Booknet Canada Blog

Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

BookCamp Halifax (#bchfx10): The Value of Community

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010 by Meghan MacDonald

I attended and moderated a session at BookCamp Halifax 2010 this past weekend. As per usual I left feeling like my brain was exploding with new ideas, but instead of writing a session recap, I want to focus on why I think this BookCamp was successful.

If you want to check out videos of the sessions from BookCamp Halifax 2010, head over to haligonia.ca .

I started off the day with a session on online communities with Kimberly Walsh and Eric Rountree. At some point, someone made the statement that: if you treat the book like a social object, the community will figure out what it wants to do with it. I think that really set the tone for the day and we, the community, took it and ran with it.

At some point, every one of the organizers came up to me and apologetically said something about the unconference being small, and that they hoped for more people next year — but that’s not the point! It doesn’t matter what size the unconference, what matters is that every single person there felt like they were part of a community no matter their age, location, or professional background.

I think it was that sense of community — that sense of belonging — that made everyone feel comfortable enough to share their experience and opinions, both professionally and personally. The audience members totally hijacked the sessions, but that’s exactly what I wanted to see happen. Session moderators only did the introduction, then ideas bounced around the room for an hour until we had to cut people off. It was fantastic.

Great work to all of the organizers: Kimberly Walsh , Ryan Jones , Robbie MacGregor , and Eric Rountree . And a big thank you to all of the attendees — you made it your own and I’m glad I could be a part of it.

We the supply chain

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010 by Tim Middleton

The sixth annual AMR Supply Chain Top 25 report has just been released and it has me thinking about the role that BookNet Canada plays in the publishing industry trying to raise awareness of the supply chain discipline and how it impacts business.

There is a lot to digest in this report but certainly it comes as no surprise that Apple has held onto the #1 position for the third year in a row. Apple’s success is attributed to its ability to consistently bring both operational excellence and innovation excellence to bear in some of the most competitive markets in the world. Furthermore, Apple has broken new ground in transforming a supply chain into a value chain by starting with the consumer experience and designing its network to serve that master first and foremost.

Recommendations:

  • Apply demand-driven principles to coordinate and integrate the functional areas of supply, demand and product management in order to better sense, shape and respond to changes in market demand.
  • Take a cue from the leaders when designing your own supply chain strategy. Think outside in, starting with your customers and working back through your trading-partner network to design a profitable response. Remember that one size does not fit all. Define how many supply chain types you have and design a customized response for each.
  • Balance operational excellence with innovation excellence for superior overall performance.
  • Focus on acquiring, mentoring, growing and retaining supply chain talent.
  • Measure your supply chain as your customer experiences it. Use the right supply chain and product metrics to consciously manage performance, and foster a culture that embraces measurement for continuous improvement.

Just in these points alone I think there is a lot for publishing to take away, but I would be remiss if I didn’t point out how the projects we work on everyday at BookNet can help you build toward the same kind of excellence as Apple.

BiblioShare:
Yes ONIX is a standard but it isn’t very valuable if companies don’t use it in a standard way. We often bemoan the fact that certifying publisher’s metadata doesn’t imply good data. So BiblioShare helps us get more consistent about validation and allows us to be as strict as we want to be about letting the data flow. Now we need to convince the industry that this is a good thing, and it is. It will help you to “to coordinate and integrate the functional areas of supply, demand and product management in order to better sense, shape and respond to changes in market demand.”

Pubfight and Interns:
With Pubfight (hey, who’s ready for next season?) and our intern program we meet a slew of young creative minds who have the energy our industry needs for transformation and we can provide them with a better informed picture of the supply chain so then the industry can have a “focus on acquiring, mentoring, growing and retaining supply chain talent”.

CataList:
Our digital catalogue project should help publishers better serve their retail customers which in effect will serve the reader better. I say should because there is a tendency to want to hold out on features that are too “retail” oriented and this is our cross to bear, to try to get to a solution that “think(s) outside in, that remembers that one size does not fit all. That defines how many supply chain types we have and design a customized response for each.”

Salesdata and Prospector:
Well this is a no-brainer. Transparency of the marketplace or “using the right supply chain and product metrics to consciously manage performance, and foster a culture that embraces measurement for continuous improvement.”

Upcoming Conferences for All Who Love Books & Tech, Tech & Books

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010 by Morgan Cowie

Winter. Boots. Slush. Dreams of warmer weather, hot conversation and exotic locations (like Toronto!).

Here’s a snapshot of what’s coming up in 2010 so you can mark your calendar (and buy your tickets) now.

