BEA Update: Publishers Launch BEA 2012

Publishers Launch BEA was one of several conferences that kicked off BEA 2012 this year on Monday, June 4, and it focused on helping publishers get their houses in order in a bifurcated world of print and digital — from workflow to discovery, to partnerships with established and newly minted vendors, to sales and marketing here and abroad.  Michael Cader gave his signature summation of all the important themes, and introduced the first speaker, Hachette COO Ken Michaels, who gave a well-constructed talk on the checklist of changes that publishers need to make to be efficiently poised for a print-and-digital future that will be orchestrated via the cloud.   He argued that, with the right partners, and in a cloud-based system, a publisher could be “up and running in 90 days.”

Michaels was followed by a panel of publishers talking about ways in which their own companies are preparing for the future.  Joe Mangan mentioned the hiring of a Chief Talent Officer to manage the many changes in the types of personnel needed at PerseusSara Domville cited the stark statistic that F+W Media has gone from 3.5% of her workforce focused on digital in 2008, to 23% today.  And she talked about editors who become marketers to their communities, persuading participants to then click through to buy products (not just books) off the site.  “The editors,” she said, “have become a profit center.”

Later, literary agents took to the stage to discuss what they have done to accommodate to a digital future.  There was debate about self-publishing, digital-only and (of course) higher royalty splits on ebooks, but in general, the agents – Laura Dail, Simon Lipskar, Jennifer Weitz and Tim Knowlton, ably moderated by paidContent’s Laura Hazard Owen seemed to appreciate that there is a role for publishers in most authors’ lives – today at least.

Molly Barton from Penguin was interviewed by Mike Shatzkin, and talked of Penguin’s ramping up non-English language publishing in ebooks.  Later in the afternoon, several panels addressed the new digital realities, where non-English language publishers produce and market their ebooks in English and their own language, worldwide – while American publishers begin to market (like Penguin) ebooks in other languages, both here and abroad.  With Germans reading almost a quarter of their ebooks in English, and German language books selling briskly in the US, the opportunities there are almost boundless.  Meanwhile the partnership between the US publisher and its international publishing partners (and vice versa) will become, as Shatzkin observed at one point,  a marketing–rather than a publishing–relationship in an ebook world.

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Distributor Profiles 2012

At a point when the words “fast-changing landscape” have become so universally true of publishing that one starts looking for alternative phrasings to avoid monotony, surprisingly little change appears between the Publishing Trends Distributor Survey 2011 and the results for this year. We list 25 total companies with no new additions this year: 12 publishers with a distribution arm and 13 distribution-only companies. Huge changes in digital certainly touch upon much that distributors do, and the major addition you’ll see to our chart this year is the question of whether a distributor offers digital services to those who are not also print customers. Overall, 15 of the 25 say they do, though the percentage of distribution-only companies offering digital-only is much higher than among the publisher-distributors, with 10 of the 13 distribution-onlys answering yes, while only 5 of the publishers offer this service.

The biggest news in terms of who’s distributing whom is certainly Disney/Hyperion’s move from HarperCollins to Hachette, though this won’t be taking place until April 2013.

Click on the image of the chart above for a full PDF version of the 2012 Distributor Profile chart.

People Roundup, June 2012

PEOPLE

Skip Prichard will step down as President and CEO of the Ingram Content Group, June 8. Ingram Content Chairman John Ingram will assume Prichard’s duties as CEO.

Myrna Blyth has been named Senior Vice President and Editorial Director, AARP Media.  She was most recently Editor-in-Chief of ThirdAge.com and previously long time Editor-in-Chief of Ladies Home Journal.

Steve Isenberg, who has served as Executive Director of PEN American Center since 2009, announced on May 30th in a letter to PEN’s president and Board of Trustees that he will end his tenure at the close of 2012.

Disney Consumer ProductsAndrew Sugerman has been promoted to EVP of Disney Publishing in LA, taking over running the division from Russell Hampton (who held the title of President). Sugerman joined the company in 2007 and built Disney’s English learning business (with over 30 language learning centers in China); he oversees all global English language learning efforts for Disney Publishing.

Cindy Loh has been appointed Publishing Director of Bloomsbury Children’s Publishing in New York, reporting to UK MD Emma Hopkin. She was previously Editorial Director at Sterling Children’s Books.   Emily Easton, promoted to Publishing Director of Walker Children’s, and Michelle Nagler, Editorial Director of Bloomsbury Children’s, will report to Loh, as will Creative Director Donna Mark and Senior Managing Editor Melissa Kavonic.

