Tag Archives: Digital Change

Briefly Noted | UK Indie Booksellers Motivated to Start Selling E-books | Publishing Perspectives

In the UK, Streeter feels that wholesalers have an important role to play, performing the back office download function and helping independents improve their websites and make them transactional. At the moment, there is a huge difference in the standard of websites among UK independents, with many of them being out-of-date or non-transactional. “After that, the next step is Google e-books,” she added. “And when that launches in the UK we want to put on a presentation for independents. At the Bookseller’s Association we have been having lots of conversations with Google and those conversations will continue. It is all about marketing this properly.

“I have never been asked for an e-book in the shop myself, but I do know customers who have Kindles. I think booksellers need to tell these customers that that is a locked-in system –- that’s a conversation they need to have.”

via UK Indie Booksellers Motivated to Start Selling E-books | Publishing Perspectives.

Opinion | The Differential Rates Of Change Problem

There’s an issue I’ve been exploring on this blog and elsewhere for some time. It’s about digital change and what it does to large and small markets, especially when the rates of change in these markets differ. I’ve called it the differential rates of digital change problem and I think it is time I put a solid definition on it.

So here it goes. The Differential Rates Of Digital Change Problem occurs:

When a large publishing market undergoes a more rapid shift towards digital delivery and consumption of books than a smaller publishing market.

This change has many significant implications but the three I want to focus on here are:

  • Rights pressure on small market publishers
  • Sales pressure on small market publishers
  • Growing disparity between ACTUAL digital change in small markets and OBSERVABLE digital change

Let’s look at these one by one.

Rights Pressure
I’ve highlighted how larger market publishers increasingly have an incentive to acquire global digital rights in works, whereas, as of yet, smaller market publishers have little incentive to hold on to those rights, though they know that in the future they will need them. I’ve pointed to one possible way to meet both needs here.

Sales Pressure
This is almost a bigger deal for small markets. And it has a few forms.

  1. Digital sales of titles not necessarily available in the smaller market to customers in the smaller market recorded as sales in larger markets (eg Kindle Sales to Irish customers via Amazon.com or .co.uk)
  2. Digital sales of titles available in smaller markets physically AND digitally but made through sites that record those sales in the larger market (eg titles published by local publishers or foreign publishers available on Amazon.com Kindle store)
  3. And of course, if a small market publisher sells global digital rights to a book they publish, then the digital editions of locally published books will sell through the larger market
  4. The quietest form is of course digital sales to residents who have retailer accounts in other territories, ie English Address for Amazon.co.uk Kindle sales (small I’d wager but without the stats who knows)

These sales are starting, slowly but surely, to leak sales from small markets to large markets. The levels are unquantifiable right now in anything but the most sketchy way, but they are surely growing with each Kindle,  Kobo reader, iPad, iPod Touch, iPhone and Android device sold into a small market. The proliferation of devices offering ebooks sold through large market retailers  MUST be driving sales from those markets. When those retailers start sharing their data (and how likely is that) we will know for sure.

Over time the sales impact will become pronounced, especially if the small markets don’t develop a local infrastructure for selling ebooks. Imagine for instance if all digital sales in Ireland were made through Amazon, Apple, Google and Kobo with maybe a small share for the rest? If the system remains as now, no digital sales will ever be recorded and the market for books will shrink dramatically OR at least  it will seem to.

Actual Vs Observable Data
This is a bigger issue than it sounds like and is deeply relevant. As digital change moves on, small markets get a false idea of how rapidly their market is shifting, or at least publishers native to that small market do. If sales are happening in the estores I’ve already highlighted then the local market doesn’t see them. If 20% of the market shifts to digital, but buys its books from foreign retailers, then the market will fall by 20% and it would still look like digital has no presence.

Clearly there are offsets here. For instance, if a local publisher starts putting their titles on those outlets they will start selling books and will realize that the digital shift is ALREADY happening, or perhaps they will realize that even if it isn’t happening, they can sell some of their books to a global customer base.

What’s more, local offices of large publishers (quite a few of which exist in Ireland) will be able to see their rising ebook sales through their corporate parents and will know well enough how quickly digital sales are growing.

But even so, the data for the smaller market as a whole will be fractured and patchy, controlled by outside forces whose good will cannot be relied on and all the time digital will seem, because there is little reliable evidence to the contrary, to be a marginal market.