Digital Book World

January 26-27, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.digitalbookworld.com

*Featured speakers include our very own Noah Genner.*

O’Reilly Tools of Change

February 22-24, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.toccon.com/toc2010

*Want a free ticket to Tools of Change? Pre-order your copy of The Canadian Book Market 2009. and you’ll be entered to win a conference pass.*

Publishing Business Conference & Expo

March 8-10, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.publishingbusiness.com

*Get your discount code by emailing us at events@booknetcanada.ca*

BNC Technology Forum 2010

March 24-25, 2010

Toronto, ON

http://events.booknetcanada.ca

*Awesome speakers, great conversation and your chance to make partnerships that will change your business. Don’t miss it.*

Making Information Pay 2010

May 6, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.bisg.org/event-cat-4-making-information-pay.php

Book Summit 2010

June 18th, 2010

Toronto, ON

http://www.readings.org/?q=node/2965

*Book Summit’s Hot New Models: The Amazing Transformation of Business and Culture in the World of Books will look at how the book business is transforming itself and creating new models in every arena *

BookCamp Toronto

Date TBA

Toronto ON

http://bookcampto.pbworks.com/

BNC CEO Noah Genner To Speak at First Ever Digital Book World

Monday, January 11th, 2010 by Morgan Cowie

On January 26th, 2010, our fearless CEO will be braving the winter winds (and seasonal Toronto - NYC flight delays) to speak at the inaugural Digital Book World conference.

See me speak at Digital Book World (http://www.digitalbookworld.com)

Noah is a part of a panel discussing Digital Tools: How the Sales and Marketing Process is Changing:

Long before we stop buying paper books in brick-and-mortar bookstores, publishers will be peddling those books differently. They already are. There is in place an industry-wide effort to create an e-catalog standard (Edelweiss) and a community of reviewers that can be served with electronic galleys (NetGalley.) BookNet Canada is also pioneering efforts with catalogs and sales data that are instructive. All of these changes are on the agenda of this panel.

Find out more about the whole agenda at digitalbookworld.com. If you haven’t yet registered and you want to, contact us at events@booknetcanada.ca and we’ll send you a discount code.

Looking Ahead to 2010

Friday, December 18th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

What’s to look forward to after the eggnog taps runs dry and the festive trappings are shelved for another year? For book publishing nerds like us, the answer is…conferences!

Here’s a snapshot of what’s coming up in 2010 so you can mark your calendar (and buy your tickets) now.

Digital Book World

January 26-27, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.digitalbookworld.com

O’Reilly Tools of Change

February 22-24, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.toccon.com/toc2010

Publishing Business Conference & Expo

March 8-10, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.publishingbusiness.com

BNC Technology Forum 2010

March 24-25, 2010

Toronto, ON

http://events.booknetcanada.ca

Making Information Pay 2010

May 6, 2010

New York, NY

http://www.bisg.org/event-cat-4-making-information-pay.php

Consumer Book Trends 2009 - Get It While It’s Hot

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

Bowker and the Association of American Publishers are putting on one last webinar to wrap up 2009 in style and BNC has a discount code available for you.

Consumer Book Trends 2009

What is the buzz in book trends for 2009? Join us for this webinar to understand the changing climate of book buying in 2009 and to understand book buying behaviors. Moving beyond basic book sales data, this webinar will provide insight into why people buy books and what motivates their purchases? You will see the latest data available on book buying behavior through the first three quarters of 2009.

You can register at http://bookconsumertrends2009.eventbrite.com/. Get the BNC discount code by emailing us events@booknetcanada.ca

BNC SalesData Tips #4 - How To Find Out More

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

The new release of BNC SalesData is a kind of like a cool Optimus Prime toy I remember my brother having when we were young (this is pre-Meghan Fox meets giant robots, which could be good or bad depending on your perspective). Anyway, the toy was pretty obviously cool with it’s ability to transform man-like machine into huge semi-truck. You didn’t have to look too deep to get into how awesome it was.

After multiple play sessions, it became clear that there truly was more to this guy/truck than met the eye. There were all kinds of playable details that you only noticed after really mining the more obvious functions. I tend to think of BNC SalesData like that - there’s a lot going on besides the very obvious revamps. To that end, we’ve created a series of tutorials that we hope will help you find more about how to use the finer details of the new site, as well as sticking with the tried and true transforming (or whatever) functions).

The short videos are broken up by section and include:

  • Homepage
  • Bestseller Reports
  • Market Share
  • Managing Saved/Shared Reports
  • How to Save and Edit Reports
  • Using the Create Reports Form
  • Title/ISBN Reports

You can find all the videos by logging into BNC SalesData - we’ve created a link in the sidebar on the right hand side.

You’ll also find a link to the BNC SalesData training webinar (taped version) that is really useful if you attended the webinar and want to review or if you weren’t able to be at the live versions.

Let us know if there is anything else you’d like to see in terms of reference guides by emailing salesdata@booknetcanada.ca. If you can stand the sound of my voice on the videos, I’m happy to make more…maybe I’ll even do some in an Optimus Prime voice (not likely to be distinguishable in any way from Christian Bale’s Batman. Fair warning).

Upcoming Events - Webinars, Seminars and More!

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

WHAT RULES READING: Ranks or Reviews?

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Book and Periodical Council

As newspaper book review sections are everywhere in decline, the New York Times Book Review has managed to stay afloat by expanding its bestseller lists. This begs the question: are bestsellers driven by reviews, or reviews by bestsellers? Do sales rankings form a service in lieu of disappearing book review pages? Are book reviews merely dressed-up algorithms? Are words now more about numbers? What happens to a book of brilliant short stories if it languishes at Amazon ranking 2,778,440?

