tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21288815632030168132024-02-20T07:09:24.295-08:00Thoughts from the Consulting GarageOpinion and research pieces about book publishing, printing and related media spaces focusing on the transition from conventional business models to 21st century digital modelsTim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.comBlogger14125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-79649944722352864212012-05-23T16:01:00.001-07:002012-05-23T16:01:06.336-07:00Book Publishers Facing Tough Tradeoffs Managing InventoryI’ve recently worked on inventory projects for book publishers and wanted to
share some keyobseravtions that warrant blogging. <br />
<br />
<ul>
<li>Success in controlling inventory in book publishing now should be defined as
<strong>having inventory levels dropping more rapidly than book sales, while
still meeting service level targets</strong>. Since print book sales are
declining, successfully managing inventory means being able to
anticipate/forecast declining patterns, yet still maintain high in-stock rates
to maxmize existing demand. More working capital can then be used to invest in
the digital side of the business.
</li>
<li><strong>Decreasing inventory levels increases the number of transactions
(like printings) that are required to resupply inventory</strong>. Obviously,
printing for shorter supply timeframes means that you might, for example, print
a title twice a year instead of once. Over a large title base, this can mean a
huge percentage increase in reprint transactions that have to be processed.
</li>
<li><strong>Increased numbers of transactions put pressure on staff, processes,
and systems for greater efficiency</strong>. Most publishers are very leanly
staffed at this point, and may not have the bandwidth to absorb signficantly
higher transactions without major problems. Investment in better processes
and/or systems could save publishers from having to make difficult staffing
tradeoffs and suffering supply disruptions.
</li>
<li>Based on these observations and assuming continuing declines for print
sales, book publishers will increasingly face tough tradeoffs between managing
their inventory relative to sales, managing their transaction volumes, and
covering staff overhead faced with diminishing print sales. </li>
</ul>
<br />
It seems counterintuitive during this digital transition away from the
primacy of physical books, but book publishers that lack strong inventory
systems and/or processes may need to invest soon for improved performance and
sustainability. The risk of inventory ballooning while sales fall is one that
can consume working capital and pollute a balance sheet, hampering a
publisher’s flexibility to invest as needed in the digital business. A
reasonable investment in improvements can save a lot of pain in the long
term.<br />
<br />
Tim CooperTim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-68585539461821532472012-05-23T15:56:00.001-07:002012-05-23T15:56:50.478-07:00Toward A New Vision Of Sustainable Print Book Publishing In the 21st CenturyIf print book publishing is to survive in a rapidly digitizing world,
traditional models for decision-making around print must evolve into models that
better fit the times. Print book publishing has been driven by the vision of
continuous growth in volume--which generally translated into selling more copies
of more titles and (thus more printing). This older vision of growth--and the
fear of unfilled demand (which jeopardizes growth)-- translated into a business
model that sought profit primarily in economies of scale. Ever increasing print
volume led to a focus on reducing the unit cost of each print book, driving up
print quantities, which further drove efficiencies in offset printing, high
volume finishing (i.e., jacketing, binding, etc) and mass logistics and
distribution.The reality is that print book sales in the US peaked in 2007. The
pinnacle was reached by the final Harry Potter title, and sales of print books
have declined significantly each year since. At this point in the 21st century,
preserving a model driven by print book volume growth is folly. Instead, a new
vision through ensuring a sustainable eco-system around printed books should be
the goal. Central to this new vision is a rethink of traditional print quantity
decisions.<br />
<br />
Fortunately, the conceptual model needed to replace the unit cost model is
readily available for adaptation: "total cost of ownership" or TCO. Rather than
using unit cost as the primary determinant of print quantity and profitability,
TCO introduces additional inventory related carrying costs that act to constrain
the attractiveness of lower unit costs that stem from higher print
quantities.<br />
<br />
What print decision-making strategies complement a TCO model? The most
fundamental is that "less is more." Printing fewer copies more frequently is
the basic premise. To do this involves finding a new balance between simple p
& l cost analysis (unit cost is a key driver), and a more inclusive review
of the implications of purchasing inventory (TCO). Reducing the size of
inventory investment occurs transaction by transaction. TCO is an approach that
requires consistency and discipline, as well as timely access to relevant demand
and inventory data. Book publishers need to realign metrics, accounting, and
incentives to reinforce the TCO vision.<br />
<br />
The drawing below shows the extent of inventory carrying costs that are in
addition to unit cost. As the shift to digital accelerates, capital, service,
risk, and storage costs need to be considered with greater rigor rather than be
treated as "external" to a print quantity decision (as was the case too often in
the growth era). Of all of the cost factors shown below, the inventory risk
costs, primarily the risk of obsolescence, are huge in a disrupted environment.
