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Archive for the ‘Year in Review’ Category

Noah Genner 2009 in Review - Breathe

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010 by Noah Genner

As many have already stated 2009 was a year full of change and innovation in the book authoring, publishing and retailing world. Digital was/is the agent of change…eBooks, eReaders (of all kinds), digital workflows and networks (be they social or internet)…for the industry in 2009. It really seemed that many digital areas that had been bubbling under for the last while came to a head in 2009…all at once. I’m not sure there was outright panic in the publishing world in 2009, but there was definitely a lot of concern. I think that the apprehension felt in 2009 might have been the biggest story of the year. Change is afoot, but isn’t it always?

1. Google. Perhaps not just in the book industry? Have you looked at the mobile space lately? They either have, or will have, the books/content, the devices, the delivery and discoverability platforms. Does any of this seem familiar? The impact of this one player will continue to be huge (see Morgan’s post below).

2. Mobile in general. Not sure about other people’s co-workers, friends and family, but most of mine have a smart phone, laptop or some mobile computing device. This was the year that mobile computing went mainstream. Not everyone is reading on these devices, but they sure are using them to do a lot of other things that I bet they never thought they were going to use them for. Familiarity is here, reading is inevitable, and the change started this year.

I’ll lump this under mobile…and do a little prognosticating…2010 is likely going to be the year of the tablet. It would seem that everyone has, or is working on, a tablet based computer (again…wasn’t this a big thing 6-7 years ago?) and someone might actually get it right. How will it affect the book industry? I’m not sure, but the effect will be felt in newspapers and magazines very soon. I’m sure the eBook platforms will follow shortly. Is the allure of e-ink, and great battery life, enough to keep someone from a multi-use-reasonably-sized-good-battery-life-app-packing-tablet-computer?

3. Digital workflows. This has been something the industry has been talking about for a while, but I think it actually started to really happen, or at least be thought about widely in 2009. Unfortunately, there is no one perfect digital workflow for creating, editing and distributing books, be they in ‘p’ form or in ‘e’ form. However, one of the only responses to the rapid change and future unknowns in the industry are to make sure you; a) have your data/content/books in a format (xml, database, tagged, etc…) that can respond to rapid change; b) make it easy for non-techies; c) if you haven’t already started…start small, but do start.

I think that perhaps 2009 was the year that the industry started thinking more about ‘content’ and less about the ‘book’.

4. Twitter. Marketing, collaborating, sharing. There were other social networking platforms that had an impact on the book industry, but last year was definitely the year for Twitter.

5. eReaders, eBookRetailers, eFormats. An explosion of devices (Nook, KindleV2, Sony, many others) and reading applications throughout the year. New retailers (i.e. Shortcovers/Kobo), and new retail partnerships, seemed to be launching weekly. All these devices and players echo the rapid change in the industry right now, but things will settle down at some point…consolidation?

6.  Pricing. The difference in frontlist ‘e’ vs. ‘p’ and the difference in hardcover vs. all the other formats.

Bring on 2010!

Hugh McGuire Year in Review - eBooks Have Arrived

Monday, January 11th, 2010 by Morgan Cowie

Hugh McGuire is the mastermind behind LibriVox as well as the co-mastermind cooking books at Book Oven

I started off 2009 with a trip to London, to attend BookCampUK - an unconference about books. While there were big rumblings of fear and hand-wringing about the arrival of the digital age in the publishing world, BookCamp was a great start to the year: a group of publishers, technotypes, writers and book-lovers collecting in one place for some open discussions about the future of books. I left more enthused about books than ever, and promptly started organizing BookCampToronto, leading into another group of West-coasters putting together BookCampVancouver.

By March, the rate of change in the business had become positively dizzying. At BookNet Canada’s Tech Forum, Neelan Choksi, of the beautiful iphone ereader Stanza, presented a slide listing all the major announcements in the ebook space in the first three months of 2009 (Amazon’s new Kindle, Google Book Search, Indigo’s Shortcovers which has since become Kobo, and on and on). By there end of 2009, there would be no font small enough to allow all the significant announcements in publishing and digital to fit on one slide.

So, where are we, and more importantly, where are we going?

Digital is Here

Firstly, ebooks have arrived, there’s no getting around it. If you can believe Amazon’s opaque data regarding the Kindle, in many cases ebook sales are already outstripping hard copy sales from Amazon. Ebook sales remain a small part of the publishing business (~5%), but once you get up to around 10% - and if the growth curve remains exponential, that will happen soon - a business with notoriously thin margins gets turned on its head.

You Want How Much?

It gets turned on its head because profit margins start looking very worrisome at $9.99, which appears to be the consumer comfort-level for ebooks. Publishers want to charge more and it’s hard to blame them: would you rather get 50% of $34.99 for a hardcover or 50% of 9.99 for an ebook? Publishers rightly claim that manufacture and distribution are relatively small parts of the the cost of a book, with the real costs sunk in advances, editorial, and marketing.