The Arts and Letters Club

14 Elm St, Toronto, Ontario

5:30 – 7:00pm, doors open at 5:00pm

$10 admission

Reading & Democracy: TD National Reading Summit

November 12th & 13th, 2009

The TD National Reading Summit will engage participants in crafting a blueprint for a reading Canada. Over two days, delegates will hear from an impressive line-up of speakers from across the country and around the world. . Conference sessions will inspire delegates to collaborate and lay the groundwork for new provincial and federal programs that will ultimately foster a reading culture in Canada.

Bronfman Hall,

Royal Ontario Museum

100 Queen’s Park, Toronto

http://www.nationalreadingsummit.ca/

Year 01: The Birth of Electronic Publishing

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

BPPA

The publishing landscape has changed with the creation of Shortcovers and the widespread availability of potential ebook readers, from Apple iPhone to Zune HD. The popularity of the Amazon Kindle and Sony Readers, both within the publishing industry and throughout the general population, has created a number of questions and opportunities for traditional book publishers.

The ongoing Google Settlement discussions and the rapid pace of the ACP digitization project have spurred publishers into action. However, most publishers are facing a steep learning curve when discussing XML markup, ePub development, and digital workflow. What skills are required for digital publishing? What kind of software and hardware are needed? How much money can be made from ebooks, and therefore, how much should be invested? The BPPA will discuss these issues and more in our ePublishing event.

The Arts and Letters Club

14 Elm St, Toronto, Ontario

eBook Readers and Standards…Where to Next?

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

As the eBook market rapidly unfolds, it seems to get more complex by the day. Publishers are struggling to adapt as competitive and consumer pressures demand that their titles be compatible with the multitude of new eBook applications and eReaders coming to market. To develop a successful eBook production strategy, you need to take a clear position on where the market is today and will be tomorrow.

In this 60-minute webinar, Sarah Rotman Epps, Forrester’s eBook Market Analyst, and Michael Smith, Director of the International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF) which manages the ePub standard, present their highly informed views on the future for eBook readers, formats and standards. How will it all shake out? Join these two industry experts to get the inside track on the future and better position yourself to take advantage of the biggest driver of industry innovation to hit the publishing world in decades – eBooks.

11am EST

http://event.on24.com

The Future of the Book: How to Stay in the Game

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

The future of the book is personal, digital, mobile and global. The changes sweeping this $100 billion plus global industry promise the biggest change in how we read since the invention of the printing press. In this webinar, you will hear your industry colleagues’ perspectives on the future of books, and about what publishers and printers need to do to participate in this dynamic and changing media world.

2pm EST

http://event.on24.com

BookCamp Vancouver - Major Wrap

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

Last Saturday, I was lucky enough to attend BookCamp Vancouver (the First!). As a co-organizer, I wasn’t (very) nervous I’d be turned away with my hat (laptop) in my hands but it still felt like a privilege to be among such smart and engaging people for a full day of books and tech talkin’.

The BookCamp Van team, notably Monique Trottier, Sean Cranbury, John Maxwell, Crissy Campbell, Nick Bouton, Suzanne Norman and myself, were ably assisted throughout the day by the students of SFU’s MPub program and I would be remiss if I didn’t mention how great a job they did. Can I hire you all for Tech Forum? Please?

Also, the moderators kicked some serious discussion facilitating butt. I tried to make it to as many sessions as possible throughout the day and nearly all of the groups that I dropped in on were really humming. Lectures were few and collaborations (is that a plural? It is now!) were many.

Big ideas coming out of the day (at least for me):

  • A book is not software and software is not a book - however, two tracks that seemed likely to run forever parallel at one time in our lives (at least mine - clearly I’m getting old) have now seen more than a few intersections. There are lessons to be learned on both sides as well as in the middle where the twain shall meet.
  • We could argue about copyright and DRM all day. Seriously. Easily. And there are always risks in taking content online or really in any new business model. But there are far more risks in not doing anything at all…I really felt the energy and optimism in BookCamp attendees. It’s true that not everything is going to work…but the idea of a trade paperback was poo-pooed at one time too. For winners to exist, they have to be experiments first.
  • Open source makes everyone stronger. The more we share what we know, the less reinventing of the wheel needs to be done and the more time we have to spend on actually creating books for the future.

Big thanks to Jo-Anne Ray, Rowly Lorimer and everyone else at SFU for being such great hosts. We couldn’t have had better digs. And thanks to all the attendees for bringing such lightness of heart and sharpness of mind - it was your contribution that made it a real unconference.

Anyone interested in their very own BookCamp? Email me at mcowie@booknetcanada.ca - BookCamp organizers past, present and future are getting together on a call in the last week of October to talk about how to bring events like this to more places across the country.

BookCamp Vancouver Mini Wrap

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

A great video from Mark Bertils (http://indexmb.com/) with Monique Trottier’s thoughts on BookCamp Vancouver. I promise to create a longer post later today with my wrap-up…

“The Big Picture” on U.S. Consumer Book Buying - Upcoming Webinar

Thursday, October 8th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

Bowker and the Association of American Publishers are offering a webinar on October 22nd, 2009: “The Big Picture” on U.S. Consumer Book Buying. Here’s the lowdown:

Who is today’s book consumer, where are they shopping and how successful are we at reaching them? Join us for this webinar for a first-of-its-kind sneak peek into book buying trends for the first half of 2009. Moving beyond basic book sales data, the webinar will provide insight into who today’s book buyer is, what they buy, where they buy books and what motivates their purchase.

