Should Entrepreneurs Self-Publish?

Posted January 30th, 2012. Filed under James Altucher Self Publishing

Formula Capital managing director and author James Altucher wrote a TechCrunch post this weekend explaining “Why Every Entrepreneur Should Self-Publish a Book.”

In the article, Altucher bashed the Penguin publicity team that worked on one of his earlier books and urged entrepreneurs to abandon traditional publishing. What do you think of his provocative article?

Check it out: “You’re an entrepreneur because you feel you have a product or an idea or a vision that stands out among your competitors (if you don’t stand out, pack it in and come up with a new idea). You know how to do something better than anyone else in the world. How do let the world know that you are better? A business card won’t cut it. People will throw it away. And everyone’s got a website with an ‘About’ button. Give away part (or all) of your ideas in a book.” (Link via Publishers Weekly; Image via Google Plus)

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Should Entrepreneurs Self-Publish?

Posted January 30th, 2012. Filed under James Altucher Self Publishing

Formula Capital managing director and author James Altucher wrote a TechCrunch post this weekend explaining “Why Every Entrepreneur Should Self-Publish a Book.”

In the article, Altucher bashed the Penguin publicity team that worked on one of his earlier books and urged entrepreneurs to abandon traditional publishing. What do you think of his provocative article?

Check it out: “You’re an entrepreneur because you feel you have a product or an idea or a vision that stands out among your competitors (if you don’t stand out, pack it in and come up with a new idea). You know how to do something better than anyone else in the world. How do let the world know that you are better? A business card won’t cut it. People will throw it away. And everyone’s got a website with an ‘About’ button. Give away part (or all) of your ideas in a book.” (Link via Publishers Weekly; Image via Google Plus)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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Written By: 
Charlotte Williams
Publication Date: 
Wed, 09/11/2011 - 12:25

Faber Academy has launched a three-day self-publishing course, with Faber Academy director Jason Cooper saying that it does not represent a conflict of interests for the publisher.

The course, "Bring Your Book to Market", will run in February 2012. Author, journalist and social media champion Ben Johncock and writer, blogger and digital self-publishing exponent Catherine Ryan Howard will be the course tutors, with Faber publishing director Hannah Griffiths also giving a one-hour session entitled "Rules for Authors".

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Written By: 
Gayle Feldman
Publication Date: 
Fri, 03/06/2011 - 08:19

Like much of our world, BEA has shrunk but also expanded.

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IN A worthy plot twist and a blow for the millions of fans of Stieg Larsson, the Swedish author’s book publisher seemed to confirm Wednesday that there will be no fourth volume in the popular “Millennium” series, left incomplete at the time of his sudden death.

“There is no fourth book from Stieg Larsson on the horizon,” Paul Bogaards from Alfred A. Knopf told Word&Film yesterday.

“Only the estate, controlled by his family [Joakim and Erland Larsson], can authorize publication of a fourth book, and they have no intention of doing so at the moment.”

Larsson’s longtime partner Eva Gabrielsson had raised hopes of a new installment of the crime series — which so far sold more than 45 million copies worldwide — in a 160-page memoir published in France, Sweden and Norway.

Larsson died of a heart attack in November 2004 at the age of 50, before publication of “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” “The Girl Who Played with Fire” and “The Girl who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest.”

Gabrielsson, his partner for 32 years, has been locked in a dispute with Larsson’s family over his inheritance. The journalist-turned-novelist died without a will, and the couple never had children.

In her memoir, titled “Millennium, Stieg and Me,” Gabrielsson told readers that “I am fighting for him, for myself, for you.”

Not unlike the trilogy’s main characters — crusading journalist Mikael Blomkvist and punk computer hacker Lisbeth Salander — Larsson campaigned throughout his journalistic career against extremism and racism, with Gabrielsson, an architect, at his side.

On the much-talked-about fourth volume, Gabrielsson confirmed that Larsson, typing on a computer, wrote just over 200 pages of the story before his untimely death.

“I am able to finish it … Stieg and I often wrote together,” she said, adding that she would only do so once she got undisputed rights to his work from the Larsson family.

She added, “It is not my intention to recount here the plot of the fourth volume. On the other hand, I want to say that Lisbeth little by little frees herself from her ghosts and her enemies.”