But whatever the publishers want to tell you about pricing, ultimately the consumers will decide what they are willing to pay. And the problem with books is not so much consumers comparing the price of a hardback, a paperback and an ebook, but rather all the other things readers might do with their time. Humans these days are bombarded with leisure and information-delivery options, and books now compete with so many other forms of entertainment (Xboxes and Facebooks and Youtubes, and on and on). The business has to keep making it easier to get books, and part of that means pricing so that readers want to buy.

Go and Get Them

Which brings me to a prescriptive, rather than descriptive, observation: publishers are going to have to go out and find their readers, find new ways to engage with them. As many have said, Twitter won’t save publishing, but at least the idea is right: go out and find your audience, and talk to them. This is a difficult adjustment for many publishers who traditionally have left that messy part of the business to book retailers.

Yet books are far more than words on a page. They are the stuff that ideas are made of, they are primarily conversational. This conversation happens between reader and writer, between reader and reader, and in order to help their books compete in a crowded marketplace, publishers will have to embrace this conversation, and not leave it to others to manage.

Everyone in the business knows how to get words on a page; the real art of publishing is getting people to engage with those words. If you want any hints on how to do this well, take a look at Harlequin, O’Reilly and Tor.

Pirates and Formats

I won’t say too much about piracy and Digital Rights Management, except this: we need a standard format for ebooks, otherwise readers will get very annoyed when they can’t move their books from one device to another. And if you are considering Digital Rights Management to help stop piracy, please follow Brian O’Leary’s research on the topic. He has actual data about sales and piracy, and every publisher should be forced to read it. Conclusions thus far: DRM doesn’t stop piracy; and maybe you don’t want it to.

Where Are We Headed?

So with all this, where are we? Well, here are my predictions:

  • Thin margins will get thinner, and publishing houses will get leaner.
  • More digital and paper book sales will be split 50-50 by … oh … 2016.
  • There will be more consolidation at the top, and a proliferation of small publishing houses at the bottom of the pyramid.
  • Self/independent-publishing will explode.
  • More people than ever will be writing books, but fewer people than ever will be reading books.
  • Publishers who continue to think of retailers as their main clients will suffer and die.
  • Publishers who spend their time asking what readers want (not just what kind of books) will survive and thrive.
  • There will be fewer well-paid writers at the top.
  • There will be more poorly-paid writers everywhere else.
  • There will be a great golden age of wonderful writing and reading.

Monique Trottier 2009 in Review - Use Clay to Shape the Future of Publishing

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

Monique Trottier is the brains behind So Misguided and Boxcar Marketing. In some vaunted circles, Monique has been named the Macgyver of holiday tinsel.

As I reflect on 2009, there is one author who continually comes to mind as a thought leader for the publishing industry, and that is Clay Shirky. In March, I attended the South by Southwest Interactive conference (SXSW) in Austin, TX. SXSW is an uber-geek fest where the best of the best come to geek it up and muse on the state of the internet, culture, and technology. Us plebs listen intently, take notes and then report back to the unwashed masses via our blogs, Facebook and twitter streams. Ok, it’s not as stuck up as that, but it is an expensive conference to attend and, as an attendee, one expects a certain, exalted level of thinking.

The panel that disappointed me the most, and which led to a firestorm amongst the online book geeks, was New Thinking for Old Publishers. This panel was nicknamed “No Thinking for Old Publishers.” As much as Clay Shirky was the heavy weight on the panel, he was not the main attraction. The audience was full of bloggers and book lovers intent on spreading the word about exciting developments in the publishing industry, intent on hearing directly from the editors, publicists and publishers who they so rarely have access to.

But to say that it was a disappointment is an understatement. It was a disaster. What resulted from the disaster of that panel was a grassroots movement to create a better dialogue on the future of publishing. I experienced that better dialogue at BookCamp Vancouver, a self-organizing conference on books and technology. Here’s a little about how BookCamp Vancouver originated. In my post-SXSW rant, I vowed to organize a panel in Vancouver. That panel quickly became a full conference. With generous sponsorship from SFU and BookNet Canada, the organizers were able to offer free registration to 300 people. (Organizers included me, John Maxwell from SFU Master of Publishing program, Morgan Cowie from BNC, Sean Cranbury from Books on the Radio and Nick Bouton from Protagonize.) We wanted a different conversation than what we usually heard at book conferences.

As an internet marketing consultant, the last couple of years have no longer been about convincing publishers that digital is here. It made no sense to have any rah-rah “ebook” conversations or to bring in big headline speakers. What made sense was to bring together the book geeks and the tech geeks to talk directly about the problems. The sessions at BookCamp Vancouver included such topics as “Using Open Source Models in Publishing”, “The Optimal Use of Social Media for Authors and Publishers”, “The State of the Electronic Book,” and “Making Content King.” It was my first book conference that was attended by people in the book industry as well as those in the technology industry. And I was thrilled. But back to Clay Shirky.

