Wednesday, January 31, 2007

About a year ago we published the hardback of Pleasurable Kingdom, a wonderful book by Jonathan Balcombe which argues that animals can feel pleasure. Here's the jacket which demonstrates the thesis.

The book hasn't (yet) made the bestseller lists but it has sold decently and its paperback release in July will give it further impetus. When we first published we focussed attention on the core markets of UK and USA but I was delighted to see just this week that the Macmillan machine burst into action in India last week to support the author on a tour and to ensure great press coverage such as this. It sometimes takes time for a book to reach its potential audience and it definitely takes patience. It also takes determination. Special thanks to Kalpana Shukla and her sales and marketing team in India. It's not always the obvious books which need marketing support.

But a forthcoming best selling book which will definitely be receiving the full marketing works is in house now and being prepared for worldwide publication this Autumn. It is the latest thriller from Ken Follett entitled World without End. It is a sequel to his record-breaking Pillars of the Earth and I have absolutely no doubt that it will outsell all the other 20-odd books called World without End! Thank goodness there's no copyright in a book title.

Incidentally, today is a big day here at Macmillan because we promised various people that they would have an up and running digital BookStore by the close of play today. As with all deadlines we are right up against it and teams in the UK and India are working franticly hard to deliver. I'll report tomorrow on whether we've kept our promise.

For those of you who not yet seen it and for everyone who loves gossip, intrigue and a publishing soap opera please go to Even Bitches Have Feelings and enjoy the story of Judith Regan, Rupert Murdoch and O.J.Simpson. I think that the whole animal kingdom should find pleasure in this - with one or two notable exceptions.

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 Tuesday, January 30, 2007

The last couple of days have seen a number of articles about the potential threat to the finances of the British Library as a result of the current Government spending review. This article sums things up pretty well. I should declare interests. Apart from being a great fan of the BL I also sit on one its advisory committees and I love the Eduardo Paolozzi sculpture of Isaac Newton in its piazza.

Fortunately the Library has a very strong  and vociferous bunch of supporters who will be arguing for its budget for reasons of culture, scholarship, history etc - for instance here. It does seem crazy that the while the 'creative economy' is being heralded as one of Britain's fastest growing and world beating industries that we should be contemplating cheese-paring at its heart.

I would like to add one thought only and it's to do with geography. In November 2007 the Channel Tunnel rail link will open at St Pancras and will deposit 50 million passengers a year literally a stone's throw from the British Library. The library will be not only a magnet for British citizens but for the whole of Western Europe. Apart from the clear cultural benefits to Britain, the possibilities for generating revenue for the economy are enormous. Don't let's miss the chance by administering pointless cuts now.

Australians have a particularly direct way of describing politicians with whom they disagree about such things. Former Federal Treasurer and then Prime Minister, Paul Keating, was a world-class insulter and here are his references to opponents in 1984 alone: harlots, sleazebags, frauds, cheats, blackguards, pigs, mugs. clowns, criminals, stupid foul-mouth grub, corporate crook, rustbucket, scumbag, rip-off merchants, constitutional vandals, perfumed gigolos, gutless spiv, stunned mullets, barnyard bullies, pieces of criminal garbage - courtesy Sydney Morning Herald and Matthew Engel.

From one great national and international insitution to another, Google Corporation. The spat over copyright and the Google library program continues and the lawyers are getting even richer. Meanwhile the story is beginning to make it into the broader press. Here's an excellent article from the New Yorker. The sentence below sent a shiver up my spine. The sooner the publishing industry can develop ways of working with Google on the basis of copyright licences and the sooner Google can accept that copyright is a genuine asset which cannot be appropriated without permission the better for all parties.

'The law is supposed to resolve issues like these—between self-interested parties with reasonable claims and legitimate arguments. But the rules of copyright are so ambiguous, and the courts so slow, that the judicial system serves largely to implement the law of the jungle.'

 

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 Monday, January 29, 2007

I've been challenged by a commenter for this exchange in a recent interview with me.

Q: Are publishers an author's natural enemy, and is that the real reason for open-access journals?

