Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Yesterday saw our twice a year board meeting. We reviewed last year's results, first quarter 2006 performance and our projections for the rest of the year. Or that's what we pretended to do. Actually it was an opportunity to collect our thoughts and focus on what really matters - where do we want to take the business, where are the opportunities for growth, where are the pratfalls, where the genuine strategic threats, are we investing enough in people, publishing, are we taking enough risks? It reminded me of the enormous breadth of the world of Macmillan - children's publishing, learned journals, software development, science, Picador, Papua New Guinea, Sao Paulo, Greece, On-line learning, site licences for academic content, books on memory sticks, online communities, mass-market paperbacks, growth in Russia, support for African education, sourcing slates from China, new authors versus existing blockbusters, building blogs for authors, developing sales analysis tools, serving US college publishers with text processing, selling New Zealand-developed literacy schemes to the USA and so on. All this is what makes publishing so exciting, interesting and fulfilling.

And meanwhile the Google debate continues and we have a new concept, the literati/technorati divide which you can read about at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/21/AR2006052101349_pf.html.

Incidentally a googly (from which the great organisation may have derived its name - OED please check) is a delivery by a right arm spin bowler which to a right hand batsman appears as if it will spin from leg to off, however, spins in the opposite direction. This may well be the problem with Google too.

5/24/2006 3:40:19 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Alas Google's name doesn't come from obscure cricketing terminology (although all cricketing terminology is obscure to a Scotsman), but the source of the name is quite amusing.
The two founders of Google wanted a name that would reflect the vast number of web-pages that their search-engine had checked and catalogued. They settled on the name for the number 10 to the power of 100, which Edward Kasner had coined from a word used by his nine-year-old nephew - googol.
Unfortunately they forgot to check the dictionary before registering the name and so were pleasantly surprised to find that www.google.com was unregistered and theirs for the taking...
Another example of the divide between the technocrati and the lterati perhaps?
5/24/2006 8:06:57 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Why is a Yorker so called ? I assumed it was because the best cricket used to - sadly it is used to - be played in God`s own county, which invented the yorker.. but hey, what do I know ? I only played cricket for Yorkshire Junior Ladies...
5/25/2006 4:13:29 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I just wondered if you would be publishing "last year's results, first quarter 2006 performance", as I'd love to report the numbers on The Bookseller Bookblog.
Cheers
5/27/2006 9:11:14 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Philip, As you know, we are a private company and as a result have no obligation to go through the reporting gymnastics which public companies are obliged to do. We'd rather spend our time, effort and money on investing in and selling more books than showing off about double-digit growth etc. R