About 25 years ago, Ingram was benefiting from a big buildout of America's bookstore network. Borders and Barnes & Noble were both opening new stores -- big stores -- at a rapid rate. Ingram hit a mother lode delivering "store opening … [Continue reading]
7 ways book publishing will change over the next few years
A prior post described the new structure of the book publishing ecosystem. In the past three decades, we have migrated away from a world where a publisher needed to own a substantial infrastructure to deliver printed books to thousands of retail … [Continue reading]
One big change in book publishing is that it does not require you to have much of an organization to play anymore
More than two decades into its digital transition, book publishing has evolved so that a capital-intensive infrastructure is no longer a requirement to successfully develop a book, or a list of books, and bring the books to market. This has resulted … [Continue reading]
A lot has changed in book publishing in the last ten years
I am returning this September to speak at Digital Book World, a conference I helped to found and then programmed for its first seven years. (One motivation to go back is to promote my new book.) The occasion calls for some reflection. DBW itself has … [Continue reading]
The sale of B&N again calls the question of the future of America’s bookstores
The most important question in the world of trade publishing is "what will happen to the book trade", meaning, primarily, the bookstores (but also the other retailers that sell books, the libraries and the wholesalers that supply them). That was the … [Continue reading]
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- …
- 123
- Next Page »