Customer demand for print is rapidly changing, and is much less predictable
than before.<br />
<br />
<div class="mceTemp">
<dl class="wp-caption alignnone" data-mce-style="width: 310px;" id="attachment_123" style="width: 310px;">
<dt class="wp-caption-dt"><a data-mce-href="http://fromthewhiteboard.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/inventory-carrying-cost.jpg" href="http://fromthewhiteboard.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/inventory-carrying-cost.jpg"><img alt="tco carrying costs" class="size-medium wp-image-123" data-mce-src="http://fromthewhiteboard.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/inventory-carrying-cost.jpg?w=300" height="231" src="http://fromthewhiteboard.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/inventory-carrying-cost.jpg?w=300" title="inventory carrying cost " width="300" /></a></dt>
<dd class="wp-caption-dd">non-unit cost inventory costs</dd></dl>
</div>
<br />
Depending on the level of activity for the title, reducing print quantities
typically triggers the need for short-run digital print solutions. Book
printers need to increase their capabilities/capacity to make economical digital
print books. Publishers and their printing partners need to utilize distributed
print networks to enable printing closer to where the book is needed, saving
shipping time and cost. As more print titles move towards being considered
"long tail", print on demand services (combined with direct fulfillment) will
comprise a larger piece of the pie. TCO also calls for better demand
forecasting for titles where inventory must be held. The forecasts should be
based on updated market models that reflect the new realities of the print book
marketplace.<br />
<br />
Additionally, given shrinking print revenues for the foreseeable future,
publishers are also challenged to financially support the staff and systems
required to manage the print side of the business. This could open the door to
investments supporting more automated, streamlined print transactions. Pressure
to reduce staff costs could lead to mutually advantageous transfer of staff and
functional duties from publishers to printers or other 3rd parties. Whether
this takes the form of limited business process outsourcing or more
comprehensive vendor managed inventory programs, it's clear that there are many
opportunities for creative solutions to the challenge of sustaining the print
book ecosystem.<br />
<br />
(Part 1 of a multi-part series) originally published 3/5/12 on 'From the Whiteboard"Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-11104887130485441082012-05-23T15:53:00.003-07:002012-05-23T15:53:52.701-07:00<h2>
The Power of Observation: Applying the Heisenberg Principle
to Consulting</h2>
<br />
<div class="date" sizcache032992441012118306="78" sizset="2">
January 31st, 2012 </div>
<br />
<div class="entry" sizcache032992441012118306="80" sizset="2">
I firmly believe in the power of external consulting to cause change in
companies. I say that from experience, but can explain it with a scientific
principle. It is the Heisenberg principle of the observer effect–the impact
that an observer has on the observed.<br />
According to Wikipedia, “The observer effect …, relates to the influence the
observer has on a system… This means that the type of measurement that we
do on the system affects the end state of the system.”<br />
Consultants are obvious observers, newly and consciously introduced into the
enterprise eco-system by management. Consultants have an immediate, sometimes
visceral impact, on the organizations that deploy them . The question is, how
can the impact be leveraged for best effect?<br />
The best clients leverage the presence that consultants have to best effect.
