Business Management - Industry Trends
Shows are expensive, requiring big checks up front. Kodak says it sees a better return from bringing more prospects to its demo center in Rochester, NY and stroking customers at GUA, the company’s user association. The question is whether this is enough.
eBooks are slowly subsuming the printed format as the preferred vehicle on which people read books. But perhaps there is reason to hope that eBooks and print books could have a bright future together, because for all the great things eBooks accomplish—convenience, selection, portability, multimedia—there are still some fundamental qualities they will simply never possess:
- Books have physical beauty.
- Books have provenance.
- Printed books are collectible.
- Books are nostalgic.
Web entrepreneur, designer and novelist Jack Cheng, who recently funded the printing of his book through Kickstarter, told me that printed books just offer a more robust experience to the reader.
Nonexistent state funding for new textbook purchases is driving the search for alternative sources of information, mainly via the Internet, electronic databases and licensing of eBooks. Schools also are making do with the books they have, stretching out replacement cycles and repairing worn volumes when practical.
State funding has dwindled from $21 million in 2008 to nothing in the current biennium, said Kentucky Department of Education spokeswoman Nancy Rodriguez. The education department and the state board of education is lobbying for more money the next time around but 2013 isn’t a budget year, she said.
Increasingly, districts are buying netbooks and iPads
At first, I dismissed the online discussion surrounding this question with a shoulder shrug and a “Really? Are we still talking about this?” Digital may sing and dance, but when I hold a good printed piece, it communicates in tangible ways that tablets and smartphones can’t.
I recently had the pleasure of interviewing Guy Kawasaki who has written 12 books, 10 of which were traditionally published. His newest book, “APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur—How to Publish a Book,” helps people understand how and why to self-publish. Guy shares his thoughts on publishing and why he decided to forgo the traditional model and go indie.
The Printing Industries of America (PIA) announced the recipients of its 2012 Best Workplace in the Americas Awards. A total of 36 graphic arts companies, both PIA and non-PIA members, were selected by a committee of human resource experts from within the industry.
Another exciting year for the publishing industry is in the books, so to speak. The eBook and digital publishing landscape changed drastically yet again. Seeing as though 2012 is just about over, we’ve gathered publishing experts to predict what extraordinary events are to come in book publishing in 2013.
Buried within Wal-Mart’s website, beneath the red sales banners and loud holiday graphics, is a magazine called BeautyScoop. Thousands of stores also carry it, and it was mailed to millions of the store’s customers. Most big retailers fill their stores with custom-published shoppers that double as cheaply made catalogs…BeautyScoop is something else.
Though wafer-thin—it runs just 12 pages—and produced on glossy stock, it is as close as a store catalog can come to a magazine. And there are editorial features.
The entire magazine was made by Condé Nast, sources said.
A year ago, Wal-Mart went to the MediaVest Group
While eBooks have been exploding in popularity in recent years, scholars, chefs and those who just love to tool around in the kitchen say it’s not time to stick a fork in the physical cookbook just yet. “I’m a pretty messy cook, so having your computer on the counter is a recipe for disaster,” said Ian Mosby, who is preparing to teach a University of Guelph course that encompasses the history of the cookbook.
“If I’m going to pay money to own something, I would rather have the physicality of the book. I’m more likely to read a physical cookbook
At a time when Wisconsin’s paper mills were already fighting off a digital death, China has become a sudden, potent adversary—a threat even greater than the rise of laptops and the iPad. Over the course of the last decade, China tripled its paper production and in 2009 overtook the United States as the world’s biggest papermaker. It can now match the annual output of Wisconsin, America’s top papermaking state, in the span of three weeks.