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Conferences are thermometers recording the level of fear about publishing changes

December 7, 2016 by Mike Shatzkin 7 Comments

In the latest sign that the need for information about digital change in publishing has undergone a sea change in the past few years, it was announced today that Nielsen will not stage an independent conference in London this April, but will instead join forces with the London Book Fair to do an event there […]

Filed Under: General Trade Publishing, Global, Industry Events, Marketing, New Models, Publishing History, SEO, Supply-Chain Tagged With: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, David Nussbaum, Denis Bennett, Digital Book World, Diversion Books, EverAfter Romance, F+W Media, Frankfurt Book Fair, Ingenta, Ingram, KIPI, Knowledge Industry Publications, London Book Fair, Michael Cader, Microsoft, NetGalley, Nielsen, O'Reilly Media, Palm, Publishers Lunch, Publishers Weekly, Radius Book Group, Sara Domville, Scott Waxman, Sony, Tim O'Reilly, Tools of Change, VISTA Computer Services

Ebooks change the game for both backlist and export

October 6, 2015 by Mike Shatzkin 12 Comments

There are two aspects of the business that ebooks should really change. One is that ebooks can really enable increases in sales of the backlist. The other is that ebooks will really enable sales outside the publisher’s home territory. The second piece of this hardly even requires much effort. At a conference called Camp Coresource hosted by […]

Filed Under: Digital Book World, eBooks, General Trade Publishing, Global, Licensing and Rights, Marketing, Scale, SEO, Supply-Chain Tagged With: Amazon, Author Earnings, BISG, Book Industy Study Group, Camp Coresource, Carolyn Reidy, Data Guy, Digital Book World, Diversion Books, EverAfter Romance, Ingram, Mary Cummings, Open Road, Simon & Schuster

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.

Follow Mike on Twitter @MikeShatzkin.

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Recent Posts

  • Should Barnes & Noble rethink its supply chain?
  • 7 ways book publishing will change over the next few years
  • One big change in book publishing is that it does not require you to have much of an organization to play anymore
  • A lot has changed in book publishing in the last ten years
  • The sale of B&N again calls the question of the future of America’s bookstores
  • Tamblyn sees a new era for bookselling that might be a new era for publishing as well
  • Getting an award and getting caught up with innovation with BISG
  • “The Book Business” is my new book
  • Amazon share grows and big publishers make more money
  • New Zealand is a beautiful country that is at the end of the line in the global English-language book supply chain

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