The problem with the SXSW panel was that there was too little Shirky. This was also the case with the former BEC conference: there were too few people involved outside of the publishing industry to offer insights into where the industry could go in terms of technology. As publishers scramble to catch up, to figure out ebooks, to work with ONIX, others have been steaming ahead–readers, in particular.

In January 2005 while working at Raincoast, I attended the Blogging for Business Summit in Seattle. At that time, I felt that the publishing industry was behind. In April of 2005, I started SoMisguided.com to talk about books, online marketing and technology. It took me until November 2005 to launch the Raincoast blog and podcast program. Desperately trying to ride at least the tail of the online crest, in retrospect we were ahead, Raincoast became 1 of 3 publishers internationally who were podcasting and blogging. We all have our Cassandra moments. Since 1997 when I got my first hotmail account, and then signed up my friends, I have been watching the culture of reading change. I was, and continue to be, obsessed with reading culture and the information revolution.

Such is the case with Clay Shirky, and it is particularly evident in his March 13 blog post called “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable.” It was Shirky’s post that led me to buy his book Here Comes Everyone and to attend that SXSW panel. In “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable,” Shirky manages to take 20 years of conversation about the digital nature of our culture and distill it into something that people in the newspaper industry are willing to hear and understand. Book publishing folks, please read this article. Why? Because book publishers, like newspapers, are content producers and we have taken similar approaches to digital copies and electronic sharing of content.

The curious thing about the various plans hatched in the ’90s is that they were, at base, all the same plan: “Here’s how we’re going to preserve the old forms of organization in a world of cheap perfect copies!” The details differed, but the core assumption behind all imagined outcomes (save the unthinkable one) was that the organizational form of the newspaper, as a general-purpose vehicle for publishing a variety of news and opinion, was basically sound, and only needed a digital facelift. As a result, the conversation has degenerated into the enthusiastic grasping at straws, pursued by skeptical responses.

There is no general model for newspapers, or books to follow. The internet has broken the model and there is no one-size-fits-all fix. Print and the web are alternate modes of distributing information. We have internalized that this is happening, but what’s missing is for each house to create an individual, cohesive plan. Publishers need to go back to their business models and create new plans and new models for new realities. A few folks in the publishing crowd are sentinels. They have been saying for years, “Hey look what’s going on, people are sharing, participating, writing and publishing their own books.” “These people are crazy, are you seeing this?” “Don’t they know how much work is involved in writing and editing and producing a book, and then distributing it to stores.” This type of response to those observations is part of the problem.

Industrial production destroyed the viability of scribes. Such is the case with digital, it has destroyed the old economics that worked for how books are produced, distributed, sold and read. We need new models because the core problem publishing solves — “the incredible difficulty, complexity, and expense of making something available to the public — has stopped being a problem” (Shirky). Instead of investigating how to drastically change and adapt, we’ve stuck to our old business models, which has left us arguing about what Google can and cannot index, what the price of ebooks should or should not be, and whether we should or should not have someone on staff dedicated to Facebook and Twitter. Yes, old systems are going to break before new systems are in place. Such is the case with revolutions. We are publishing in a time of experimentation where nothing will work, but anything might. Whether it’s keeping our nose to the grindstone, burying our heads or navel gazing, we have forgotten to look up. Look up now, to that to top left corner of ceiling and think about all the “yes, buts …” you’ve said over this conversation. Where are the “yes, ands …”

How can we work this year on creative planning and reinventing our businesses? Jay Rosen recently interviewed Clay Shirky and one of the discussion topics was of research done in the 70s and 80s by social scientists who studied how newspapers, such as Time, Newsweek, CBS, NBC, made decisions. Their common observation was that the sociology of the newsroom was based, not on the best way or the journalistic way to do something but rather, on what the production process demanded. They discovered that as newsrooms internalized the production routine, their decisions accommodated that routine. They eventually believed that they were doing things that were required or necessary rather than recognizing that they were making decisions on what the production routine demanded. In publishing we have reps selling in the books from tip sheets and advances, we produce catalogues seasons in advance, we store and ship products between warehouses, the number of pages in a book is divisible by 4 to accommodate printing presses. What happens when the production routine changes? If the entire business is shifting and the nature of how the public informs itself and acquires reading material is changing, then why are we not changing at the same speed? What if you had to start from scratch? How would you make more money than you spend (yes, on every book)? This is a new year. A time for new beginnings. We can’t reverse the flow of time. Micropayments, subscriptions are not the answer. Set aside ebooks. Stare at that top left corner of the ceiling more often this year. Innovate. Read some Clay Shirky. Create your own future.

Liza Daly 2009 In Review - Moving From If to How

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

Liza Daly is the owner of Threepress Consulting, a technology company servicing the publishing and educational industries and was last seen peering warmly at you from our BNC Tech Forum banner on the right.