They communicate proactively about the pending engagement with the key players
in their company. They show their organization that they are serious and
willing to commit resources.<br />
The best consultants harness their presence to get information and connect
with the key players. They channel positive energy and try to use it to uncover
barriers. As they absorb more information, they begin to test hypotheses about
how to orchestrate the changes needed, whether process or organizational.<br />
The best results bring the observed into a new state, one that is more
cohesive, productive, and committed to achieving common goals. The strength of
the Heisenberg principle, and consulting in general, is in leveraging the impact
made to organizations by observers.<br />
<br />
(first published on "From the Whiteboard" blog</div>Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-46738129469233969952011-07-07T09:28:00.000-07:002011-07-07T09:34:23.264-07:006 Months To Go in 2011Summer's here and the time is right for ... evaluating your progress year to date. While vacationers hit the beaches, business people should hit their numbers and gauge how the year is shaping up. Whatever your key metrics are (probably revenue/sales, costs, profit), you should review the year to date thoroughly, update your projections for the rest of 2011, and make adjustments as needed. July is the right time to take stock and plan to finish strong.<br /><br /><ol><br /><li>Review your key metrics year to date</li><br /><li>Update your projections/budgets for the rest of 2011</li><br /><li>Make necessary adjustments to operations</li></ol><br /><p></p>Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-75351179316668096032010-01-06T13:49:00.000-08:002010-01-06T14:25:13.771-08:00Top 5 for 2010--Book Publishing Predictions from Tim<ol><li>Continued extinction of the 20th Century book eco-system. More bookstores will close, less "trade" new titles will be published by fewer "<em>acknowledged</em>" trade publishers, less books will sell through traditional channels (whether retail or institutional), less people will be employed by book publishers, and less money will be spent overall by publishers.</li><li>The existential crisis for traditional publishers will continue. There is no going back to the way it was, and the path forward is unclear at best. More content will be written defending the value of the traditional publisher and their traditional functions, and many still in publishing will be encouraged and share these pieces with colleagues. This will not change the problem. <em>Dualism</em> (e vs. p) in publishers will exacerbate this trend, with the "e" staff seen to be the favorites and sometimes mocking their primitive "p" colleagues.</li><li>The best publishers will invest in operational improvements, so they can handle their "physical" business more efficiently. Areas like data warehousing/business intelligence and reports, sales forecasting and inventory management, and measuring sales force productivity will see increased focus to drive more ROI. Any savings will then be invested in digital infrastructure needs. The best publishers will create self-funding loops.</li><li>On-demand print technologies will continue to evolve, particularly for full color, and the most innovative trade publishers will find ways to capitalize on new capabilities. Look for more personalization of book content (with pre-orders) as publishers try to find ways to charge more (for extra value) and build databases of interested readers. The best publishers will make this a long-term strategic priority.</li><li>On the digital side, now that eBooks are finally hot (after 10 years of anticipation), the growing focus for publishers will be on understanding and managing the digital supply chain. Publishers will need to understand (and spin) the advantages that their digital supply chain brings to the table versus other competitors, whether those are traditional publishers or other players.</li></ol><p> </p>Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-19553891242825498862009-09-21T10:38:00.001-07:002009-09-21T11:25:27.188-07:00More legal problems for the book industry are a precursor to the next suit to comeI'm not surprised by the news that the Justice Department has recommended that the proposed Google settlement be rejected as written. Given the complex issues involved, more work needs to be done to achieve a fair settlement for all parties involved, one that does not lock in an unfair advantage for Google over its competitors. Clearly, this is just the latest example of litigation playing a critical role in shaping the industry's business models.<br /><br />Recall that in 2001, just 8 years ago, the ABA (American Booksellers Association) settled its antitrust case against Barnes & Noble and Borders for $4.7 million. The 1994 lawsuit and its accompanying evidence exposed many discriminatory deals made by the two bookstore chains with the major publishers. Many commentators at the time noted that the deals helped to financially feed the 1990's superstore expansion, while at the same time crippling the ability of independent bookstores to compete on the same playing field. By the time the lawsuit impacted the industry enough for publishers to offer fairer terms to independent bookstores in the late 90's, the damage had been done. The industry was left with the 2 chains as the increasingly dominant booksellers. <br /><br />At about the same time, the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">internet</span> and