retailers collectively outsell and outnumber traditional book retailers. This is one of the challenges for independent retailers and for publishers. The barriers to entry for carrying book stock are very low. This means there are a lot of people in the market who are selling books, including Home Depot, Costco, Superstore, London Drugs, and Starbucks.

With so many players–and big players who usually only want to carry bestsellers and new releases at discounted prices–this creates a marketplace that overvalues the bestsellers and new releases. Something Chris Anderson tells us to stop doing. All those big players with deep discounted prices also create a market that puts a lower perceived value on books. That’s not good for anyone, in particular independent retailers who can’t match the discounts.

The challenge then is not “should we look beyond traditional marketing to our traditional market base,” but rather “how in a fragmented market do we match readers to good books?”

Better books. Better marketing. Better questions next week.

Better Books–a conversation in multiple parts:

* Introduction
*
Part 1. Market challenges.
* Part 2. The music industry and the book industry.
* Part 3. We go on a bit, discussing what we’ve learned.
* Part 4. Ebooks and POD.

Chris Anderson starts BookTour.com

Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail, has a new start-up. He officially announced it on his blog today. Well, he announced that there will be an announcement.

Chris Anderson says BookTour.com is a new company but that it will be run by 2 partners and it does not affect his day job. The rest is under wraps until Thursday when M.J. Rose of Buzz, Balls and Hype interviews Chris at Book Expo.

Thursday May 31 at 2:00 pm in Room 1E06.5 in the Javits Center in NYC.

Siobhan, you best go and take notes for us.

And who knew the domain BookTour.com was available?

Think Before You Send

I once had quite the mishap with a snotty email of mine that was accidentally forwarded to a client. No malice was intended, but it required a lot of groveling afterwards to set things right.

Do you have your own example? Please share. This space should not be about my humiliation alone.

I’m thinking about saving face today because my pal Kate from Random House sent over a funny email about a new book Send: The Essential Guide to Email for Office and Home.

Send is a quirky book about email etiquette.

Here’s the Amazon.ca page and here’s the Random House page.

The authors of Send have also launched a website dedicated to the book, thinkbeforeyousend.com.

You can share your bad email story.
Or you can just read other people’s stories.

Either way, I’m happy to know that my foible is not the world’s worst email faux pas. I didn’t get fired. Check out “District Superintendent loses job by CCing school board.”

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2024 So Misguided

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