Monday, January 01, 2007

This blog has now completed a full year. In December we had 60,400 visits down from 63,375 in November (the effect of the holiday season I hope rather than anything sinister). This brings the total for the year to 399,947, tantalisingly close to a milestone. With the statistics software I have I cannot tell how many of these are unique, nor how many are from Macmillan employees. Maybe next year our IT department can come up with a zero-cost way of answering these questions.

Nonetheless I am amazed and gratified by the volume of visitors and the amount of (usually) kind and constructive correspondence. The paucity of comments is a shame but I guess people have better things to do than populating this blog. I also wish more Macmillan people would contribute. There are some regular commentators, some of whom I've enjoyed arguing with. There have been only two comments which I've had to edit away for reasons of taste. It's worrying that the entries which generate the most and the most heated debate are those concerned with the British book trade and the relationship between publishers and independent booksellers. I accept that there are important issues here. I cannot accept, however, that these are more important than the impact of the digital revolution on publishing as a whole or the need to develop new structures for publishing to take account of globalisation and new reader tastes.

And while on the subject of literary taste I came across the following quote in a BBC report.

'It entertains, as sport must do, but it is without heft, or any substance, it is like a book picked up at an AH Wheeler & Co bookstand at Calcutta's Howrah Station and discarded on arrival in Delhi.'

I do not know the bookshop in question and I have never been to Calcutta. The sport in question is also irrelevant. You know exactly what the writer is trying to convey. The sport in question is, of course, cricket (the one-day version) and the journalist is Rohit Brijnath. His style of sports writing is hardly ever found in the British media. It is correct, old-fashioned English with falir and substance. It is discoveries like this which make me so enthusiastic about our investments in India. This is not a just a country for outsourcing or manufacture. This is a place of creativity, insight and literary adventure. Fortunately it is also complex and its rules of engagement will bamboozle all but the most determined would-be investors.

Macmillan has been part of Indian publishing since 1892 and we intend to make 2007 the best year ever with Macmillan India leading the rest of the group in growth and innovation. January will see our Gurgaon-based MPS Technologies launch of BookStore for the German Boersenverein and for Macmillan companies in the UK and Australia. More customers and more functionality are lined up for implementation throughout the year as we build on our lead over competitors. ScholarlyStats goes from strength to strength as librarians around the world discover the efficiencies and cost savings of using the system. On the text processing end of the business we are investing heavily in enhanced systems for all our clients and have built formidable resources for book as well as journal activities in Charon Tec and ICC Macmillan. On the publishing side we shall be publishing more and better than ever and investing in new markets in education both school and college, scholarship and science, Internet, fiction and non-fiction, in English and the vernacular languages. It will take the all the ingenuity and efforts of our 3000 people in India to make all this work and I have no doubt they will succeed.

And as a change from the usual pictures of the Taj Mahal here's my favourite spot in India the interior of the Cochin synagogue - a very strange and wonderful cultural mix.

#    |  Comments [11]  | 
1/1/2007 8:15:56 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
1. This synangog is fantastic place, although it does not look to me as a synagogue but as you say this is all about cultural mix!
2. comments - I am a regular reader of your blog and I have already been astonished by the lack of comments, although most of the subjects you raise are central for the book trade and you have such an impressive of visitors. Usually my interlocutors are quite vocal about their vieuws on the trade!But other blogs, I have been reading regularly, have also relatively few commentators despite the fascinating subject they are dealing with ... the European construction (which can be quite polemic as you know).
3. keep up with the blog, it is instructive and amusing.

Anne
1/1/2007 9:12:09 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Richard,

That Bookstore Demo is really great. I look forward to seeing it in action!

I echo Ann, keep up the blog it is a wonderful read!
Eoin
1/2/2007 6:29:06 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Atlast a comment from a Macmillan employee (and from India!)

Thank you for the picture you have painted on the Indian industry.....I see 2007 as a great year!

Akila
1/2/2007 8:40:57 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
The BookStore demo looks good. When will the beta-test version by accessible? Would be pleased to give your team some comments on the beta-test version when they are ready. It will be very interesting to see how Google co-operate with a publisher platform. If they do a good job of co-operating they will disarm some of their critics on the Google Book Search project. If they ignore it they will encourage more criticism.....
1/2/2007 12:02:07 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I'm a Macmillan employee, sitting waiting to see how the year ended. Its a quiet day, so we can read `and respond to the Guvnor's blog:

1. You speak of.."(usually) kind and constructive correspondence...." Well, in the kindest and most constructive way, please don't randomly jumble your fonts and sizes and colours, etc in blogs. I had a hard time following your taxman correspondence in a recent (previous?) blog

2. We look after Harvard University Press in SA. Your reference to Charon tec reminded me that the chap responsible for the typesetting of the Loeb Classical Library drove a black Harley Davidson, appropriately named Charon.

See this from Encyclopedia Mythica:

>>>>>>>>paste
Charon
by Micha F. Lindemans
Charon, in Greek mythology, is the ferryman of the dead. The souls of the deceased are brought to him by Hermes, and Charon ferries them across the river Acheron. He only accepts the dead which are buried or burned with the proper rites, and if they pay him an obolus (coin) for their passage. For that reason a corpse had always an obolus 1 placed under the tongue.
Those who cannot afford the passage, or are not admitted by Charon, are doomed to wander on the banks of the Styx for a hundred years. Living persons who wish to go to the underworld need a golden bough obtained from the Cumaean Sibyl. Charon is the son of Erebus and Nyx. He is depicted as an sulky old man, or as a winged demon carrying a double hammer. He is similar to the Etruscan (Charun).
>>>>>end paste

3. Finally, thanks for the picture of the synagogue. Anyone visiting Jerusalem must not miss the Jerusalem Museum with its amazing reconstructions of synagogues from all over the world, including the East. (And while you're there, the Museum of the Book/Writing(?) will blow your mind)
1/2/2007 1:40:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Adam,

I'm glad you liked the BookStore demo. We expect to have the Boersenverein BookStore site live on 31st Jan, together with a number of Macmillan sites too.

We would very much welcome feedback on BookStore once the sites are live. We will set up a feedback mechanism and I will ask Richard to announce the launches as well as to post details of how to give feedback on his blog.

We are having fruitful discussions with the major search engines and we aim to provide the widest possible access to BookStore content. Look out for further announcements over the coming weeks.

David Sommer

Commercial Director,
MPS Technologies
1/3/2007 10:50:27 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Sorry about the jumbled fonts, Cory, but that's the way they came out on a cut and paste and I can't really retype everything!

And while on the subject of Charon Tec, I discovered that the reason it's not Charon Tech is that Charon Tec is numerologically better.
1/3/2007 12:40:29 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Richard, as regards a zero-cost way of running stats across your logs to unearth unique visitors (and not just the domains you mention today) you might try using a google analytics account. You need to have a google account - which I guess you do based on the ads you have running - and then you can just (get IT to) embed a tiny piece of Javascript into your blog page templates (I use wordpress which has a free plugin to do this). You then link them up and you get a pretty good means of analysing traffic - for free. It's not perfect, but it might tell you more than you know currently.

Happy New Year,

Peter
1/3/2007 12:52:02 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Thanks Peter. I'll see if I can get it to work.
1/20/2007 8:27:03 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Are the Indian and asian markets going to expand into audio books? This seems like an underserved area
1/27/2007 7:21:13 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I suspect the Indian and Asian markets may well bypass audiobooks on CD and move straight to digital downloads - and a good thing too.