Google emerged to become the next new challenge for the industry. In this latest case, <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">Google's</span> behavior in digitizing entire library collections, initially without regard to copyright issues, was the core of the problem. While the publishers and the <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">AAP</span> sued to stop the library program, a negotiated settlement became the vehicle to resolve the dispute. <br /><br />As the industry continues to struggle with digitization in general, the almost arcane focus in the settlement on "orphan works", those out of print or rare works without a clear and identified rights holder currently, can be seen as a microcosm of a larger dispute that will eventually be settled in the courts. Since <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">Google's</span> strategy could be characterized as digitize first, then negotiate, they were able to attain the competitive advantage early on, and have leveraged that to steer the proposed settlement. Their major argument is that digitization is in the public good, giving wide access to these rare works. Of course, that access is through <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error">Google's</span> book search. And parties wanting to claim their orphan works and opt out of Google must do so actively, the onus is on them to navigate through the structures defined in the proposal. It will be interesting to see how this all turns out in the end.<br /><br />But I think this particular legal action is the precursor to another one. It is my guess that the future dispute will be whether the major publishers' individual and confidential agreements with Google, Amazon, etc, violate Robinson <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">Patman</span>, or the Sherman Act, and give those companies an unfair advantage over their competitors. Whether it is about <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">ebook</span> terms, book search terms, or terms about any income derived from scanning and digitization of works, more litigation is the only certainty.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-90089843493122081282009-09-15T11:15:00.000-07:002009-09-15T11:16:45.142-07:00Dan Brown and Publishing Pricing in 2009<a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/dj-taylor-dan-brown-is-going-to-be-the-ruin-of-us-all-1786885.html">http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/dj-taylor-dan-brown-is-going-to-be-the-ruin-of-us-all-1786885.html</a><br /><br />In the article (see link above) in UK's Independent, DJ Taylor bemoans the fact that Uk retail cutthroat discounting on major bestsellers like "Lost Symbol" and Harry Potter, etc are a lost opportunity for struggling book retailers to realize profitable revenue. With UK chains selling the title at 50% discount or half price, Mr Taylor notes that selling a copy is either a loss leader to drive traffic, or a break even proposition at best. Mr Taylor neglects to note the major cash flow advantage that retailers will see in selling many copies quickly to consumers, collecting that cast, then paying their suppliers with extended dating.<br />He writes, "All this renders the book's publication horribly symbolic. For all the bright-eyed talk about 'diversity' in <a style="POSITION: static; TEXT-DECORATION: underline !important" id="KonaLink4" oncontextmenu="return false;" class="kLink" onmouseover="adlinkMouseOver(event,this,4);" onmouseout="adlinkMouseOut(event,this,4);" onclick="adlinkMouseClick(event,this,4);" href="http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/dj-taylor-dan-brown-is-going-to-be-the-ruin-of-us-all-1786885.html#" target="_top">the nation's</a> bookshops, the over-riding tendency in publishing is for more discounted copies to be sold of fewer, similar books. Some might argue that putting Dan Brown on sale at half-price is a thoroughly democratic way of making <a style="POSITION: static; TEXT-DECORATION: underline !important" id="KonaLink5" oncontextmenu="return false;" class="kLink" onmouseover="adlinkMouseOver(event,this,5);" onmouseout="adlinkMouseOut(event,this,5);" onclick="adlinkMouseClick(event,this,5);" href="http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/dj-taylor-dan-brown-is-going-to-be-the-ruin-of-us-all-1786885.html#" target="_top">literature </a>more accessible to a mass public. In the end, though, price-cutting simply devalues the allure of what remains. "<br />Mr Taylor may not have noticed, but a sort of consumer price deflation has hit many physical media products in the last year or so. I would propose that the revenue dampening impact of the global recession, combined with the emergence of digital media, the increased visibility of used products (via eBay and Amazon.com), and the corresponding weakening in physical media product sales and retailer performance has driven this phenomena. Lost in many industry blogs and trade articles about eBook pricing and the $9.99 Kindle consumer price target is the fact that in 2009, the price of physical book product matters much more to publisher's top and bottom line results.<br />The industry is in an almost existential juggling act, trying to find the balance of consumer value vs publisher profitability while many of the primary factors that influence both are changing. What is indisputable in 2009 is that the industry needs more consumers to buy books, whether in the US or UK, whether in chains or indie bookstores.