A: No, readers are the author's natural enemy because most of them don't want to read a particular author's work, however good it is. There have always been open-access journals - they're usually called "controlled circulation" (or "organs of state propaganda"), and normally they are rather substandard. I'm sure that Public Library of Science and others are excellent, but I don't think they are the result of anti-publisher sentiment but rather a legitimate desire to make available everything to everyone for free. The problem is there is no such thing as a free lunch, and a good value one can be pretty sustaining.

Of course the question related to scientific authorship and the open access movement. My answer was slightly tongue in cheek and could be interpreted more widely. However, thinking about it more, perhaps there is some truth in it.

I remember Per Saugman, the early creator of Blackwell Scientific Publishing (sold recently for £600m), gave me a tip for authors demanding a higher royalty (the advance had not been invented!). His argument was that the publisher doesn't pay the royalty, the book purchaser does. And does the author really feel that his readers would be willing to pay significantly more for the book? Normally authors settled for the existing royalty and price on the grounds that the reader wasn't overkeen to pay the extra.

And then there's the nearly universal authorial complaint that their publisher isn't marketing hard enough. We all know that the best marketing is word of mouth. If sales aren't high enough it might be the publisher's marketing budget but it's more likely it's those pesky readers not spreading the word hard enough.

Sometimes readers even have the temerity not to like a particular book. Or they may find it of no interest. Or they just can't be bothered. Hard for the publisher to explain to the author whose world frequently revolves round the latest book.

Publishers are not authors' natural enemy. Authors and publishers and booksellers might do well to join forces and try to ally themselves with readers too. Perhaps that is the explanantion for the success of the Richard and Judy Book Club. Last year one in four of all books sold in the UK were recommended by R&J, an extraordinary statistic and evidence of the power of understanding the reader. Here are Britain's leading book marketers posing in front of a tiny proportion of the books they've been helped sell.

 

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 Sunday, January 28, 2007

Years ago a doctor friend of mine asked me to look at manuscript of short stories by his brother. I was not overkeen (brothers of friends with manuscripts to sell are a publisher's cross to bear by and large).Anyway, I agreed and these were the first words I read:

"Tell me something," said Morris, my father-in-law to be. "What would a guy like you make?" "A guy like me," I replied, "would make about the same as I do."

These were the opening lines of Schoom by Jonathan Wilson which we published under the now-defunct Limetree imprint. He has gone on to publish several books with Random House in the USA. He sent me an invitation to a reading of his latest book A Palestine affair published by Five Leaves Publications which was originally published in 2004 by Random House USA.

The reading is 7.00pm 28th February at the Gallery at Swiss Cottage Library, 88 Avenue Road, London NW3 (where I used to swot for my A levels).

Why am I writing this apart from bringing your attention to a brilliant but not very famous writer (whom I happen to know and like)? It is to ask why on earth in a global marketplace a global publisher like Random House doesn't just publish a book like this everywhere in English in the first instance. One of their excellent editors in New York clearly liked the book. They've invested in it. They've got to know the author. They've copy-edited it, proofread it, designed a jacket for it, they've loaded it onto their computers, they've had it printed, deposited the stock in their warehouses, they've promoted it, entered it in their catalogues. And then they decide not to 'publish' it in little places like Britain, Australia etc.

This is not to pick on Random House - we frequently do just the same - but what sense can this make?

Exile

And while on matters Palestinian I can't resist quoting from a review of Exile by Richard North Patterson. You can read the full review in the The Times.

EVERY NOW AND THEN — but a lot more rarely than that implies — you come across a thriller so important that it absolutely demands to be read. This is one....

...His recent books, however, have taken a more political stance, drawing on such contentious issues as abortion, US gun laws, the death penalty and now, most controversially of all, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict...

...Patterson has done stupendous research, is admirably level-headed, eschews sermonising and patronising. Now, more than ever, as this conflict holds the world to ransom, this is a thriller that deserves to be a bestseller.

Finally, a few extracts from an interview with me in the American librarian journal Against the Grain which doesn't (yet) publish its articles on the web but which is well worth reading if you are in the least interested in developments in electronic publishing and the academic community.

Richard Charkin, chief executive of Macmillan, one of the world's leading educational, scholarly, and general publishing companies, is known for a willingness to take risks, even to the point of starting to blog earlier this year. We turned to him with questions about innovation in publishing, the book supply chain, and electronic publishing. The most surprising thing about his comments is that there is not a single word here about cricket or The Ashes, but you'll be able to follow England's fortunes, as well as news about UK and international publishing here.