My desk tells one part of the story of publishing in 2009: it’s littered with devices. Dedicated eink readers, netbooks, mobile phones, and of course the all-time most popular ereader, the computer. I could use some more USB ports, and a bigger desk. My 2010 budget already has allocations for the Apple Tablet and the PlasticLogic QUE, and that’s just Q1.

Most of the devices on my desk are already obsolete despite being practically brand-new. And progress isn’t always continuous forward evolution — there are many ways in which that old Sony Reader is superior to the brand-new Nook. The QUE, which seemed to be beamed in from the future when it was hyped in 2008, may be anemic next to whatever Apple’s going to offer.

So much technology to deliver the humble book. It’s one of the earliest forms of persistent human communication yet one of the last to go digital commercially. 2009 saw serious consolidation down to three formats — PDF, ePub and Mobipocket — and that’s
been good for consumers and publishers alike. Everyone but (perhaps) Amazon would like to see that number decline even further, but there are signs it’s already going back up: the Kurzweil Blio uses its own format, based on PDF, and Apple may do the same.

That would be too bad, as the healthiest change I saw in 2009 was publishers moving from basic questions like, “Should we make ebooks?” to thoughtful debates about implementing video, better use of hyperlinking and indexing, and exploration of new distribution channels.

Most of all, my hope for 2010 is that the rush to larger screens and movie-like interactivity doesn’t leave behind the greatest beneficiaries of the ebook revolution: the print-disabled and the billions who don’t have access to big box stores and $800 tablets. Low-bandwidth, standards-driven formats still hold a lot of promise, and while it’s okay to obsolete a device, we must not do the same for people.

Robert Wheaton 2009 in Review - The Big Three

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

Robert Wheaton is a Director for Inventory Management at Indigo Books & Music Inc. He contributes to http://www.datachondria.com Datachondria and can be found online at http://www.rjwheaton.com

In no particularly order, three small things – indicating wider trends – that you should have known about in 2009:

  1. McSweeney’s iPhone app
  2. The standout story in publishing in 2009 has been, obviously, digital reading. Whether we finally have a killer device to bring ebooks to the mass market remains doubtful. The price point of the Kindle remaining prohibitive for many customers and there is not yet an “iPod for books” among the competitors. Moreover customers themselves appear as yet agnostic, many preferring instead to read on smartphones. Consensus has not yet materialized around formats, standards, or, most contentiously, pricing, an issue around which rights and publication schedule are now being mobilized as negotiation gambits.

    Ways forward out of these problems may be provided by small publishers and startups who do not need to reframe an established business model or reallocate resources. Many publishers and content providers have taken positive steps in this direction, and McSweeney’s iPhone, designed by http://twitter.com/russellquinn is a compelling example. It is a brilliantly immersive experience which successfully reinforces readers’ identification with the brand, teasers new products, and provides a new monetary stream. Technology will continue to develop; the publishers that are prepared to reimagine the reading experience alongside it are those most likely to be successful.

  3. Infinite Summer
  4. While noisy debate continued around digital distribution channels, the publishing industry continued to weather radical disruption to its traditional methods of product knowledge and awareness. The Washington Post shuttered its books supplement in February and other newspaper book review sections diminished or disappeared entirely throughout the year. In the meantime book-lovers began to make more use of recommendation systems ungoverned by top-down curation or even online algorithms based on prior behaviour. The most glaring example was the ground-up http://infinitesummer.org/ phenomenon, whereby a loosely organised movement structured a three-month collective reading of David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest with astonishing success. I stood at a Chapters branch in mid July and watched multiple copies of this mid-90s postmodern doorstopper novel leave the shelf in the space of a half hour; the sustained commentary – on Twitter, on the blog, and elsewhere – sustained the movement throughout the summer. Reading is and has always offered a collaborative, communal experience alongside its solitary pleasures; new tools of communication will continue to spin off exciting opportunities in this direction.

  5. BookCamp
  6. As Canadian publishing experiences these changes, partly in the backwash of the American economy, it remains reassuring that the industry houses a robust and imaginative community, both within and outside of traditional publishing channels. There are large numbers of enthusiastic people deeply committed to changing the industry to preserve what is best about it and, indeed, to improve the extent to which we all successfully mediate between authors and readers. Standout initiatives in 2009 – among many – included Sean Cranberry’s Books on the Radio, Julie Wilson’s Seen Reading, Hugh McGuire and Stephanie Troeth’s BookOven, and Erin Balser’s Books in 140. Collective initiatives from the community as a whole yielded the BookCamp ‘unconferences’ in Toronto and in Vancouver, both of which provided a focus for thoughtful, enthusiastic, contentious, and often inspiring discussion, both on and off the stage. This dialogue continues daily on numerous websites and on, notably, on Twitter. Traditionally the biggest voices sounding from the publishing industry have belonged to authors; as technology and this generation matures, new roles may emerge as we all – readers, retailers, publishers, authors – understand how the experience of reading is changing.