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-42284500850817495732009-08-18T08:26:00.000-07:002009-08-18T08:52:28.917-07:00BEA and Reed still miss the point.After reading the "How to fix BEA?" article in the 8/10/09 edition of Publishers Weekly, it struck me again how timid the thought process is of both Reed and the publishers they listen. Once the ABA sold the show to Reed, the original concept (bookseller oriented annual show) should have been reworked. Reed's customer is not the bookseller, but the publisher who pays for space. And publishers have been tolerating the show for years, but only with diminishing investment required of them. This is because the major challenge in the industry is not publishers reaching booksellers with their fall list (the way it used to be). As the role of the bookseller has been reduced (primarily) to ringing up the sale on the cash register (see my previous blog), the new challenge for publishers is to identify and reach the new "influencers" who will recommend their titles and authors. <br /><br />Since the traditional print media has drastically reduced book review coverage, this influencer role has increasingly shifted to bloggers, twitterers, facebookers, and social networkers in general. Even if a book is featured on TV, the amplifying effect of social networkers noting the appearence is crucial to building popular awareness. While booksellers still need to have product available (whether p or e), influencers are the demand creators of the 21st century. <br /><br />Again, what is a major challenge facing book publishing? It is to reach the social networkers with appropriate titles and the accompanying information so they can do their magic. What if Reed made the effort to attract the top social networkers who recommend books to the BEA? What if Reed set up a section in the hall for them, documented the topics they were interested in, and then facilitated scheduling meetings and pitch sessions for publishers. What if software players like Net Galley and Bowker, or organizations like BISG helped publishers capture and assimilate the pertinent data on social networkers and tracked their activity, followers, and helped publishers see the relevant data on how consumer sales (Book Scan) moved due to those efforts?<br /><br />BEA may be irrelevant, but the industry has needs that a major aggregating event can help address. It just happens that need is not about booksellers.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-31421527645272571312009-08-04T14:24:00.000-07:002009-08-04T14:24:35.171-07:00Amazon: Love Them, Hate Them, Let's Follow the Money<p>by Ted Treanor, publishing consultant, <a href="http://www.consultinggarage.com/">The Consulting Garage</a></p><p>So what’s Amazon up to? Let’s follow the money trail. In 2005 I remember becoming acutely aware of their strategy when they bought BookSurge and Mobipocket in one month. It was a clear message to both the digital and traditional book publishing industry that Amazon was investing in their vision of the future of book publishing. They were putting their money on future growth areas in the book industry by demonstrating a commitment to digital books and print-on-demand technology and services. Here is an awesome link to a <a href="http://www.meettheboss.com/amazon-acquisitions-and-investments-zappos.html">visualization</a> of Amazon’s entire history of investments in buying companies across all industries. Many of their acquisitions and investments are in technology infrastructure that supports their book business and other industries as well. </p><p>Bookpages (<a href="http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=97664&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=233853&highlight=">announced</a> April 27, 1998) – Bookpages was one of the largest online bookstores in the United Kingdom. It became Amazon’s online UK store.</p><p>Telebook (<a href="http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=97664&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=233853&highlight=">announced</a> April 27, 1998) Telebook, operating through its ABC Bücherdienst subsidiary, was Germany’s number one online bookstore –It became Amazon’s German online store.</p><p>Audible.com (<a href="http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=97664&p=irol-newsArticle_Print&ID=71791&highlight=">announced</a> Jan. 31, 2000) An investment of millions of dollars, for 5 percent ownership, which featured content from newspapers and magazines, and books on audio. For promoting audio.com, Amazon would receive $ 30 million over three years.</p><p>BookSurge LLC (<a href="http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=97664&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=691258&highlight=">announced</a> April 4, 2005) <a href="http://www.booksurge.com/">BookSurge</a> print-on-demand book printing and fulfillment from Charleston, South Carolina with growing global relationships.</p><p>Mobipocket.com (acquired <a href="http://www.fonerbooks.com/2005/08/ebook-server-software-amazon.html">April 2005</a>) – <a href="http://www.mobipocket.com/">Mobipocket</a>, a very popular French ebook company that specialized in ebooks for mobile devices, with both reader and server software. </p><p>Brilliance Audio, Inc. (acquired <a href="http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=176060&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1006035&highlight=">May 23, 2007</a>) –<a href="http://www.brillianceaudioinc.com/">Brilliance Audio</a> is one of the largest audiobook publishers in the USA.