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The implications of the computer moving from the desktop to our hip pocket

November 4, 2014 by Mike Shatzkin 13 Comments

Benedict Evans of Andreessen/Horowitz (an indispensible observer of digital change across media, and an analyst who explains Amazon better than any other I know) did a presentation called “Mobile is Eating the World”. It spells out the fact that just about everybody is going to have smartphones with connectivity very soon. One slide (slide 6) […]

Filed Under: Atomization, Authors, General Trade Publishing, Marketing, New Models, Supply-Chain Tagged With: Aerbook, Amazon Author Central, Andreessen/Horowitz, Benedict Evans, Bong, Chromecast, Citia, Duck Duck Go, Facebook, Google, iPhone, Linda Holliday, Ron Martinez, Twitter, Wikipedia, Wolphram Alpha

Big publisher bashing again with fictional facts

September 14, 2014 by Mike Shatzkin 54 Comments

The estimable Clay Shirky has written a lengthy piece called “Amazon, Publishers, and Readers” on medium.com saying, essentially, that an Amazon-dominated world would be an improvement over the Big Five “cartel”-dominated world of publishing we have today. This is an apples to oranges comparison. The Big Five are not nearly as broad a cartel as […]

Filed Under: Atomization, Digital Book World, eBooks, General Trade Publishing, Industry Events, Licensing and Rights, Scale, Self-Publishing, Supply-Chain Tagged With: Amazon, aNobii, Apple, Big Five, Clay Shirky, Digital Book World 2015, DRM, Hachette, Kindle, Matteo Berlucchi, Michael Cader, Pocket Books, Russ Grandinetti, Steve Coll

Is the new Amazon acquisition something publishers need to think about or not?

August 26, 2014 by Mike Shatzkin 7 Comments

If you’re like me, you know a thing or two about the book business but you didn’t know there was a business called Twitch until you heard the announcement this morning that Amazon had bought it for about $1 billion, apparently outbidding or somehow finessing Google to make the purchase. Twitch, I have learned, streams […]

Filed Under: Atomization, Community, New Models, Supply-Chain Tagged With: Amazon, Bob Stein, James McQuivey, New York Times, Richard Nash, Twitch, Wall Street Journal

New data on the Long Tail impact suggests rethinking history and ideas about the future of publishing

June 25, 2014 by Mike Shatzkin 66 Comments

For most of my lifetime, the principal challenge a publisher faced to get a book noticed by a consumer and sold was to get it on the shelves in bookstores. Data was always scarce (I combed for it for years) but everything I ever saw reported confirmed that customers generally chose from what was made […]

Filed Under: Atomization, Authors, eBooks, General Trade Publishing, Marketing, New Models, Scale, Self-Publishing, Supply-Chain Tagged With: B. Dalton, Baker & Taylor, Barnes & Noble, Booknet Canada, Borders, BP Reports, Brentano's, Cambridge University Press, Collier's Encyclopedia, Crowell-Collier, Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, HHI, Ingram, Kindle, Leonard Shatzkin, Lightning, Macmillan Publishers, Marcello Vena, Noah Genner, Oxford University Press, publishing history, RCS Libri, Two Continents, Walden

Wondering whether printed books will outlast printed money, or football

May 5, 2014 by Mike Shatzkin 13 Comments

When you’re trying to figure out what will happen in the book publishing business in the years to come, any prediction depends on how things work out that are beyond the control of the business, and sometimes well outside it. This will be increasingly the case if the book business, in what has remained a […]

Filed Under: Atomization, Authors, eBooks, General Trade Publishing, Global, Marketing, New Models, Scale, Self-Publishing, Supply-Chain, Vertical Tagged With: "Hunger Games", "Twilight", Amazon, Apple, Barnes & Noble, Chi Birmingham, Claire Cain Miller, content marketing, Google, Harris Survey, Harry Potter, Kindle, Kobo, New York Times

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Mike Shatzkin

Mike Shatzkin is the Founder & CEO of The Idea Logical Company and a widely-acknowledged thought leader about digital change in the book publishing industry. Read more.

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  • Doubts about the Department of Justice’s objection to the PRH acquisition of S&S
  • Every publishing strategy should start with Amazon and Ingram
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  • “Enterprise self-publishing” is coming: the third great disruption of book publishing since the 1990s
  • “The Family Business” is Ingram: the global infrastructure for the book industry
  • Amazon has done so many smart things that some of the best ones get forgotten
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Recent Posts

  • How book publishing has changed in recent decades and the puzzling question of what comes next
  • Doubts about the Department of Justice’s objection to the PRH acquisition of S&S
  • Every publishing strategy should start with Amazon and Ingram
  • Why books are different and why enterprises will be discovering they should be issuing them
  • “Enterprise self-publishing” is coming: the third great disruption of book publishing since the 1990s

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Archives

Categories

  • Atomization
  • Authors
  • Autobiographical
  • Baseball
  • Chuckles
  • Climate Change
  • Community
  • Conferences
  • Digital Book World
  • Direct response
  • eBooks
  • Enhanced ebook university
  • General Trade Publishing
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  • libraries
  • Licensing and Rights
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  • New Models
  • Politics
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  • rights
  • Scale
  • Self-Publishing
  • SEO
  • Speeches
  • Subscriptions
  • Supply-Chain
  • Technology
  • Unbundling
  • Uncategorized
  • Vertical

Recent Posts

  • How book publishing has changed in recent decades and the puzzling question of what comes next
  • Doubts about the Department of Justice’s objection to the PRH acquisition of S&S
  • Every publishing strategy should start with Amazon and Ingram

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