Jessica Schmidt has joined Audible as Manager, Editorial and Publisher Relations. She was most recently National Account Manager, BN Sales for Sterling Children’s Books.

Scott Waxman and Waxman Literary Agency agent Byrd Leavell have formed The Waxman Leavell Literary Agency.

NBN International announced the appointment of Ken Rhodes as General Manager. As well as running the distribution service, he will oversee the development of sales and marketing services for UK and International territories. Rhodes was most recently  Director, International Sales & Global Academic Marketing at Bloomsbury.

Maris Kreizman joins Barnes & Noble as Director of Editorial Content for BN.com on June 4. She was most recently Audiobooks Editor at eMusic.  She replaces Liz Scheier who recently departed to join Amazon’s Brilliance Audio as Senior Product Manager.

Kelly Barrales-Saylor joined  Albert Whitman & Company  as Editorial Director effective May 21, 2012. Barrales-Saylor comes to Whitman from Sourcebooks, Inc. where she was involved in the launch of both Sourcebooks Jabberwocky and Sourcebooks Fire.  She replaces Josalyn Moran.

Karen Matsu Greenberg has left Blue Apple Books to focus full-time on her packaging and book-based gift business, Hourglass Press.

Osprey Group announced the hiring of Emlyn Rees to helm its addictive new crime fiction imprint, Exhibit A.

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Tortoise? Hare? Who’s Winning in the race of the ereaders?

New ereader developments abounded in early May with the announcement that Barnes & Noble’s Nook received a $300 million investment from Microsoft, prompting much speculation about what new products and technology this partnership might bring. Though Nook and Microsoft might mean some interesting developments in the US market, many other ereader companies have turned their attention to the international market, which is still very much up for grabs with Amazon’s local Kindle stores in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and the UK (with a recent announcement that Waterstone’s  will soon be carrying the Kindle), as well as Sony and Kobo’s entrance into the European market. Especially with BEA quickly approaching and whispers of a big announcement from Kobo on 6/5, the competition continues to be fierce.

So who’s coming out ahead, and who’s lagging behind in this competition of ereaders? Read on to make your own call.

 

“B&N has contributed significantly to the commoditization of eInk readers. There’s really nothing to distinguish one from the others these days. Yes, I like having the light built into my Nook but Amazon and others will undoubtedly offer the same feature soon too.

B&N CEO William Lynch needs to focus on answering this one important question: Why would someone want to buy a Nook over a Kindle? If their answer is ‘because we have GlowLight’ he might as well just fold up his tent and go home now.”

— Joe Wikert, Joe Wikert’s Publishing 2020 Blog (5/29/2012)

 

“NFC chips haven’t really taken off in the US yet. Overseas people use the Near Field Communication technology to use their smartphones as credit or debit cards. But in the US, they aren’t common enough to use very often even if you have a phone with an NFC chip and Google Wallet installed.

But Barnes & Noble could be one of the first US companies to do something moderately useful with an NFC chip. The company plans to add NFC capabilities to future NOOK eBook readers.”

 — Liliputing (5/1/2012)

 

“Since Target stores began selling Amazon’s Kindle line back in 2010, the devices have always appeared to do well; the Kindle Fire was even the retailer’s best-selling tablet during Black Friday last year. It appears that’s about to change, however, with a source telling us that the company is going to stop carrying the line of products due to a ‘conflict of interest.’ According to an internal Target memo we’ve received, the company will be removing Amazon hardware from its locations starting this month. Certain accessories will remain in stock, but shipments of Kindles themselves will cease as of May 13th.”

 — Bryan Bishop, The Verge (5/2/2012)

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When in America, Read as the Russians Do: Russian Readers in the US

As dozens of Russian authors, poets, translators, and publishers descend on New York City for BEA’s Global Market Forum and Read Russia 2012 from June 2-7, Publishing Trends set out to explore Russian literature in the US as it exists even when large delegations from Russia aren’t holding readings and workshops around New York City. Read Russia will primarily be tackling the important questions of: what’s getting translated, who’s publishing it, and who’s reading it? A less-explored side, though, is the story of those who publish, distribute, sell, and read Russian-language literature in the original across the United States. While this niche industry has been significantly shaped by what has happened to Russian book business with the end of the Cold War and the rise of Russian capitalism, it has many challenges and accomplishments uniquely its own.