If you’re interested in attending, BookNet members get a 10% discount. Email Morgan Cowie at mcowie@booknetcanada.ca to get the discount code.

Register at http://pubtrackconsumer.eventbrite.com/

ONIX 3.0: “Working to create a more informed, empowered and efficient book industry supply chain for both physical and digital products.”

Thursday, October 8th, 2009 by Tim Middleton

In partnership with the International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF), the BISG presented the third in their series of ONIX 3.0 educational webcasts. David Martin from EDItEUR’s ONIX Support Team and Brian Green, Executive Director of the International ISBN Agency focused mainly on how ONIX 3.0 provides new support for digital publishing.

The presentation was an excellent introduction for those of us wondering how the ONIX 3.0 release will impact the supply chain. The very first thing to realize about this release is that ONIX 3.0 is not backwards compatible with earlier ONIX releases. This could mean that adoption of ONIX 3.0 will be slow, however the overhaul to the standard will mean somewhat less complexity and of course some new elements to mark up digital formats and marketing collateral for the supply chain.

Obviously there is a lot debate and work to be done around ebook identification in the supply chain but the ONIX 3.0 is an encouraging move in the right direction.

The Key Features of ONIX 3.0 are:

* Removal of ‘deprecated’ elements
* Digital products (ebooks and more)
* Multiple-item products, sets and items in series
*‘Marketing collateral’
* Market-specific data, for products sold internationally
* Breakdown of product records into ‘blocks’, to allow partial updates
* New schema language options (RELAX NG)

There are lots of great improvements in the new release and even though it is not backwards compatible I think it will be hugely beneficial to migrate your ONIX to this release. So far no one has implemented ONIX 3.0 but at least one Canadian organization on the call yesterday indicated they will be moving to ONIX 3.0 in 2010. Let us know if you are planning a migration to ONIX 3.0 soon!

Check out the full presentation.



ONIX 3.0 Free Webinar From IDPF and BISG

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

The Book Industry Study Group and the IDPF are putting on a free webinar explaining ONIX 3.0 and metadata for eBooks on Wednesday, October 7th at 11:00 EST.

The big questions that will be addressed during this session are:

  • How does ONIX 3.0 provide new support for digital publishing?
  • What are the requirements for the standard identification of eBooks in the complex new supply chain?
  • What are other important benefits of ONIX 3.0?
  • How should publishers and other ONIX users respond to the new release?

Register at http://www.bisg.org/

Webinar features David Martin, ONIX Support Team, EDItEUR and Brian Green, Executive Director of the International ISBN Agency.

O’Reilly Announces New eBook Conference

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

As the BookNetter in charge of running the BNC Tech Forum, I’ve often thought the only way our annual conference could be better is if I didn’t have to strap on heels, make-up and generally just look better than I would if I were just sitting around in my pajamas all day. O’Reilly Media has found a way to bring the best of the conference and lounging world together - an eBook conference that you can participate in remotely.

More exciting news: as a TOC media sponsor, we’ve got discount codes for our loyal blog readers. To get 25% off the ticket price, please email us at media@booknetcanada.ca before Wednesday, September 9th, 2009.

The big issues on the agenda include:

Ebook Pricing: Is $9.99 the new price for ebooks? How can publishers add value and increase margins with ebooks?
  • What Do Readers Want? How are readers responding to ebooks and the plethora of new devices? What do they think of our efforts to date?
  • The Future of Electronic Reading: Ebooks, Ereaders, and Beyond: This presentation will cover the current state of the art in eBooks and eReaders - discussing the technologies currently at play and those coming in the near future.
  • Some great speakers, including Tech Forum alumni Neelan Choksi of Lexcycle and Hugh McGuire of BookOven, will be sharing their opinions.

    Go to http://en.oreilly.com/tocfall09 to register or find out more.

    Future of the ISBN - Free Webcast from BISG

    Wednesday, August 12th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

    The Book Industry Study Group is hosting a free webcast on Identification and Digital Publications: Exploring the Emerging Standards Landscape. The cast takes place on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 from 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM.

    The book industry has had the ISBN for nearly 40 years; there has been little cause for excitement. Now, suddenly the whole subject of “identifiers” has become a hot topic, particularly when it comes to digital books and other online resources. This BISG Webcast will explore why the book industry has standard identifiers, and consider the future of the ISBN (International Standard Book Number), as well as the role of newer identification standards like ISTC (International Standard Text Code) and ISNI (International Standard Name Identifier). What do you need to know to make informed decisions about how — and whether — to use them?

    You can find out more and register here.

    ONIX 3.0 - Free Web Seminars from BISG and EDItEUR

    Monday, July 27th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

    Though it’s still early in the life and times of ONIX 3.0, the new release is starting to generate some questions. Thanks to the BISG and EDItEUR, you can get some answers in two free web seminars that are coming up later this month.