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Offering more support than self publishing can provide, Schiel & Denver Book Publishers gives a tangible publishing platform for independent writers to reach their readers with bookstore distribution. However, as Alex Pham writes in the L.A. Times, more and more writers are bypassing the traditional route and selling directly to readers to get a larger slice of the sale price…

Joe Konrath can’t wait for his books to go out of print.

When that happens, the 40-year-old crime novelist plans to reclaim the copyrights from his publisher, Hyperion Books, and self-publish them on Amazon.com, Apple Inc.’s iBooks and other online outlets. That way he’ll be able to collect 70% of the sale price, compared with the 6% to 18% he receives from Hyperion.

As for future novels, Konrath plans to self-publish all of them in digital form without having to leave his house in Schaumburg, Ill.

“I doubt I’ll ever have another traditional print deal,” said the author of “Whiskey Sour,” “Bloody Mary” and other titles. “I can earn more money on my own.”

For more than a century, writers have made the fabled pilgrimage to New York, offering their stories to publishing houses and dreaming of bound editions on bookstore shelves. Publishers had the power of the purse and the press. They doled out advances to writers they deemed worthy and paid the cost of printing, binding and delivering books to bookstores. In the world of print, few authors could afford to self-publish.

The Internet has changed all that, allowing writers to sell their works directly to readers, bypassing agents and publishers who once were the gatekeepers.

It’s difficult to gauge just how many authors are dumping their publishing houses to self-publish online, though for now, the overall share remains small. But hardly a month goes by without a well-known writer taking the leap or declaring an intention to do so.

In addition to Konrath, bestselling author Seth Godin, science fiction writer Greg Bear and action novelist David Morrell recently have used Internet tools to put their works online themselves. Earlier this year, suspense master Stephen King, Brazilian novelist Paulo Coelho and Stephen Covey, the author of bestselling self-help books, self-published some of their works exclusively on Amazon’s Kindle bookstore.

Godin, the author of a dozen books on marketing, including “Purple Cow” and “The Dip,” cut ties to Penguin Group Inc. in August. This month, he announced plans to self-publish a series of “idea manifestos” on Amazon.com.

Godin, 50, said he realized that he no longer needed a publisher to distribute his work or to find an audience: He had cultivated a following of millions through his blog and speaking tours.

“If an author has the choice of two distribution models, one that costs nothing and has no gatekeeper and the other has lots of gatekeepers and costs a lot of money, a lot of people will go with the free one,” he said.

Amazon’s Digital Text Platform lets authors sell their works through its Kindle bookstore. Those who set their prices between $2.99 and $9.99 per copy receive 70% of the sale price, minus a few pennies per book to cover the cost of distributing files over a cellular network.

Sony Corp.’s online ReaderStore also lets authors sell their works directly to buyers, giving writers 70% to 85% of the sale price. In October, Barnes & Noble Inc. launched its PubIt! self-publishing platform, promising royalty rates of 40% to 65%.

The upshot is that writers can find virtual shelf space in the world’s largest bookstores without the help of conventional publishers. And the number of forums for online bookselling continues to grow.

This fall, Amazon and Google Inc. unveiled online tools that can turn any website into a bookstore.

Google launched an online bookstore with millions of titles and said it would let independent booksellers sell those works on their own sites. Amazon said it would allow any website to sell Kindle books and would pay a referral fee for every sale.

“Publishers used to be the gatekeepers,” said Mike Shatzkin, a New York publishing consultant and editor of the Shatzkin Files (www.idealog.com/blog), a blog about the book industry. “Going through the gate still has certain benefits, but it’s no longer the only way for authors to get to where they want to go.”

For now, those benefits include editing, cover design, marketing support, accounting and advances on royalties. In exchange, book publishers control the copyrights to works and take a larger slice of the sale price.

Authors typically get 10% to 25% of the proceeds of digital sales if they go through a publisher, compared with 40% to 70% if they self-publish.

For Konrath, the math made his choice easy. He said he earned $1.17 in royalties for each digital copy of “Whiskey Sour” sold by Hyperion. That’s roughly 25% of the sale price of $4.69.

When he self-publishes on Amazon, Konrath prices his books at $2.99 and earns $2.04 a copy, or just under 70%.