</p><p>Shelfari (acquired <a href="http://blog.shelfari.com/my_weblog/2008/08/shelfari-joins-the-amazoncom-family.html">August 25, 2008</a>, <a href="http://www.shelfari.com/">Shelfari</a> book based social network site from Seattle. Amazon originally was an <a href="http://www.shelfari.com/Shelfari/Press/02-28-07.aspx">investor in Shelfari in February, 2007.</a></p><p>Audible.com (acquired <a href="http://www.thestandard.com/news/2008/01/31/update-amazon-buys-audible-us-300-million">April 2008</a>) <a href="http://www.audible.com/">Audible</a> is the online audio-book provider was purchased by Amazon in for US$300 million and assumption of liabilities.</p><p>AbeBooks (acquired <a href="http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=97664&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1182551&highlight=">Dec 2008</a>) Purchased for between $110-$120 million. AbeBooks is an online marketplace for books, with over 110 million primarily used, rare and out-of-print books listed for sale by thousands of independent booksellers from around the world. </p><p>-Bookfinder.com (subsidiary of AbeBooks, acquired Dec 2008) </p><p>-LibraryThing (a 40% share) (subsidiary of AbeBooks, acquired Dec 2008) </p><p>-Justbooks (subsidiary of AbeBooks, acquired Dec 2008) -IberLibro.com (subsidiary of AbeBooks, acquired Dec 2008) </p><p>-Gojaba.com (subsidiary of AbeBooks, acquired Dec 2008) </p><p>- FillZ (listing-management service, subsidiary of AbeBooks, acquired Dec 2008) </p><p>Lexcycle Inc. (acquired <a href="http://www.lexcycle.com/lexcycle_acquired_by_amazon">April 27, 2009</a>) This is the company behind <a href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/163917/amazon_acquires_lexcycle.html">Stanza</a>, an electronic book reading application for the iPhone and iPod.Booktour (Seed capital investment in <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-booktour-raises-350000-in-seed-capital-from-amazon/">April, 2009</a>) </p><p>The Chairman of <a href="http://booktour.com/">Booktour</a> is author and journalist Chris Anderson, who is the editor in chief of Wired Magazine, and the writer of the book The Long Tail and his 2009 book, Free. The company lets authors create profile pages where they can communicate with fans, and provide a schedule of events.<br />You can bet that there will be more investments to come…</p><p>There are many other Amazon investments in customer enabling technologies, and to improve the customer experience for any product or service through the ever reaching and growing Amazon.com. It is not just B2C, but B2B relationships, too, such as hosting and in the cloud computing services. They are building a comprehensive online shopping platform for entire verticals and horizontals and they make money selling directly to the consumer, or helping merchants sell to their customers, and more recently by supporting supply chain relationships. No small vision here. </p><p>Whether you see Amazon as a friend or a threat will depend on your market position. It will also depend if you and your company have a strong vision and an ongoing commitment to investment in the future. Where do you weigh-in?</p>Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-83219827416921704802009-08-04T13:37:00.000-07:002009-08-04T13:55:19.827-07:00Comic-Con a model for 21st Century BEA?Calvin Reid has a PW piece about Comic-Con (here in San Diego), and about how it could be a model for what to do with the BEA/ABA. (here is the link) http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6674286.html?nid=2789&source=link&rid=1494249144<br /><br />Obviously the big difference between the two is that a traditional trade show like the BEA is B2B-oriented, while Comic-Con is a fan-driven show that brings Creators (writers/artists), publishers, studios, distributors, dealers, etc together in one big stew. <br /><br />However, if book publishers are serious about digital marketing and developing strong vertical categories, then they need to seriously consider fan-friendly shows conceived around strong subject categories. Publishers could collect fan information (to market to them) and gather their feedback about upcoming books. Involving authors, specialty retailers, other publishers in the vertical, other media in the vertical (web, Video, magazines, etc), bloggers, reviewers,etc could give enough scale and attention to make it compelling.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-24697644384671276262009-06-22T09:30:00.000-07:002009-06-22T10:46:52.378-07:00Evolving from the 20th Century Book Publishing Ecosystem, part 1Evolving from the 20th Century Book Publishing Ecosystem, Part 1 Booksellers<br />I’d like to add to the growing body of commentary about the way publishing may adapt to the challenges it faces as it evolves from a 20th century ecosystem into the 21st century. First of all, I find that 20th century publishing had 6 major roles that impacted the lion’s share of the business as listed in the table below.