    The first, ONIX for Books 3.0: An Introduction, answers four primary questions:

    • Why did the book industry need a new ONIX release?
    • How does ONIX 3.0 provide new support for digital publishing?
    • What are other important benefits of ONIX 3.0?
    • How should publishers and other ONIX users respond to the new release?

    The second, ONIX for Books 3.0: Best Practices for Implementation, features Richard Stark (Director of Product Data for Barnes & Noble, Inc. and Chair of BISAC’s Metadata Committee) and is an hour of how to best implement ONIX 3.0 at your firm.

    New Publishing Business Model #5 - HarperStudio

    Wednesday, July 15th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

    Bob Miller made a big splash in the waters of publishing in April 2008 when he announced that he was leaving Hyperion and joining HarperCollins to create a new imprint. And not only did Miller change houses, he also challenged fundamental aspects of the supply chain as we know it. HarperStudio, as his imprint came to be named, was not taking returns. Period. All books are non-returnable. And wait…there’s more! Authors receive a 50/50 revenue share in exchange for lower initial advances, rather than a more traditional 10-15% with a large(r) chunk of cash up front.

    There’s a lot more about HarperStudio that is remarkable. Possibly the best part of their website is their amazing blog. With articles coaching authors on how they can do great book signings or explaining to readers why eBooks cost more money than you might think, they are working on educating the entire publishing community (and I am nothing if not a huge fan of the rising tide lifts all boats theory).

    There’s book promotion on the blog, sure, but there’s also a feeling of real community. The tone of the site and of the new way of doing business sync to build a feeling of everyone being in this together. After all, the author, publisher, bookseller and reader all want the same thing: getting great books into the world in a sustainable way is everyone’s bottom line.

    Is HarperStudio the wave of the future or do they exist only as an anomaly within the supports of the traditional structure? This is something of a false binary but an interesting questions nonetheless. How does an imprint or a firm move to non-returnable? Is it possible to change traditional advance structures industry-wide? The competitive advantages of securing a large author with a big bonus or allowing for returns are many. Will there come a time when it makes more sense for these traditions to be retired? HarperStudio is certainly worth watching for things about how these questions will be answered.

    BookCamp TO - Moving to The How

    Monday, June 8th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

    The first Book Camp Toronto (aka Book Camp TO or #bcto09 for Twitter devotees) was nothing less than a smashing success.

    So What Are the Big Questions?

    • DRM: we know that customers don’t like it. We can assume that device-specific files, with no one eReader holding iPod market monopoly, are holding back adoption. But what do we do about it? What is the middle road?
    • International Rights: parceling out territorial rights is a dependable revenue-supplement for Canadian presses but with every eBook available to be viewed/purchased by the entire English language speaking world, this channel is eroded when it’s dropped into the electronic book trade. Should publishers give up the short-term revenue of territorial rights-selling (when print and electronic are demanded in the same package) for the potential of a stronger e-market in the future? Is the short-term hit worth whatever potential sales are coming?
    • Where Should Books Be Discovered?: Amazon? Indigo? Publisher websites? Aggregates of publisher websites? Indie bookstores? With net traffic distributed as it is, publishers don’t always control the way their books are found and they are even less likely to control what other books might be recommended to potential buyers. But the tools on the larger eBook vendors help drive sales for all books (and they are crazy expensive to build in-house).
    • Role of Author: if your author doesn’t want to play digital ball with their own self-promotion, how do you encourage/wheedle/plead for them to get stuck in? Is it always worth it to get your authors on board?
    • What is the New Business Model for Publishing?: if DRM sucks and digital is the way of the future, what existing revenue streams are soon to be dead as dodos? What are they replaced by? It’s not enough to deconstruct (which is a heck of a lot easier than the alternative of construction. We need to know how we keep the business of books alive even while it’s changing. Because it’s important. Period.

    What Worked:

    • The Un: most of the sessions that I attended were moderated by really fascinating speakers who were experts in the topic at hand. They presented great snapshots and starting points for the discussion…and then they got out of the way and let the discussion flow.
    • The Timing/Session Numbers/Breaks: the day flew by and I could have stayed for more sessions (on a sunny Saturday. I was surprised too). Logistics were great…enough time to get to every session but still have some hallway chat time.
    • Broad Debate: it didn’t take long to wake the lightly slumbering DRM beast but thankfully not every session I was in focused on it. From Twitter stream, it seems that more than a few got stuck in that mud but thanks to good moderation, the sessions I attended stayed focused on the topic at hand.

    For Next Year…?

    • What questions are we trying to answer?: this year, it felt as though a lot of tangled issues arose. Next year, it would be great if some/all/most sessions were focused around questions that attendees tried to answer…the takeaway would be more coordinated and more clear.
    • Speak Up!: I bet everyone in every room had something great to say but most rooms had 5-10 people speaking and a bunch of folks listening. You have the right to comment - it doesn’t matter if you’ve been in the business for 20 years or 20 days. The more perspectives in the mix, the better value for all.
    • Leave Personal Agendas At the Doorstep: personal experience is great. Personal promotion is not. The public sessions are not a time to solve individual conundrums, air grievances or belittle those around you for not being as techie/forward-thinking/revolutionary as you wish they would be. Immerse yourself in the sessions, let the discussion move organically (instead of seeking to left-turn for your own sake) and you might just find what you’re looking for anyway.
    • Let Us Leave a Mark: somewhere to share comments, thoughts and inspiration from sessions would allow us all to share in every session and have an idea of what we’re building on from sessions earlier in the day or in previous years. This could be as simple as easel paper outside of every room or as elaborate as a live wiki everyone was encouraged to comment on throughout the day.