“If a traditional book publisher offered me a quarter of a million dollars for a novel, I’d consider it,” he said. “But anything less than that, I’m sure I can do better on my own.”

Digital book sales make up 9% of the overall market and are growing rapidly. During the first 10 months of this year, they reached $345 million, a 171% increase over the same period in 2009, according to the Assn. of American Publishers.

Print book sales dropped 23%, to just under $4 billion, in the same 10-month span.

Publishers say they are keenly aware that the ground is shifting, but most don’t see the situation as dire.

Talk of the demise of traditional publishers is “cocktail party sensationalism,” said Neil De Young, executive director of Hachette Book Group’s digital division in New York. “Our core mission hasn’t changed because of digital. We continue to be the venture capitalist for authors, helping them to distribute their works as widely as possible. Now we do that digitally as well as physically.”

James McQuivey, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Mass., agrees that publishers can still play a valuable role — for now.

With millions of titles potentially flooding the market, readers will have to rely more on external cues to guide their purchases, whether it’s a favorable review from a celebrity, a tip from a social-media contact or the backing of a major publisher.

“Until someone comes up with an algorithm to sort the good manuscripts from the bad, publishers and their human network of agents and editors maintain an advantage,” McQuivey said. “But sooner or later someone will create a new way for readers to find the books they most want to read, and that someone may or may not be a traditional book publisher.”

It may not even be human.

Amazon, Apple Inc., Netflix Inc., Pandora Media Inc. and other technology companies use software that analyzes consumer behavior to recommend choices in music, movies and other products.

Indeed, the challenge in a world where anyone can publish a book is getting people to pay attention.

In a blog post titled “Moving on,” about his decision to self-publish a book, Godin wrote that “my mission is to figure out who the audience is, and take them where they want and need to go, in whatever format works.”

The Internet is opening up new ways for writers to connect with readers.

Last year, Bear and another bestselling science fiction author, Neal Stephenson, teamed up to create “The Mongoliad,” a subscription-based historical novel based on the conquests of Genghis Khan. The authors, along with about half a dozen other writers, take turns writing chapters, which are published weekly on http://mongoliad.com/ and on Apple’s iPad and iPhone devices.

Readers pay $5.99 for a six-month subscription or $9.99 for a year to be able to read the chapters as they come out. A handful pays $1,000 to become lifetime patrons of the series.

The project uses software to let readers discuss the novel in forums on its website, contribute artwork for the book and even spin their own tales using a collaborative writing tool.

Although the technology is new, the creative model is a throwback to the days when newspapers published serial novels, or earlier when storytellers traveled from place to place looking for people who would pay a few coins to hear a tale.

“We’re allowing the reading public to sit there and be our editors, to engage in a dialogue with us,” said Bear, 59, of Seattle, whose 30 science fiction books include “Darwin’s Radio” and “Eon.” “Technology is making it possible for us to take advantage of reader feedback to create a story.

“This is the future of the book as I see it. Fewer and fewer people are walking into a bookstore. You have to reach readers in other ways. Because, ultimately, the new gatekeepers will be the readers.”

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Richard Branson’s Virgin Digital Book Publishing company on Tuesday launched “Project,” a digital lifestyle magazine, exclusively for distribution on the Apple iPad.

The magazine, which will reportedly feature multimedia content, will be priced at US$2.99 an issue.

This is the second digital magazine created exclusively for the iPad announced by a major company; the first was “The Daily,” from News Corp. (Nasdaq: NWS), which is scheduled to be launched next year.

Will Virgin’s endorsement of the iPad as a publishing platform undermine publishers’ consortium Next Issue Media, which is trying to squeeze Apple by launching a digital newsstand on the Android platform early next year?

The Book Publishing Project Has Landed

“Project” was created jointly by Virgin Group and UK multimedia book publisher Seven Squared. It’s a monthly magazine that will change as often as minute-by-minute to give readers up-to-date news.

The publication is based around design, entertainment, technology and entrepreneurs. It will have its own staff, and it will also encourage contributions from the public.

“Project” is edited by Anthony Noguera, formerly editorial director of men’s lifestyle magazines at H. Bauer, the largest privately owned publisher in Europe. The publication’s art director is Che Storey, formerly of Arena and Men’s Health magazines.

The cover story for the first issue focuses on Jeff Bridges. Other subjects include Yamauchi Kazanori, the developer behind the “Gran Turismo” game series.