Morgan Cowie 2009 in Review - Cowboys, Ninjas and Bears

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

It’s been a big year for territory shifting in property rights, market share and pricing power dynamics. Who better to help me explain it than my old friends, cowboys, ninjas and bears?

The Cowboy: Google

  • In this corner, the Author’s Guild and the Association of American Publishers. In this corner, an ever-expanding web crawler/tool builder/information aggregator known as a verb and noun: Google. In 2009, the final face-off.

    The Google Book Settlement was heatedly debated and the final settlement was far from unanimously adored. This class action lawsuit has, however, set a remarkable legal precedent for better or for worse. Publishers and creators who opt-in are getting paid royalties; Google is expanding searchable content. Whether you look at it as a win/win or a lose/lose or some zero sum variation, there’s no doubt that that in this Wild West, digital book copying and sharing without restriction has ridden into the sunset.

The Ninjas: Kindle, Kobo, B&N, Sony, Stanza, Specter of the Apple Tablet & The Ghost of 2009 Past PlasticLogic

  • 2009 was a year of stealthy and strategic attempts to gain market dominance in the battle of the eReaders. In the first half of the year, Amazon’s Kindle was king (at least of the press hits). The Kindle continues to dominate although B&N’s Nook looks to be a potential assassin of the one reader/one retailer eBook supply chain. And don’t count Kobo out - with the rebranding comes a set of nunchuks with ‘global’ and ‘appeal’ scrolled upon them.


The Bears: Amazon vs Publishers

  • As noted above, Amazon’s dominant market share may be upset in the coming year but in 2009, Amazon set the pace and pricing of the eBook market. That is, until the publishers fought back with their own set of tactics: delayed released of digital formats. The bears are still going toe-to-toe on this with Amazon and other eBook retailers looking for simultaneous eBook and print release and publisher refusing to take lightly the hit to their margins that the preferred $9.99 price point would deliver. Two heavy hitting beasts with no clear truce in sight. 2009 was the year of first blows and 2010 looks to be a continuation of the skirmish.

Mark Leslie Lefebvre 2009 in Review: Plus ça Change, Plus c’est la Même Chose

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009 by Mark LeFebvre

Mark Leslie Lefebvre is a blogger, a writer and an innovative bookseller at McMaster University. There’s a rumour going around that he also plays a mean jazz flute.

In many ways, 2009 was an intense year of change within the Canadian book industry. 

In February, for example, Reed Exhibitions cancelled BookExpo Canada, which used to be a small trade show run by Canadian Booksellers Association. Years ago, it was taken over by a large corporation, grew fast, got out of hand and was no longer about booksellers and publishers sharing information and ordering books, but about flash and glamour, publishers paying continually growing rental fees for booths they couldn’t afford and ridiculously long line-ups for freebees.

It started to be managed further away from the actual book-loving people it was centered around (ie, booksellers, publishers and authors), and eventually things collapsed.  Canadian Booksellers Association quickly put together a “back to the basics” Summer Conference 2009.  Touted as “Stronger, smarter, shorter, sweeter” it included more opportunities for simple connections between participating publishers, authors and booksellers.  It was a great success. 

There’s more change in the air, with respect to digital delivery of books (both ebooks and digitally delivered POD)  As one of three Espresso Book Machine owners in Canada, I personally witnessed the importance of embracing the ability of authors, publishers and booksellers to act quickly in getting books into consumers hands.

I worked with Playwrights Canada Press to get two books into a classroom at McMaster which were out of print and stock and thus would have otherwise been unavailable for study.  This resulted in publisher income and further study of Canadian authored work.  Similarly, thanks to the forward thinking of Blue Butterfly Books, my bookstore was able to go from not having even heard about a great new fiction title (Second Rising by Catherine Wiebe) to having stock of it within a matter of hours in response to local buzz and promotion.  Again, increased sales because of a willingness of the publisher and bookseller to work together and try something new.

Of course, that type of advantageous use of POD is just the tip of it. There are so many opportunities to change distribution models to better benefit the author, the publisher, the bookstore and the consumer.

Digital books, something that we’ve only seen the modest beginnings of this year, present interesting changes and challenge. 

It’s my hope that the previously mentioned examples of the spirit of adaptation prevalent within Canada also takes hold and we don’t blindly follow the lead that the major US and foreign owned publishing houses seem to be taking with respect to ebooks (which seems more in line with the “old” way publishing has done things, based solely on models that subscribe to moving physical atoms from point A to point B)

I hope that 2010 allows the book industry to find ways to embrace the change and engage in the possibilities that digital can provide rather than subscribe to the belief that the existing world is coming crashing down around us.