<br />20th Century Book Publishing Ecosystem Roles<br />ROLE FUNCTION NOTES<br />Author Write books, promote as needed Success = large royalty advance<br />Agent Select book/author, sell rights Success= negotiating large advance<br />Publisher (Trade) Acquire book/author, publish Growth and profit is key<br />Wholesaler 1 stop shop for retail, selection Same day shipping, high fill rates<br />Booksellers Merchandise to consumers stocking, word of mouth, hand sell<br />Consumers Buy from booksellers, read Media influenced (Oprah), wom<br /><br />As we move deeper into the 21st century, almost every role is in flux, threatened by current developments or undergoing major change due to technology, culture, overall business trends, etc. But the first role I’ll explore in more depth is that of the bookseller. <br />As the 20th century retail evolved in the 1980’s and 1990’s, so did bookselling. What had been a diverse assortment of independently owned and operated bookstores across the country became a big box chain category. The growth of Barnes and Noble through merger and acquisition, as well as the parallel growth of Borders changed the face of bookselling. The superstore became the ultimate bookselling tool, a vast expanse of tables and shelves for almost all current frontlist and backlist titles from every publisher, and the rapid expansion of the number of superstores across the country fueled demand for category backlist titles to fill those shelves. Publishers and wholesaler benefited enormously from these opening orders, and developed more efficient ways to inventory the necessary titles and handle the order fulfillment challenges. <br />By the mid 1990’s, during the height of the superstore boom, Amazon.com emerged and created the etail category. In 10 years, Amazon.com has grown to become perhaps the most influential bookseller in the US, with the volume and buyer power that comes with the territory. At the same time, the independent booksellers that dominated the business until the 1980’s declined rapidly. Both the superstores and etail devastated the independents. While some of the best still survive today (Tattered Cover in Denver), their overall number and sales volume has diminished to a rounding error. <br />One of the consequences is that the role of the “professional” bookseller, a human paid for their knowledge of books and their ability to match books to readers, has been disintermediated. While the chains may claim that they employ many booksellers, staffing cuts have reduced most superstore staffing to levels that provide only the most basic services. And the chains do not typically pay a living wage to their “bookseller” store employees. <br />But perhaps even more significant in the virtual extinction of the professional bookseller is the emergence of web 2.0 technologies. Look at Amazon as the supreme example. The function of the bookseller has been replaced by a combination of several factors. First, the ability for consumers to rate the items that they’ve bought (books they’ve read) and then store that information in a database. Second, the ability of Amazon to utilize that information, as well as their record of your purchases and browsing path, to provide recommendations to you replaced the most obvious role of the bookselling professional. And third, the enthusiasm of other customers in providing “user generated content”, their ratings and reviews of books, gives the Amazon consumer an amazing amount of supplemental content to validate their choices. Together, these factors provide a consistent customer experience no matter where that consumer is located.<br />The best 1970’s bookseller understood the tastes of their customers, what they had already read, and which other books might appeal. Their brains were the recommendation engine of the time. Yet that skill was hard to teach and required much time and dedication to acquire. In the virtual world of Amazon, the software that provides the recommendation learns to improve results by closely tracking how the consumer responds. It is a self-improving loop that will continue to evolve as more information is provided to fuel it. And it has rendered the professional bookseller almost extinct.<br />Next, part 2.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-27390952478846494752009-06-09T09:25:00.000-07:002009-06-09T09:48:56.423-07:00Today's publishers should look at 1950's publishing thought leadersReading Mike Shatzkin's blog (<a href="http://www.idealog.com/blog/)%20about">http://www.idealog.com/blog/) about</a> his father(Leonard Shatzkin)'s innovations in 1950's book publishing at Doubleday motivated me to write today's posting. I vividly remember reading "In Cold Type" by Leonard Shatzkin ( <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Cold-Type-Overcoming-Book-Crisis/dp/0878380264/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1244564554&sr=1-2">http://www.amazon.com/Cold-Type-Overcoming-Book-Crisis/dp/0878380264/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1244564554&sr=1-2</a> ) in the mid-nineties while I was Director of Inventory and Reprints for Harcourt Trade. Shatzkin's descriptions of both the way print quantity decisions were made, and how statistical techniques like regression analysis could be applied to fill in missing information and improve the results of the decisions presented a promising alternative to the smart but underinformed, visceral, and emotional approaches that I saw daily. As we progressed on the path to being a profitable business at Harcourt Trade, I was able to apply the spirit of Shatzkin's experiences to help inspire analytical, decision-making, process, and strategy reforms that led to reducing our inventories by over 50%, while sales grew 100%, and fillrates increased to exceed the goals we set. <br />It is true that quantitative analysis by itself has limited utility, but coupled with an improved decision architecture so that the insights and/or predictive information culled from the analysis can be best incorporated into the final decision-making, it is part of a potentially impactful improvement engine. This requires that the organization be willing to tackle the people/structural issues that impact the problem at hand, from who sits at the decision-making table and what roles they play when, to who implements and communicates the decision, to how results are tracked and communicated to those who need to know. <br />As book publishing struggles in the early 21st century, while new digital platforms dominate a lot of the industry's thought leadership, I'd make the case that publishers can more directly impact their current cost structures and balance sheets by looking back at the 1950's and Leonard Shatzkin's example of thought leadership at Doubleday.