One particularly long-lasting example of Russian-language literature in the US is Liberty Publishing House, founded by Ilya Levkov in 1984. In the early 1980s, he felt compelled to address the hole he saw in Russian literary culture available to readers in the US, and the first years of the house—which coincided with the last years of the Cold War—were spent publishing the work Levkov admired that could not be published in the USSR. Manuscripts had to be smuggled out of the Soviet Union, (he recounts the bureaucratic nightmare of convincing officials to let authors keep a few copies of their own books once they were published) but he also took interest in the work of Russian authors writing in exile. In addition, Levkov was and is passionate about bringing work in translation to Russian-language readers. One of his major coups was winning the Russian-language rights to Tom Clancy’s novels when no Soviet publisher would have dreamed of touching them. Though the rights have sense been sold to a Russian publisher, the success of bringing Clancy to a Russian audience, especially at a time when  a book’s “topical ideology”  was of tantamount importance, was key in fixing Liberty Publishing’s place as a Russian-language publisher on the international scale.

Levkov’s ability to last beyond a time when he had no competition coming out of Russia is note-worthy. During the Cold War, several other stateside Russian publishers did exist, but almost exclusively to produce books that were smuggled into the USSR. The challenge for Liberty Publishing House in the past 10 years has been to maintain and engage as much of a limited and aging audience as possible. For almost 30 years, Levkov’s greatest resource has been a formidable mailing list—crucial, given the number of his customers who buy direct. His most powerful publicity tool, though, is his weekly show Liberty Now on New York City public access television, where he interviews both his own authors and other writers and artists. All episodes are viewable online, which increased his international reputation as well; it isn’t unusual for an author in Russia to submit a manuscript after having seen the program. Changes in Liberty’s printing costs have also made a difference—“but not just what you would think [i.e. lowered costs of digital/short-run]. You can’t imagine how long it took to convince Russians that in the US, just because it’s a paperback doesn’t mean it’s a piece of trash. For a long time, Russian-made paperbacks made an American mass market book look like a work of fine craftsmanship. It was hard to convince readers to buy anything that wasn’t hardback.”

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Paper Meets Digital at Stationery Show 2012

Everyone Publishing Trends encountered at this year’s National Stationery Show (Sunday, May 20-Wednesday, May 23, 2012) agreed on one thing: “smaller and quieter.” Without being asked, several exhibitors admitted that, beyond a smaller number of attendees overall, it felt like “the buyers have disappeared.” Said one purveyor of animal-shaped desk accessories: “Sure, plenty of people stop by. But they’re all wholesalers ‘scoping things out for next year,’ or designers ‘looking for inspiration.’” As for those buyers placing orders on behalf of bookstores, exhibitors didn’t report changes or trends in any direction. No matter the upheaval elsewhere in book business, the special merch end of things seems to have found a status quo in the past twelve months.

Nevertheless, many hot-topics at the 2012 Stationery Show carried strong echoes of current issues in the book industry. While there is obviously no direct parallel to ebooks, emphasis on new digital printing technologies and proprietary interfaces abounded, as did that all-too-familiar anxiety which generally expresses itself as “and then there’s Pinterest…”

The most popular trend in digital this year revolved (unsurprisingly) around printing, and the opportunities afforded by its swiftly rising quality and plummeting costs. “For us, it’s only going to get better,” said Kevin Spindler, Director of the UK-based company Signature Gifts, Inc. His company has been in the personalization market since 2003, but only expanded to the US in 2010; this year was their first Stationery Show. This expansion has been aided by improvements in the speed and cost at which they’re able to deliver quality products—even though those products are printed in the UK. “But pretty soon,” said Spindler, “we anticipate using remote digital print-fulfillment locations rather than shipping from the UK. Even if you order one of our books in Bismarck, ND, once we complete the design on our end, I picture sending the files to our digital print location in Bismarck, and having them produce and ship locally the next day.”

Improvements in print technology seem to coming at just the right time: among all their personalized products, the most popular one, both at the Fair and in general, has been their line of personalized children’s picture and activity books. “These full-color products are where we can take the fullest advantage of the newest digital print development,” explains Spindler. Signature Gifts has also benefited from refinements to the instant preview software that lets online retailers give customers an accurate idea of what their finished book will look like.