Deanna McFadden 2009 in Review - Panic on the Streets of…Well…Everywhere

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 by Deanna McFadden

Deanna McFadden, Marketing Manager, Digital Content and Strategy at HarperCollins Canada, makes her digital home at tragicrighthip.blogspot.com and is a friend to woodland creatures, great and small.

Looking back on the world of publishing in Canada in 2009, it’s easy to pull out the biggest news stories and create intelligent commentary around them. From the Kindle to Kobo, there’s no doubt that the ebook has finally become mainstream — perhaps not as yet in its adoption by the masses, but we’ll see how much that changes after the holiday season as gadgets are unwrapped, plugged in, and turned on. Yet, for all the positivity around the digital content revolution, there are equal amounts of panic.

We’re not talking panic as in the "oh no what’s Marcus Dohle done now"-type headlines on Publisher’s Weekly, but the kind of disquiet that leads to companies making some truly bad business decisions. No one can possibly accuse publishing (in general) of being a rash business. We’re still using publishing models that were adapted when we printed the very first books. Yes, I’m exaggerating, but you get what I mean. We evolve slowly, so the fact that digital content and the ebook revolution has made it this far in this short of an amount of time remains a little staggering.

Somehow, though, we’re rushing in all the wrong places. Entire businesses are being formed around technology that may or may not be relevant in six months. Companies are pulling from tight resources to make sure they’re at least in the digital space without having any real strategy behind what they’re trying to do. People are building giant web-based properties without any foresight about whether or not they can make them online destinations, or even fully realizing what’s involved in doing so.

This is the kind of panic I mean, the "if we don’t then we’ll be left behind" mentality that’s driven much of the conversation around the digital side of publishing in 2009. It’s the biggest trend I’m seeing as entire companies move from fad to fad, mistake tools for marketing reach, and leave behind the very thoughtful practices that have ensured our staying power. Yes, there are archaic practices that need to be overhauled. Yes, there are problems with many, many parts of the publishing business. Yes, we need to change. But what does that change look like and at what cost should we be making it?

While my giant sweeping generalizations might not be newsworthy, they certainly have given me pause to think as I reflect on this past year. There’s nothing wrong with taking a deep breath as an industry and figuring out what the right next move is, whether you’re a smaller house or a larger one. Maybe ensuring that 2010 becomes the year of the conscious revolution in publishing instead of knee-jerk revolution might be the only way for the panic to subside and for us to survive well into the next decade.

Julie Wilson 2009 in Review - Conversation, Community and Output

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 by Julie Wilson

Guest blogger Julie Wilson aka The Book Madam aka Seen Reading’s Literary-Voyeur-in-Chief aka the co-founder of the Advent Book Blog may or may not have invented the word smitten. It’s a really, really good word.

On the road of publishing there are few vehicles, and even fewer drivers. The Humvees take up multiple lanes, while others hug the shoulders and pray they won’t get tossed over a high bridge on a windy day. But when I look back on 2009, it was the year that any publishing professional was given the chance to stick their head out the window and let their tongues wag, Twitter as our very own slobber trap. People who had previously never seen the inside of a folding-wall convention centre were suddenly following alongside paid attendants who diligently tweeted and retweeted every word coming out of anyone’s mouth, heard or hearsay. The gates were opened. Students, self-identified publishing professionals, entry level publishing professionals, readers, consultants, and online curators/experts/critics were talking about publishing as a verb, not just an industry. Who publish? What publish? Why publish? Where publish? And How? That was the first third of 2009.

The second third of 2009 was a lot of chatter, us getting used to the sound of our own voices, playing catch up with the industry’s response/nonresponse to anything that blew up in our faces like a rogue leaf in the breeze. I sincerely began to worry that my choice in ereader would put my professional reputation, if not my very soul, in immediate peril. I started talking less about books, and more about my cat. I also left my job at House of Anansi to become a first-time author, working away on a book that, thank the lard, has a built-in audience. Sitting recently with an editor, we purposefully placed our palms on the table at the absolute idiocy of an industry that, like, just puts make-believe stories into the world and then bases its bottom line, and the security of its employees, on a freakin’ tiger on a raft. Then we “Cheers’d” one another and ordered the next round, as if to say, “Henh, but what else would we do?” (As unique a bunch of coconuts we are, what else could we do?)

The third part of 2009, thank an even bigger lard, became about actual conversation, actual community, and actual output. At Book Camp Vancouver, there was a refreshing absence of tweets, replaced by a “You kind of have to be here to believe it” vibe. (And if you live in a city hosting a Book Camp, or can get to one, do it. It’s free. If you work in publishing, you’d be remiss not to come listen, if not contribute.) Sean Cranbury and I clocked heads to create The Advent Book Blog, just to show people we could. And, most important, to provide a place for publishing professionals to fly their freak flags as readers, and to include bloggers, once and for all, into the fold as content creators, not just a supplementary marketing initiative.