    Much love and congratulations to the founders of BookCamp TO. Mark Bertils, Hugh McGuire, Alexa Clark, Mitch Joel and Erin Balser. Founders, volunteers and all attendees did an amazing job of bringing an industry that is hungry for hope and community together. Nice work, all. I’m so proud to work in this industry and so glad that all of you do too!

    Bookcamp: an unreview

    Monday, June 8th, 2009 by Tim Middleton

    So it is inevitable that when you are involved in an unconference that it is impossible to adequately provide a synopsis of what was covered. There are too many threads, not to mention dead-ends that many of the conversations can take. But there was an enviable comradere where everyone present felt invested in solving the problems at hand in the publishing industry. And maybe classifying them as problems is unfair when really what they are is something the human race is pretty good at solving - challenges. The challenges that the unconference hoped to address were the challenges that the shift from an analogue world to a digital world presents. There were strong feelings emoted where there was obvious career investment in the existing models that are available. But where people are more interested in what is taking shape in culture there was dynamic dialogue, and yes this dialogue was fostered and expanded by those very models that are falling apart.

    “Listen to the sounds of the machine. You have to listen - we could die out here!”

    This is a line taken from a great little animated film I saw called When Elephants Dream. It is obviously a story about our times and the machine and the role of the machine in our lives. This is one of the things that publishers need to do and are doing “listen, listen to the sounds of the machine and be careful.” But don’t be too careful!

    If anyone is able to re-envision the new world, the new paradigm, the new publishing model - it is publishers. Publishers work with creative types, and help them to shape and package their creations so that they may be consumed by we the people, so it is publishers who can come up with the answers to the question that was reiterated throughout the day: What is a publisher for?

    The question of what a publisher is for came up in almost every session I sat in on including topics about marketing, curating, and connectivity. I’m not sure it was answered in any satisfactory way. It is obvious that there is still a lot of thinking that needs to be done about the relationships that are in place and the possibilities that connection through the machine offers. This comes as no surprise.

    The rights panel led by Lisa Charters was certainly productive in this regard. It really seemed that at least here you had people willing and able to re-imagine the way something is done today. Lisa and others in the position to make a difference were open to suggestions that included perhaps allowing a contract model where digital rights were always world rights and that perhaps a better solution than reselling those rights in different markets was to hold onto those rights and divvy up the earnings from downloads based on ip or some other mechanism.

    During my last session of the day called “Discovering Books” there was a dialogue about who should sell a publishers books and the choices were seen to be between Amazon and Indigo or direct from the publisher. Monique Trottier from boxcarmarketing talked about how Amazon had gained the edge over publishers and I wanted to add my two cents worth about the Amazon winning the ‘drag race” as Monique put it. I don’t know if it was a drag race that Amazon was participating in at all but more of an endurance race. There is some kind of rewriting of how Amazon got into the position they are in and -it wasn’t necessarily through technology or allowing comments. Technology and comments- staff recommendations etc., if not trivial in the 90’s were at least present. The thing that got Amazon into the winning lane was straight ahead discounting and free shipping. These were both areas that independents couldn’t participate in without going bankrupt and in Canada Chapters was going bust already. Amazon had a vision and they stuck with it even through the dotcom bubble burst. Now you may ask yourself how Amazon survived that - and again it was through a means that independents did not or could not go -investors! So Amazon became the destination for online sales and because they were a pure online player they didn’t need to worry about cannibalizing the bricks and mortar business like Barnes and Noble or Chapters. Now today it isn’t so much the discounting but the pure volume of users that gives Amazon the edge and it is no easy task to rebrand bloggers or online shoppers so that they find the alternatives -i.e. indiebound. Naturally since then other worries have rocked the book boat and now it is even harder for independents to find traction.

    What was perhaps endearing and maybe also one of the signs of the demographic of our times or of the unconference was that no one questioned that people wanted to read. There was mention of attention distribution but really no one ever said “but people aren’t reading anymore!” Either this is wishful thinking or an accurate assessment of the fact that yes people have migrated online and it is merely the effort to provide books online that will provide a resurgence in reading. Reading is not really the issue. What people are reading and how they are discovering what to read and what format do they want to read it in are the questions.

    The multitude of voices was the key thing about this unconference - and sure some of the discussions went down the rabbit hole but most of the talk was relevant. It was unique to have the opportunity to hear all of the different disciplines from editing, marketing to creating and publishing the work. It was great to hear the technologists and designers express the problems that exist in the trenches of this change. One thing that may have been missing was how to create the change within an organization when you aren’t the one making the decisions. This is perhaps always the issue. Where are the decision makers? What are they thinking? I think it is fair and perhaps safe to say that none of the changes being thought about are going to happen overnight, and yet many of these changes should be already well under way.