“Project” claims to have landed top-flight advertisers, including Lexus, American Express (NYSE: AXP), Panasonic, Ford UK and Ford Canada.

Readers Heart Digital

Consumers apparently love their tablets — an online survey of more than 1,800 consumers conducted by Harrison Group and Zinio in September found that 13 percent of consumers are interested in buying a tablet-based device within the next 12 months.

The survey also found that 55 percent of tablet and e-reader owners who read digital content are consuming more digital content than they expected, and that 33 percent are spending more on buying digital content.

That led the Harrison Group to forecast sales of more than 20 million tablets and e-readers next year.

“This is a continuation of the trend in that you’ve got a whole host of devices that are receptacles for Internet-based content,” Frank Dickson, a vice president of research at In-Stat, told MacNewsWorld. “You’re seeing reconfiguring of content, which is already in digital form for another medium, whether it’s the iPad, the Nook, the Kindle or the smartphone,” he added.

“Before the iPad, book publishers tended to think they had to choose whether consumers wanted to read content in print or in digital format,” Jeanniey Mullen, a spokesperson for Zinio, told MacNewsWorld. “Now they’re finding people may love print, but they want digital access as well so they can take their digital device with them and read on the go.”

The Agony and the Ecstasy of the iPad

The iPad has forced the publishing industry to take digital media seriously, Mullen said.

“When the iPad came out in April, it was the first time that the publishing industry began committing design and strategic resources to building up digital readership,” Mullen explained.

Strong consumer demand has made the iPad the spearhead of the digital publishing revolution, Mullen stated. However, it won’t be the only digital device on the market.

“Zinio has been committed to digital publishing for 10 years, and we see the iPad as one of the very first of an oncoming array of devices of all shapes and sizes with different operating systems to open up content to anybody,” Mullen elaborated.

However, the iPad and other digital readers are making things difficult for printers as well as book publishers.

For example, Pearson, which publishes education and consumer books as well as newspapers including the Financial Times, is seeking to print short runs of its less-popular titles on inkjet printers because the iPad, the Kindle and other e-readers make it difficult for the publisher to figure out print runs, senior vice president Ed Febinger said at HP’s (NYSE: HPQ) Publishing Innovations earlier this year, according to Printweek.

Digital Newsstands Ahoy!

Apple’s strict requirements for digital publications on the iPad have driven five major publishers to consider Android devices as an alternative. The five — Conde Nast; Hearst; News Corp.; Time, Inc.; and Meredith — have set up a consortium, Next Issue Media..

The consortium has announced it will open a digital storefront next year on Android tablets. This triggered speculation that they were trying to pressure Apple into offering better terms for digital publications on the iPad.

“Next Issue Media has been around for a year,” Mullen said. “They wanted to go down the route that’s most widely accepted — the iPad — but Apple has very strict limitations around the sharing of data with book publishers and that’s when they decided to go the route of the Android device.”

However, it’s not clear whether Virgin’s announcement of the “Project” publication on the iPad will force the consortium to change its mind.

Next Issue Media did not respond to requests for comment by press time.

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President Obama already has “senator” and “Commander in Chief” on his resume, but now he can add his newest achievement: Successful children’s book author.

Random House Children’s Books announced Tuesday that the president’s latest book, “Of Thee I Sing: A Letter to My Daughters,” is the fastest-selling picture book in the company’s history. The book publisher said 50,000 copies were sold in the first five days after the book’s release.

Written before the president took office, the tome for tikes pays tribute to such celebrated Americans as Neil Armstrong, Jackie Robinson, and George Washington. Obama’s proceeds will be donated to a scholarship fund for the children of fallen and disabled soldiers.

Over a million copies of another November presidential release by a Random House subsidiary, former president George W. Bush’s “Decision Points,” have flown off the shelves since the memoir hit bookstores November 9. The book is the third by a presidential author to top the million-copy mark, joining former president Clinton’s “My Life” and President Obama’s last two books, “The Audacity of Hope” and “Dreams from My Father.”

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Random House Book Publishers has acquired the multi-language rights to publish a memoir by Salman Rushdie in each of its territories across the world.