2010 is the year of collaboration. More projects that curate online and offline spaces that bring the industry together, first and foremost, as readers. Book Madam will toss her hat into the events ring, creating places where readers, publishers, booksellers, and authors can meet each other face-to-face and offstage. Old school celebration and conversation, live and in person. I think Facebook calls this a “Mixer.”

Sean Cranbury 2009 in Review - Recoil!

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 by Sean Cranbury

Our guest blogger for this post is Sean Cranbury, the intrepid book lover behind Advent Book Blog and Books on the Radio. When Sean’s not fighting lions, tigers and bears in the wilds of Vancouver, he’s fearlessly finding new ways to promote great books.

The word that best sums up 2009 in book publishing to me is recoil.

Everywhere you looked people were recoiling in horror and apprehension as the digital revolution continued to make serious inroads to print publishing.  Mr Murdoch raged from the mountaintop and all trembled accordingly.

The wave of petroleum products, er, I mean, eReaders crashed ashore bringing with it the familiar scent of uncertainty.  The argument that these immediately obsolete chunks of single-use plastic were somehow better for the environment brought with it another familiar smell.

It was a year of idiotic public pronouncements by people who are ostensibly leading this industry.  The CEOs of major publishing houses stood on the battlements and sternly awaited the arrival of the pirates, armed with itemized work orders for a fleet of lawyers prepared to charge hourly sums fit for a king.

And if the pirates didn’t like that then how about delayed eBook sales windows! What are you gonna do about that, pirates? Huh, eh?  Hello?

But where were the pirates?  Why weren’t they crashing to the shore in their digital dinghies and pillaging the kingdom before our very eyes? 

How could Dan Brown’s publisher turn a profit during such a dastardly time?

Isn’t the industry supposed to be on the brink of total collapse?

*

Thankfully 2010 doesn’t need to be this way. 

2010 is an opportunity to learn from the suffocating atmosphere of 2009 and move forward with confidence.

Print, web, social media, multi-media, mobile - you name it, it’s going to happen in 2010 and beyond.

Engage it.  The readers are out there.  More than you think.  Awaiting new stories told in new ways.  Awaiting old stories that will spark imaginations.

The word for 2010 is momentum.

You’re not going to be able to stop it.

Whirled 2009 in Review - Waving Goodbye Via Google Wave

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 by Morgan Cowie

Mark Bertils 2009 in Review - EBooks: 20 Years To Become an Overnight Success

Monday, December 21st, 2009 by Mark Bertils

The following post is written by our guest blogger, Mark Bertils, who, when he’s not leaping over buildings in a single bound, blogs over at http://indexmb.com/ .

Paul Saffo, the head of Engineering at Stanford, did a great video in 2007 where he explained how common it is in media forecasting to mistake a clear view for a short distance, but when something — something like ebooks — has been failing for twenty years "your entrepreneurial radar should pop up." Technology, Saffo reminds us, often takes that long to become an overnight success.

Hello 2009. Hello opportunity.

Yes, the ebook was taken seriously by one and all this year. Or maybe that was last year? Yes, the year started off under a grim cloud from 2008’s Black Wednesday and yes, gallons of ink has been spilled on what has gone wrong and what to do about it. But what was really exciting about 2009 was that it set the stage for a watershed 2010.

2010 is going to be a massive year for digital publishing. There is enough players with enough smarts with enough on the line, all racing towards critical mass, for digital publishing’s Manhattan Project not to achieve fusion next year. The little guys like ECW and Dundurn have been shooting the lights out with their digital activities. The big guys are working through the Kubler-Ross model but they get it now — it is life or death. The technology companies are jockeying for opportunities. The start-ups are hungry to get traction.

Crash-Boom-Pow! What’s it going to be?

Remember Youtube before Google? Remember Flickr and Delicious before Yahoo? Probably not, unless you got the press release. The fact you can’t even remember life before Twitter just speaks to how fluid change is; how it sneaks up on you. So I am not going to make any brash predictions but look for a fundamental shift in consumer behavior next year that will both disrupt and enrich. It will likely be driven by mobile computing and may involve a universal payment system. Someone will go looking for the digital book market and someone might just find it.

So hello opportunity. Hello 2010.

Throw around hyperbole? Confuse a clear view for a short distance? Who me? This year was great, but the ground is going to move under our feet next year. Hopefully we will find ourselves in a better place. Fingers crossed.

Nic Boshart 2009 in Review - Digital Publishing’s GED

Monday, December 21st, 2009 by nboshart

The following is a post by our guest blogger, Nic Boshart of the Canadian Publishers Digital Services at the ACP. Nic is one of the founders of Invisible Publishing, as well as a gentleman and a scholar.

About five years ago my dad got a palm pilot. He could type notes, play Zeppelin, and he could read books. My dad isn’t a huge reader. He likes gadgets, but he’s more the home entertainment type. He started reading ebooks five years ago.