    Stimulating eBooks - Part Two

    Wednesday, May 13th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

    Like identical twins, just because eBooks and print books are born from the same material does not mean they behave or even look like carbon copies. Finding ways to bring out the different but equal potential in each will allow for well-adjusted creations who don’t need literary therapy at a later date.

    From the IDPF 2009 Digital Book Summit, three major considerations came to light.

    1. eBook Design is not Print Design

      With notable exceptions, publishers are still thinking of content in terms of layout (on printed page). Translations to screen are literal rather than essential and, as Dave Cramer of TexTech notes, led to eBook that would embarass even slightly tech-savvy teenagers.

      Dave’s point is that we need designs that translate (or degrade gracefully, as he more lyrically states). We also need more enriched editions that actually have stuff that people want inside. Creativity and familiarity with the web are not optional for eBook designers.

    2. eBook Production is Not Print Production

      Production cycles are shorter, finished products are updatable and good XML allows for repurposing and chunking. An eBook’s life isn’t going to look the same as the print counterpart and that’s not a bad thing.

      Random House is issuing eBooks before print - because they can. Daily Lit is sending out tiny pieces of the book by email and RSS. O’Reilly offers lifetime updates on any eBook purchased from their store.

      This is not your grandma’s production flow - LibreDigital even suggests that real-time updates in epub are on the horizon. An eBook remains a living thing in the hands of the reader..imagine the possibilities!

    3. There is No One Solution

      Adam Smith from Google suggests that trade may be last to move over and there is no one way to create good digital books. There will be different solutions for different needs and what matters is finding what works for you.

      The EPUB police can’t stop you from creating beautiful picture books in PDF - walking your own path is the best way to create as diverse and interesting a book landscape in ebooks as exists in print.

    Slides are available at http://www.idpf.org/digitalbook09/PresentationsDB09.htm

    eBook Stimulus Plan - IDPF 2009 (part one)

    Wednesday, May 13th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

    This year’s Digital Book conference, put together by the International Digital Publishing Forum, was built around the timely theme of an eBook Stimulus Plan for Publishing. Congratulations must go to Michael Smith, IDPF Executive Director and BookNet BFF, for a great day.

    More than 20 speakers and more than 400 attendees gathered to debate the merits of potential stimulants and depressants in the eBook world. From my perspective (and the help of the Twittering masses), a few themes emerged…

    1. Industry Collaboration Makes All Ships Rise

      Bob Carlton from LibreDigital suggested that in today’s overstimulated culture, publishers are indeed competing for consumer attention - but not necessarily with each other. Open standards and help everyone - booksellers and publishers alike.

      Erica Lazarro from Overdrive adds to this point by stating that in addition to pushing sales, the book industry need to message out ebook adoption to get customer comfortable with digital book content.

      And from the reader’s perspective, Sarah Wendell of Smart B*tches, Trashy Novels says promoting virality does not equal promoting piracy. Enabling the reader to share with their networks drives adoption and sales - how can something that feels so right be wrong?

    2. Devices Are The Weakest Link

      No real surprises here - it’s still way too difficult for readers to download and display good looking eBooks.

      Let’s take the power back and think about ways to support readers and join forces with them in the fight for good devices. Random House responds to reader complaints by asking readers to push back on device makers. Publishers can’t do it alone - align with the readers!

      And device makers: ease of downloads is going to impress your customers and develop deep loyalty. There’s a hunger here for less pain (and perhaps a smidge more cowbell).

    3. DRM Hurts Readers

      So…about that alleviation of suffering…DRM makes your readers into criminals if they want to market your books for you (Sarah Wendell), isn’t in line with most publishers’ customer service goals (Angela James of Samhain Publishing), and doesn’t work anyway (Andrew Savikas from O’Reilly). Unless you’re looking for a really great tactic to it drive customers away, do without.

      More from Andrew Savikas - pirated ebooks don’t need to hurt- people will still pay for convenient digital product (just like they will pay for bottled water). Do it right and you’re going to keep your customers. A pirated book does not mean a lost sale. The two are not equivalent even though they’ve become identical in a lot of publisher’s minds.

      I tend to agree with Angela James that refusing DRM will allow publishers to better control destiny of digital and make sure market doesn’t become monopolized.

    I’m going to break this up into two posts as this is starting to get a little lengthy. Next up - design, production and workflow that buy eBooks new clothes instead of just shifting big brother Print’s hand-me-downs over.

    EPUB Boot Camp - Get Your Hands Dirty

    Wednesday, April 1st, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

    Slides are now available from the EPUB Boot Camp (first ever, according to Michael Smith, Executive Director of the IDPF) if you click here.

    Great speakers (Laura Dawson of LJNDawson Consulting, Keith Fahlgren of O’Reilly Media, Dan Galperin and Robert Beghian of Shortcovers and Michael Smith of the IPDF) discussed what EPUB means for Canadian publishers.

    I’m going to leave the summary to my capable fellow bloggers Tim Middleton and Nic Boshart and instead focus here on the big question: Where Do You Go From Here. What’s your next step on your road to creating EPUBs?