In this strange  scenario, local publishers remain unwilling to invest in digital because they feel the market is small but equally the market to them remains small because they have not even invested to get a few titles digitized and for sale on these foreign platforms. The only way to see beyond the apparently tiny size of the market is to take the leap and invest a small amount, but companies, in the absence of data, are rightly reluctant to do so.

Conclusion
So there it is, the Differential Rates Of Digital Change Problem. It’s not a problem for larger publishing markets of course and I don’t see any real way of addressing it until figures for digital sales begin to be shared more freely by the large companies like Apple, Amazon and Google who are not really minded to share it.

The only way beyond it is to accept on faith that digital is growing in smaller markets but in hidden ways, then to step beyond that and start offering your products digitally. This doesn’t have to be a huge investment (and if you doubt that, spend some time online reading about ebook creation from text files) but it does need to happen and it needs to happen soon.

Briefly Noted | Week after holidays, e-book sales outdo print – USATODAY.com

Millions of gift-wrapped iPads, Kindles, Nooks and other digital reading devices resulted in an unprecedented surge in sales of e-books last week.USA TODAYs Best-Selling Books list, to be published Thursday, will show digitals new popularity: E-book versions of the top six books outsold the print versions last week. And of the top 50, 19 had higher e-book than print sales.Its the first time the top-50 list has had more than two titles in which the e-version outsold print.

via Week after holidays, e-book sales outdo print – USATODAY.com.

Blackhall Publishing Releases Its First Trade Ebook

Open Dissent by former Bank Of Ireland CEO, Michael Soden, is Blackhall Publishing‘s first trade book to be published as an ebook.

The title, which went live today on Amazon’s Kindle ebook store is the first of the publisher’s trade books to be made available in digital format and is the first of three ebooks in the pipeline.

Open Dissent and one other will be converted in partnership with Tech-net Scientific e-Publishing services and the company plans to release the third through Kobo, the ebook retailer founded by Indigo of Canada.

Blackhall aims to have all its new trade titles available in ebook format by the end of 2011 and is working on a plan for its backlist.

Daily Links 26/08/2010

A rather excellent video featuring Jamie Byng, who’ll be appearing at Mountains To Sea in Dun Laoghaire in September


Hatched | everything I want to say on one page
David discusses blurbs, including his own!
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Upwardly mobile | moving in and what not
And he discusses new digs!
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Book Launch: Renegades: Irish Republican Women 1900-1922
Ann was on Pat Kenny yesterday, interesting book this one.
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Moving on
This really should be read, considered, parsed, filed and re-visited by publishers across the globe. It’s message, however unpalatable, is a vital one!
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Gollancz appoints Nash as digital publisher
On a very selfish level I admire Gollancz as a publisher, if only because they publish some of the finest sci-fi and fantasy.
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Miriam O’Callaghan and Mercier Press title
And why wouldn’t they? (I commissioned Moxie while working at Mercier Press)
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Sell, Socialise and Survive at the Frankfurt Book Fair
Good advice on Frankfurt. IPN will be there so don’t be afraid to send us your stories and releases!
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Edinburgh
Nice note on Edinburgh from Laura!
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Waterstone’s to open bar and restaurants
I think this makes sense, but don’t quote me on it!
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Samsung launches e-reader with W H Smith
When will the ebook and ereading bug bite home here? 
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PW Select: A Quarterly Service for Self-Published Authors to Launch in December
Publishers Weekly will launch a quarterly magazine in December focusing on announcements and reviews of self-published titles. However, listed self-published titles will come at a fee of $149 to the author and reviews will only be on selected titles.
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Publicity for Mercier Press titles
Three of Mercier Press titles were reviewed in national papers at the weekend.
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Reivew: Rules for a Perfect Life by Niamh Greene
IN Rules for a Perfect Life, each of the 27 chapters, like those in some self-help manuals, is headed by a maxim, which will, if followed, apparently change your life for the better.
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Tales of the Burren, and other places
A nice list of new local history titles
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Ireland’s desperadoes of the veld
Masked Raiders: Irish Banditry in Southern Africa, 1880-1899, By Charles van Onselen
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Book Club: Tenderwire by Claire Kilroy
An interesting move this!
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Review: Jumping in Puddles by Claire Allan
The Balamory lookalike seaside village of Rathinch may look postcard-perfect to summer visitors. But for locals who live there all year, it is a place of squinting windows, a hotbed of righteous gossip.
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Tim Waterstone To Discuss The Future Of Books In Dun Laoghaire

Founder of the Waterstone bookshop chain, Tim Waterstone will join, Jamie Byng, whose publishing house Canongate published Barack Obama’s Dreams From My Father and the global success, Life Of Pi, author Matthew Kneale and journalist Rachel Cooke in the Pavilion Theatre, Dun Laoghaire to debate the future of reading, writing and books.