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Condensing the Conferences, bit.ly-style

It was a busy week for mini-conferences: O’Reilly and PW’s TOC Executive Roundtable took place on Tuesday, May 22, and featured Hilary Mason, Chief Scientist at bit.ly, talking about what a service like bit.ly can glean from those who use it to shorten URLs – and it’s pretty amazing.  Calling the company “the largest engine for capturing human gossip,” she showed how different media – magazines, newspapers, digital news etc. – is preferred in various parts of the country, and at times of the day, based on bit.ly usage. A version of this will be available short.ly (pun intended) that will allow publishers to track what books, reviews, excerpts etc. are being shared across which social media.  Mason also talked about which social media is used, when.  Twitter is typically used during business hours, but FB is later, and Tumblr is late at night.  Not surprising, Pinterest visits are heaviest on weekends.

On May 23, GigaOm’s efficiently run paidContent 2012 took place at the Times Center.  It had some marquee names, including Union Square Ventures Fred Wilson and – in another “sector” – Richard Russo. But it seemed that the audience stayed for what was strictly germane to their business, and had no compunction about leaving whenever the panels were focused on something other.  As the event, like paidContent, covered all media and, like GigaOm, some tech too, there was a lot of movement.  Like other trade journalists, Shelf Awareness covered the two end-of-day book-related interviews.  One was with Richard Russo (who was appropriately curmudgeonly) and the other was between paidContent’s Laura Hazard Owen and Pottermore’s Charlie Redmayne.

But there were lessons to be learned from other panels.  B&N’s GM Digital Newsstand John Shar brought up the “D” word, which was much used at the conference: “We need to take discoverability to the next level. Each article [in a magazine] or chapter is an entry point to purchase.” In a panel on apps,  Mark Johnson, CEO of Zite, a news aggregator that CNN recently bought, talked about how important the user interface is in helping consumers “sift through content,” so the smart thing to do is to constantly explore new business models.  In fact, he said, “it’s the only thing to do to save publishing.”

See paidContent’s coverage of their conference here.

Making BEA As Simple As ABC: Quick Links to all things BookExpo America 2012

As though navigating endless booths at the Javits Center isn’t an overwhelming enough endeavor, throw in many collocated events with various websites and it’s easy to see how you can feel a little lost preparing for the 2012 BookExpo America (BEA). With the big event quickly approaching, we thought we would pull together a quick cheat sheet with links and all the important info for BEA and all its concurrent conferences (please note that the BEA exhibit halls do not open until Tuesday, June 5th):

ON SUNDAY, JUNE 3:

uPublishU at BEA (formerly known as DIY Authors Conference & Marketplace)

Date: Sunday, June 3

Location: Javits Center, NYC

Events: Self-publishing panels including Break Through & Publish YOU! Be In Control—Be Read, Reviewed & Become A Success! and Amazon: Maximizing Your Book & Kindle Sales.

Price: $150.

Important Links:

Schedule Information
Exhibitors
Registration

 

STARTING MONDAY, JUNE 4:

Publishers Launch BEA

Date: Monday, June 4

Location: Javits Center, NYC

Events: Publishing industry panels including Book Publishing in 2012 with Michael Cader; Remaking the Publishing House with host David Wilk,  and panelists Carolyn Pittis, Chris Bauerle, Joe Mangan, Sara Domville; and Agents In Transition: Direct publishing, new deals, and rethinking sub-rights with Laura Dail, Simon Lipskar, Tim Knowlton.

Price: $495.

Important Links:

Schedule Information
Registration

 

Book Expo America Education Program

Dates: Monday, June 4 – Thursday, June 7

Location: Javits Center, NYC

Events: Educational programming includes social media, library, bookselling, and publisher tracks, as well as the popular Editors’ Buzz sessions (Editors’ Buzz on Monday, June 4, at 4:15 pm – 5:30 pm in Rooms 1E14/1E15/1E16; YA Editors’ Buzz on Tuesday, June 5, at 10:00 am – 10:50 am in Rooms 1E14/1E15; and Middle Grade Editors’ Buzz on Wednesday, June 6, at 11:00 am – 11:50 am in Rooms 1E24/1E13).

Price: Free for BEA attendees.