    If you have never created an EPUB file before in your life…grab an EPUB file (Feedbooks has a bunch of free ones. Change the .epub extension to .zip and open it just like you would open any zipped file. It’s not scary! Just take a look at the components and get a feel for how an EPUB file looks.

    If you are ready for a slightly deeper dive…you can download the PDFXML Plug-in for free from Adobe if you create an Adobe account. Then you can play around with the formatting of an EPUB file and see how it looks on screen once edited.

    If you want to start creating your own EPUB files…Check out eCub, bookworm and start playing around with turning it into an effective EPUB file.

    Get your hands all EPUBby. It’s the best way to figure out how to create these files. After that, you can determine where and how they fit into your production strategy.

    Eco-Bounty

    Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009 by Tim Middleton

    With the advent of the kindle 2 one begins to wonder if we are really ready to go electronic with reading. The reason I wonder is because I’ve been looking at Chris Jordan’s work lately where he tries to document the size of the e-waste that is in the world now. One picture stands out for me - 430,000 cells phones a day retired in the US alone.

    Image

    Is this what ebooks will lead to? I don’t know the answer to that but I can say I am inspired by the effort that innovators are putting into resolving the problem of sustainability.

    This quote from the latest briefing from trendwatching.com puts a hopeful spin on things:

    Recession or not, consumers will continue to demand responsible behavior from brands. Just one statistic: “Four out of five people say they are still buying green products and services today–which sometimes cost more–even in the midst of a US recession.”(reuters)

    The quest for eco-bounty continues to be one of the inspiring stories coming out of our current world financial crises. The call for eco-friendly products and life-styles continues to be shouted from the heights of ancient trees in ancient forests.

    Another event has me cheering for the environment - the second annual Greener Gadgets Conference in New York. The design competition saw some fascinating projects presented - but of course only a few can win. Here are three of the winning ideas:

    eco-neighbuzz Korhan Buyukdemirci (Finland)

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    Eco-neighbuzz is an apartment buzzer & intercom system with additional features. Today’s existing intercom systems work only between outside door and flat. However, we can improve this system to support the existing community inside the building. Even though today we are living in tall concrete blocks built in big metropolises, we are not communicating with our neighbours as we did years ago. Sometimes we even don’t know who is living in the building and what they are doing.

    When thinking about green design, we need to design good services which help us to consume less and share more. This means car-sharing, free-cycling (giving unused items for free), recycling, etc. We should first start doing this with our closest community - our neighbours. Even when we have good relationships with our neighbours, we are still missing a good service platform to improve upon it. Eco-neighbuzz is a great platform to build a greener community with our neighbours. Essentially, it is a voice message to neighbours. Interaction with the device happens through a touch screen and handset, using speech-to-text functionality.

    Power Hog

    Power-Hog Mathieu Zastawny, Mansour Ourasanah, Tom Dooley, Peter Byar, Elysa Soffer, Mathieu Turpault (United States)
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    Power-Hog is a power consumption metering piggy bank designed to sensitize kids to energy cost associated with running electronics devices. Plug the tail into the outlet and the device into the snout; feed a coin to meter 30 minutes of use.

    It’s designed to capture the interest of parents and kids alike and serve the wider environmental cause. Power-Hog visually and symbolically associates power conservation with savings by using the iconic piggy bank as a visual reference. Kids can use their allowance to turn on the TV or video game by feeding the Power-Hog with loose change. The Power-Hog meters consumption and blinks red when time is running out. It also helps parents meter the amount of time spent watching the tube.

    The Power-Hog is made out of Xenoy iQ1103-U grade resin from Sabic. Their upcycling process using recycled PET allows good performance at a cost similar to less friendly materials. It is 100% recyclable and its packaging has been developed following the sustainable coalition packaging guidelines.

    Tweet-a-Watt, A twittering power meter Limor Fried, Adafruit Industries & Phillip Torrone, MAKE magazine

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    Using “off-the-shelf hardware”, we have modified a Kill-a-Watt(TM) power meter to “tweet” (publish wirelessly) the daily KWH consumed to the user’s Twitter account (Cumulative Killowatt-hours). We are releasing this project as an “Open source hardware” project - in other words, anyone can make these, modify them and make a commercial product from the ideas and methods.

    Here’s how it works: The modified Kill-a-Watt uses a “super-cap” to slowly recharge itself. Once there is enough power it turns on the Xbee wireless module which transmits the data to a nearby computer (or internet connected microcontroller, like an Arduino). Once the power usage for the day is recorded it uses a predefined Twitter account (it can be your own) to publish your daily KWH consumption for the day. Multiple units can be used for an entire household.

    We’re publishing the source, schematics and the idea for others to run with. Energy change and consumption can happen many ways; we feel there is a social imperative and joy in publishing one’s own daily KWH. By sharing these numbers on a service like Twitter users can compete for the lowest numbers and also see how they’re doing compared to their friends and followers.

    *Note: We are in testing now, we’ll run it at Green Gadgets if requested (http://twitter.com/tweetawatt)

    To see the voting on other designs go here: greener gadgets