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-32494594679645188112009-06-01T10:26:00.000-07:002009-06-01T11:11:15.285-07:00Essence of Wholesale is lost in the current ebook marketplaceLast week's news of reorg at Ingram and new partnerships for B&T triggered me to try and crystallize some unstructured thoughts I've had floating around. In the physical book world, wholesalers and distributors had distinct, well-understood roles, and success in one business didn't guarantee success in the other. <br /><br />Wholesalers dealt with a variety of publishers, non-exclusively, as many as they could reasonably do sensible business with. That gave wholesalers the ability to compete on their title selection and availability, and fill a vital role in the 20th century book supply chain. They still do function in this way, but the vitality of their role continues to shrink as the bookseller base shrinks.<br /><br />On the other hand, Distributors worked with a fixed list of publishers and essentially replaced the warehousing and order fullfillment function (along with sales for most) of those publishers. Distributors occupied a place one notch higher than wholesalers in the supply chain in that they would ship to wholesalers as well as booksellers. <br /><br />In the ebook world, the plethora of delivery systems and formats have, so far, eliminated the wholesale function. The vertical plays of both Amazon and Sony mean that they occupy the functions of distributor (for format/device), wholesaler and bookseller, going directly from publisher to consumer. The relatively new iPhone distribution channel may be the only place where ebooks can be content-centric rather than device or format-centric. As such, we've seen Amazon now occupying a new role, straddling bookseller (Kindle) with distributor (Kindle titles to iPhones). <br /><br />Where is the role for Ingram or B&T in this world? So far, despite the attention they've gained and the resources invested, they do not have a vital place in the supply chain comparable to their role in the physical world.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2128881563203016813.post-16239832470758873762009-05-22T09:01:00.000-07:002009-05-22T09:02:24.642-07:00Publishing Innovation must be physical as well as digitalPublishing Innovation Must Be Directed to Physical as Well as Digital Media<br />On May 6th, I had the pleasure of attending the HP Inkjet Web Press Open House at O’Neil Data Systems, a commercial, book and newspaper printer in Los Angeles. I offer the following thoughts as my quick reaction to the event.<br />I’ve seen the future of web printing, and the brand on the press is HP. Their new digital HP Inkjet Web Press will render conventional offset web presses obsolete by 2020. But why is this important for book publishers? Because the computing power that drives this efficient and cost-effective print engine will finally allow publishers to innovate the contents of physical books in unprecedented ways. True customization and personalization will be possible at an acceptable cost level. <br />As publishers leverage digital marketing tools to create mailing lists, market to specific audiences on the web, publicize to bloggers as well as the traditional media, and do virtual events with authors, the ability to customize/personalize the core product, the physical book, will allow publishers to really do what they’ve been struggling to do for years: offer unique value for a product that has been commoditized in almost every other way.<br />For example, with the HP print technology, books could be “mass printed” (at attractive costs) yet have personalized elements unique to each individual book. New revenue models could be created, with publishers prompting loyal consumers of specific authors or genres to pre-order (and pre-pay?) for new books that could then be printed with their names and their choice of customized supplemental content within the book. Perhaps that could include choosing an alternate ending in fiction, or additional depth about a character, or in non-fiction, additional content about a particular example explained in the core content. In this scenario, Publishers and authors could then continue to build their mailing lists of consumer contacts for additional marketing and sell more customized product directly to high-value customers. Or they could work with booksellers to collect the consumer information and pre-orders. It’s just one quick example of what the future marketplace could become. <br />To learn more about the HP Inkjet Web Press, visit <a href="http://www.hp.com/go/inkjetwebpress">www.hp.com/go/inkjetwebpress</a>.Tim@consultinggarage.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12868136716898015303noreply@blogger.com0