This year in eReading, a lot happened. Sure. People actually made money with eBooks. Amazon released the Kindle 2. Barnes and Noble released the Nook. The Kindle came to Canada, but not before Luxembourg. EPub was adopted by Sony and China. EReaders finally got touchscreens.

Wait, my dad’s palm pilot had a touchscreen! In fact, a quick search of Wikipedia reveals: "Touchscreens emerged from academic and corporate research labs in the
second half of the 1960s."

So what did happen in 2009 to digital publishing? Well, the dead-beat older sibling of all other digital media kind-of got his act together. After a couple years of bumming around, working at the 7-11 and playing Zork in Mom and Dad’s basement, digital reading took some night courses and finally graduated high school. It was a good year for digital publishing, but I wouldn’t call it great. The biggest change this year, and why people are freaking out, is that reality is sinking in; digital book reading is an actual thing that people want to do.

The big issue this year was publishing’s reaction to digital. I would categorize this under "insane speculation." After seeing other media so thoroughly and rapidly transformed in past years, the fact that the eBook was getting media attention forced the industry adjust. It also created a bit of a panic. But was this panic warranted? Digital reading had its big breakout last year with Oprah. This, combined with the popularity of smartphones and a serious move towards more mobile computing was further exacerbated by the economic crisis which had people looking for better-value entertainment. Suddenly the sky was falling and publishing was dead, dying, or miraculously saved, depending on the HuffPo author .

Publishers saw Napster around every corner, a digital bogey-man leaping out to destroy their livelihoods. But that didn’t and isn’t going to happen. Here’s what did:

  1. We’ve got cool, new technologies called eReaders. They have this nifty thing called eInk that doesn’t damage your eyes. You can read a screen in the sun. Neat stuff. Rumours of amazing tablet technology coming any second now. EReaders are launched left and right, and the media has latched on and spread the word; it’s new-gadget-mania.
  2. Mobile computing is exploding. iPhone, Android, Blackberry, etc. Cloud computing is taking off and netbooks are flying off the shelves. The device doesn’t matter, it’s more the idea that we have lots of easily accessible information all the time. It’s quickly becoming the norm .
  3. The economy. Blah blah blah. You remember. People stopped buying books. Some people figured out they could pay less for books and get them easily on their iPhones. But mostly, people stopped buying $50 dollar hardcovers. And they’re probably not going to start again, but this isn’t the fault of digital publishing, it’s the reality of online shopping and big-box stores, a reality that has been happening for some time. The eBook is just a nail in an already tightly closed coffin.

The outcome of all this was a lot of attention on digital publishing. But what else? As stated, a couple more stores, better distribution, and a few people came a couple steps closer to a standard. Nothing singularly revolutionary happened; we just talked like it did.

Publishing is thinking, evaluating, and changing along with the technology. Paper books are still sustaining the industry, but in the meantime publishers are looking for solutions and coming up with different business models before eReading becomes the norm.

This is the upshot of 12 months of nothing: Publishing is changing the industry, technology is not.

I mean it is, but in a sort of natural evolution of technology way. Let’s look quickly at newspapers. Articles and updates are a quick read and news is more potent when it’s new. Hence the name. This is the nature of the internet–quick, digestible bits delivered constantly. It wasn’t that newspapers saw this and decided to make the most of it, it’s that users came to demand that news meet its expectations of quick and easily accessible. With technology, the way people spent time with news changed from a long-form reading experience to snippets anywhere and anytime because that made sense for the experience. It’s a better way to get the news.

And that’s actually the fundamental change of how we view media, a change that has been happening for years. Quick, constant access. The difference with publishing is that quick, easy access doesn’t matter that much for a book. A book is long-form, it’s meant to be taken in slowly. We can read snippets of it here and there, but we still are stuck with the whole thing for as long as it takes to finish it. Readers don’t want to click around for more information from a different source, they want to finish the book for the whole story. Convenience is not the issue for the book, like it is for news or music.

People aren’t finding it easier or more convenient to read eBooks except in that digitally is already the way they consume things. Our lives are digital now. Books didn’t help to make it that way, like news did, but books are expected to move along and adapt to the way people live their lives.

What happened with digital publishing in 2009? Well, not a lot. It just kind of felt like it was time to move on. The basement is dank and digital publishing wants a place of its own. Digital publishing is sick of taking crap from its go-nowhere manager, CD-ROM, at the 7-11. So digital publishing got its GED. And guess what; it applied for college and got in to a good one.

Lets stop the speculation. Let’s walk into 2010 knowing the industry is changing, but we’re on it. Bring on your tablets, get that colour eInk, make sure you have a strong digital program, but don’t blame it for the failings of the industry itself. There is no Achilles heel of publishing, there is a world that’s changing, and publishers are starting to react.

This blog post was inspired by a post on Digital Tonto called "Why There Is No Dominant Trend Toward New Media ."