Monthly Archive for November, 2010

How Publishers Are Tackling the App Question

From Rachel Deahl, Calvin Reid, and Craig Morgan Teicher at Publishers Weekly

Are apps marketing devices for authors and books, or a new revenue stream? This is just one of many questions publishers are asking as they develop apps from their content. When PW approached large and midsize publishers to find out about their app programs, we discovered that many houses don’t have “programs” per se. Questions loom about what content is best suited for apps—though overwhelmingly it seems that reference and children’s are sweet spots—and how best to look at apps. Should apps be created with the goal of bringing in money independent of books, or as tools to market books and authors? And how do publishers define an app? Many said it was simply anything that could be sold in the App Store. This may soon change, as rumors have swelled that Apple will add restrictions on what can be sold in its App Store. (Currently, a publisher can adapt an e-book and sell it in the App Store even if it doesn’t feature any content added to the original.) Right now, though, publishers are dipping their feet into this market slowly and, with the exception of a few houses, cautiously. More…

Smaller Presses, Bigger Authors

From Rachel Deahl at Publishers Weekly

The midlist is dying. That sentiment has been a mantra in publishing circles for years as agents, authors, and editors have decried that corporate publishing will no longer support the kind of author that was once an industry staple—the moderate success who was a consistent seller, if not a bestseller. With the “big six” demanding bigger sales numbers from all their authors, indie presses, which have long been the province of riskier, harder-to-market literary fiction, are finding that more commercial writers are showing up at their doors, as well as writers with serious accolades and lengthier track records.

One shift is that the definition of  the midlist author has changed. A number of agents and publishers interviewed said when editors at the big houses look at the sales performance of an author’s last book in considering acquiring that author’s new book, the number they need to see is bigger than it used to be. While it’s been rumored that a publisher at one of the major houses told his staff they couldn’t acquire authors whose last book sold fewer than 50,000 copies, most sources said they thought the so-called “magic number” was closer to 25,000 or 30,000. One agent, noting that there’s far more variation at the paperback imprints of the big six, said most hardcover publishers today “would settle for 20,000.” More…

The book is far from dead

bookconf

St. Gallen’s Taglatt takes note of the 2010 Book Conference and its discussion on the future of the book (article in German)…

Das Buch ist noch lange nicht tot

ST.GALLEN. Geht es ums digitale Zeitalter, schwanken Buchexperten zwischen Enthusiasmus und Endzeitstimmung. An der HSG diskutieren Fachleute aus allen fünf Kontinenten über die Zukunft des Buches – erstmals in der Schweiz.

Odilia Hiller

Eigentlich ist es Bozena Mierzejewska zu verdanken, dass die 8. Internationale Konferenz des Buches im Jahr 2010 in St. Gallen abgehalten wird. Die Lehrbeauftragte der Universität St. Gallen war es, welche die amerikanischen Verantwortlichen der Buchkonferenz vor zwei Jahren in Washington D.C. so neugierig auf die Schweizer Stadt mit der Stiftsbibliothek machte, dass diese kurzerhand beschlossen, die jährliche Zusammenkunft von Buchexperten aus aller Welt hier abzuhalten. So kommt es, dass das Kompetenzzentrum Buchwissenschaft am Institut für Medien- und Kommunikationsmanagement (MCM) der HSG die diesjährige Ausgabe ausrichtet.More…