Important Links:

Schedule Information

 

International Digital Publishing Forum (IPDFDigital Book 2012

Dates: Monday, June 4 – Tuesday, June 5

Location: Javits Center, NYC

Events: Panels including The Attention Economy with Seth Godin (Bestselling Author); How Consumers Discover Books Online with Otis Chandler (Goodreads); and Google Play, and Google Books Going Global with Tom Turvey (Google).

Price: $279 for IDPF Members. $339 for Non-Profit Attendees. $399 for Non-IDPF Members.

Important Links:

Schedule Information
Registration

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People Roundup, Mid-May 2012

PEOPLE

Scholastic has named Jenny Frost as ePublisher and SVP, eBook Strategy. She has been consulting since leaving Crown Publishing Group, where she was President and Publisher, in January 2010.

Sara Nelson, book editor for O, The Oprah Magazine, is moving to Amazon where she will be Editorial Director, Amazon.com Books. The press release announces that Nelson “will be leading our editorial vision for books in the print and Kindle bookstores on Amazon.com.”  Recently, Liz Egan joined Amazon Publishing’s New York imprint as Senior Editor, focusing on fiction, memoir, and parenting. Previously she was the books editor at Self Magazine for seven years.

Leigh Ann Ambrosi has left Sterling for Crown Publishing Group, where she will be VP, Brand Publishing, reporting to Tina Constable.  She was VP Marketing and Publicity at Sterling.  Kimberly Snead is the new Director, Brand Strategy at Crown, reporting to VP, Business Development Ranjana Wingender. Snead was Director, Consumer Marketing at Nickelodeon/MTV Networks.

Roland Lange has left the Google Books team, where he was Strategic Partner, Development Content Partnerships, and is now Major Accounts Lead at YouTube (also owned by Google).

Retail and marketing consultant Bill Miller has been named President of Galison Publishing, a division of The McEvoy Group, whose properties include include Chronicle BooksPrinceton Architectural Press, and becker&mayer!.

Joshua Kendall will join Little, Brown on May 29 as Editorial Director of Mulholland Books suspense fiction imprint, reporting to Judy Clain. Previously Kendall was Senior Editor at Viking/Penguin, and fills the position held by John Schoenfelder, who left to work for film producer Scott Rudin.

Valentina Rice Head of International Sales for Penguin USA has left to found Many Kitchens, LLC, an online marketplace for artisanal foods.  She may reached at valentina.rice@gmail.com.

Karen Rinaldi announced that Julie Will is joining HarperCollins starting May 14 as Executive Editor “working closely with me in acquiring and editing titles in the health and wellness area.”  Will was most recently at OpenSky.com, and previously at Rodale.

Frances Gilbert announced that she will be leaving Sterling, effective Friday, May 18 and moving to Random House to be Editorial Director of Doubleday Children’s Books, reporting to Mallory Loehr, VP Publishing Director of Random/Golden Books.  She begins mid-June.

Debi Fine recently left the company Direct Brands, the company that runs Book-of-the-Month and numerous other clubs. The new CEO is Daniel Shum; he comes from the Najafi Companies, where he is a Partner. 

Laura Dawson will be starting a new position at R. R. Bowker, handling product management for DOI, ISNI and ISTC.  She was Communications Chief at Firebrand Technologies.

Melville House announced a number of recent new hires. Sal Robinson has joined as an editor from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, where she was most recently an associate editor. Founder and publisher of Dark Sky PressKevin Murphy, has been named Digital Marketing Manager, as well as Managing Editor of the MobyLives blog.

The Overlook Press announced that Jill Lichtenstadter has been appointed Sales Manager. She was previously Director of National Accounts at Hachette Book Group.

Jon Thurber, who has been books editor at the LA Times since 2010—his latest posting in over 40 years at the newspaper—is leaving the company.

Kathy Davis has joined Harlequin as Acquisitions Editor, supporting the newly acquired Heartsong Presents program.  She had been a freelance writer and editor.

Peter Collingridge is the latest well-known epublishing recruit for Safari Books Online, where he will serve as VP of Product Development. He will work out of London initially, but will relocate to the San Francisco Bay area this summer.

Eric Brandt has joined Yale University Press as Senior Editor, Humanities. He was most recently Senior Editor at HarperOne.

Tattered Cover Manager of Operations Neil Strandberg has relocated to New York to join the ABA‘s staff in the new position of director of member technology.

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