The session takes place on Sunday 12th September at 1.45pm as part of Dun Laoghaire Rathdown’s book festival, Mountains To Sea which is entering it’s second year in 2010.

The discussion comes at a time of great change in the world of books and the panel will explore this new digital landscape. With the launch in Ireland of Apple iPad and news that Amazon’s newest Kindle device is both the best selling Kindle ever and the best selling product on Amazon there will be much to discuss.

Monthly Round Up – May 2010

It has been a busy month for Irish Publishing News. So busy we didn’t get a round up post out so here, as a monthly digest, it is! To celebrate the iPad launch in the UK and the forthcoming launch here in July we’ve added a rather nice image from Flickr User Jesus Belzunce.

Announcement

Mary McAlese Announces The Inaugural Laureate na nÓg

Authors

Gately’s Posthumous Title To Make Chart?

Books

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 22/05/2010

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 15/05/2010

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 09/05/2010

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 1/05/2010

Eason Book Club Choice for May is Tana French’s In The Woods

Comment

Guest Column: Seeing beyond the recession: Celebrating 25 Years Of Cló Iar-Chonnacht

Guest Column: How to Make Ebooks and Influence People

Guest Column: My Business Is Your Business

Features

Exclusive: Derek Hughes On The New Hughes & Hughes

Links

Daily Links 26/05/2010

Daily Links 20/05/2010

Daily Links 17/05/2010

Daily Links 12/05/2010

Daily Links 10/05/2010

Daily Links 06/05/2010

Daily Links 04/05/2010

News

Breaking: Hughes & Hughes Dundrum Reopens

PJ O Connor Awards Shortlist 2010 Announced

Nuala Ní Chonchúir Makes The Edge Hill Short List

Jean Harrington New President of Publishing Ireland

Hughes & Hughes St. Stephen’s Green To Reopen Monday

RTE Releases The Francis MacManus Radio Short Story Competition Shortlist

Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick Wins Bisto Children’s Book Of The Year 2009/2010 for ‘There’

Hughes & McGilloway On The Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel Of The Year Award 2010 Longlist

Published This Month

Published This Month ~ May 2010

Publishing

Liberties Press Offers PDF Ebooks Direct To Readers

Rights

Gill & MacMillan Signs “Heartbreaking” Story

Three Book Deal With Poolbeg For Debut Novelist Shirley Benton Bailey

Maverick Sells German & French Rights For Welcome To Hell

Lots more to come in June!

Instant Weekly Roundup - Free WordPress Plugin

Image with thanks to Flickr User Jesus Belzunce, under a CC license.

Daily Links 17/05/2010


Awards celebrate national talent
The books of the decade poll is really pulling on attention!
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An Orthodox Approach
William Ryan is getting some interesting reviews!
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What will be the big digital issues in January 2011?
Good question
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Nobody Move, This Is A Review: THE WHISPERERS by John Connolly
John Connolly’s The Whisperers is reviewed over at Crime Always Pays
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David’s got a mountain of posts from the CBI conference, all worth reading if, like me, you couldn’t make it along at the weekend!

CBI Conference 2010 | Siobhan Parkinson
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CBI Conference 2010 | Marcus Sedgewick

CBI Conference 2010 | Elena Odriozola
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Children’s Books Ireland Conference 2010
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CBI Conference 2010 | Siobhán Parkinson & Tadhg Mac Dhonnagáin
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CBI Conference 2010 | Michael Rosen
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CBI Conference 2010 | Nikki Gamble
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CBI Conference 2010 | Writers’ Panel
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Daily Links 12/05/2010

The Knife Of Never Letting Go, Patrick NessPatrick Ness & Sarah Rees Brennan | Question anyone?
Go on, suggest a question to David for Patrick Ness or Sarah Rees Brennan
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Launch of The Song the Oriole Sang by Philip McDonagh
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Launch of The Summer Campaign in Kerry
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Orion signs Walsh autobiography
The christmas biography market in Ireland is hotting up
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Review: The Fethard-On-Sea Boycott
A pretty fair review I think!
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President Mary McAleese “Books are the stepping stones to your best self.”
The president is a fine speaker.
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The iPad and iBookstore to arrive in UK on 28th May
We must wait until July of course!
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Is There a Digital Talent Emergency in Book Publishing?
Yes if, no but!
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