Markus Dohle, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Random House Book Publishers worldwide, announced the acquisition of hardcover, paperback, audio, and e-book rights for English- German- and Spanish-language editions of the work-in-progress from Andrew Wylie, President of The Wylie Agency, the author’s agent.

Rushdie expects to complete his manuscript by the end of next year for publication by Random House in 2012.

Dohle brought together the book publishing and editorial leadership from each of the company’s international divisions for this acquisition, which is unprecedented in scope for the world’s largest trade book publisher.

Random House is planning a simultaneous publication of the memoir in each of its territories in physical, digital and audio formats.

‘This extraordinary work merits an extraordinary publishing effort on our part,’ said Mr Dohle.

‘It offers Random House, on behalf of one of the world’s great writers, the opportunity to harness our tremendous international creative and logistic capabilities, which will support the focused, customized publishing campaigns each of our publishers will execute locally.’

Random House will publish the memoir in India, the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, in English; Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, in German; and Spain, Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, Chile, Venezuela, and Uruguay, in Spanish.

The Random House and Knopf Canada imprints are the respective US and Canadian publishers.

In the UK, the book will be published by the Random House UK imprint Jonathan Cape; in Germany, by the Verlagsgruppe Random House imprint C Bertelsmann; and in Spain and Latin America, by Random House Mondadori’s Literatura Mondadori.

Salman Rushdie is one of the world’s most revered and honoured writers.

His memoir will be an evocation of his public and personal life: his outsider’s experience at British public school and Cambridge; his evolution as a writer; his relationships as a husband and a father; and his years in hiding following the fatwah issued by the Ayatollah Khomeini after the publication of The Satanic Verses in 1988.

Rushdie currently is working on the film version of his classic novel Midnight’s Children, which won the Booker Prize in 1981.

Chiki Sarkar, editor-in-chief of Random House India, said, ‘I and the entire team at Random House India are delighted to be self-publishing Salman Rushdie’s memoirs and welcoming him to Random House India. We believe it will be a truly important book of a pivotal moment, and one of the great books on the act of writing.’

Rushdie observed, ‘I’m absolutely delighted that Random House, my longtime book publishers, has agreed to publish my memoir in the English-language world, as well as in Spanish, and for the first time in German. I couldn’t wish for a better home for my work. I have waited a long time to write this memoir, until I felt I was ready to do it. I’m ready now.’

Rushdie’s latest work of fiction, Luka and the Fire of Life, has just been released in India on October 15th. Dohle added, ‘It is a privilege for Random House to publish a book of this remarkable memoir by Salman Rushdie, whose courage and commitment to freedom of expression is matched only by his unsurpassed importance as a writer.’

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An Australian book publishers claim that he debuted the world’s biggest book at a German book fair are inaccurate, according to self-publishing information from Guinness World Records sent to TODAYshow.com Thursday.

The largest book in the world measures 13.71 by 12.36 feet and weighs more than 1.2 tons, spokesperson Sara Wilcox said. The only copy was completed in Hungary on March 21, 2010.

Gordon Cheers, the managing director of the Australian book publishing company, Millennium House, told the AFP that his 6-by-9 foot atlas, titled “Earth, Platinum edition,” was the world’s largest. “This is the first time a book this size has ever been seen,” he said, adding that his company would only print 31 copies, each going for about $100,000.

“It’s all about creating a legacy,” he told the AFP. “Today, everything is digital and it’s gone in a second. This will still be around in 500 years.”

In a statement to TODAYshow.com, Suzanne Gross, an official from Millennium House, indirectly questioned Guinness’ definition of “book.”

“When is a book a book? If there is only one copy produced is it a ‘book’? … Anyone can grab two huge planks of wood, hinge them together and paste in some paper and call it a book,” Gross wrote, noting that there will be 31 copies of “EARTH, platinum edition.”

“Platinum is not big because it can be. Platinum is big because it needs to be. That’s a book,” she said.

An image of the book that currently holds the title is visible on the right.

“EARTH” may still nab a Guinness World Record. It likely could receive the award for world’s largest atlas.

The current record-holder belongs to the Klencke atlas, which was made in 1660 as a royal gift. Wilcox said it measures just smaller than 6-by-3.5 feet, belongs to the British Library and was measured on Feb. 2, 2010.

Guinness World Records hasn’t yet received a request to verify the book publisher’s claim, Wilcox said Wednesday.

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