 

Q: What's the most exciting new thing Macmillan has done since you've been there?

A: The transformation of Nature and its sister journals from a paper-based magazine company into a global electronic scientific information and navigation service. Sales have tripled and annual investment has increased more than tenfold. Every single part of the value chain has been inspected for "fit for purpose" in the twenty-first century and abandoned, replaced, or improved. Most importantly, we have never ceased taking risks, launching new products, experimenting, and promoting talent.

  

Q: One of your most controversial innovations is the New Writing program. What makes it different, and why has it ignited so much anger from other publishers and literary agents?

 

Macmillan New Writing is a program that gives a voice to new authors who are talented but who might otherwise not get into print. We offer standardized terms that are modest at the beginning but place the commercial risk on the publisher rather than the author. The author receives no advance but also pays nothing (unlike typical arrangements with vanity publishers) and benefits from a royalty arrangement that is generous and open-ended. The author is published in standard book format and distributed through our normal Macmillan channels and through MNW. We review only adult fiction, take only electronic submissions, and look only at complete manuscripts-and there's still a 99 percent rejection rate.

 

When it comes to the negative reaction we've had from some quarters, I suppose that when a system is established it's very hard for its practitioners to accept that it may be flawed and that something much simpler (and actually more old-fashioned) might be a better model. In fact, we just applied Occam's Razor. What are the essential elements for spotting new talent? What are the bits that are counterproductive or uneconomic? Let's keep the former and abandon the latter. We've had general break-even. One or two titles have done better than par, but the real success will come only when we find an author who really breaks through in sales or esteem, and that's still to come. However, the key thing is that when searching for the new superstar we don't lose money-and that we have achieved. We have also rewarded our authors fairly, which is important.

 

Q: Given all our exposure to new ideas, one might think publishers would be innovative and likely to try new things. But publishers aren't known, to put it gently, for being innovative. Why's that? 

A: I disagree. I think there is a misconception here about the role of the publisher. Where publishers are conservative is in their desire to publish "safe" content - in other words, high-quality authors in a traditional format - novel, reference book, textbook, etc. However, content production is not the primary role of the publisher. The primary role is content dissemination, and here publishers have been innovative. For instance, the complete invention of a new business model - the site license - in scientific publishing. Or Westlaw and Lexis-Nexis. Or xrefer. Or One Stop English. I could go on but won't.

 

Q: What needs to change in publishing?

A: How many pages am I allowed? Get closer to readers as well as to intermediaries. Stop saying, "I bought this book" rather than, "I've been granted a license to publish this book." Stop and turn around the movement to disintegration of rights. Improve profitability in trade publishing. Have more multilingual people on staff. Have more genuine all-rounders and more genuinely specialist people. Get less arrogant and accept that publishers are no more than a link between writer and reader and that there are plenty of others in the chain adding at least as much (and frequently more) value. Reduce the number of times a book is handled between printing machine and reader (currently around twenty-five times in my estimation and another twenty-five times on the way back for 35 percent of books that are returned). Buy into on-demand printing at point of use-library, bookshop, corporation. By the way, this is one reason why journals are more profitable than books. The process for journals publishing is much  simpler.

 

Q: How about Google and Amazon - threat or opportunity?

A: Both are both. The biggest threat is the threat to copyright. There is a balance in society between the need to protect the inventor or creative talent and the need for society to benefit from their works. The Internet has a significant inclination toward the rights of the user and tends to undervalue the rights of the inventor. Google and Amazon don't always realize the consequences of their actions, in terms of maintaining this balance. The opportunity they offer is, at very low cost, to publicize the existence and help people find and buy books, in e or print form.

 

Q: You're now a blogger. What has that taught you, do you expect to continue, and what do your publishing colleagues say about it? 

A: How to do accents on letters (but I've now forgotten). How to insert a hypertext link. What words generate extra traffic. Which statements generate comments and which ones don't. My colleagues by and large think I'm mad or a showoff or a fool.

 

Q: Are publishers an author's natural enemy, and is that the real reason for open-access journals?

A: No, readers are the author's natural enemy because most of them don't want to read a particular author's work, however good it is. There have always been open-access journals - they're usually called "controlled circulation" (or "organs of state propaganda"), and normally they are rather substandard. I'm sure that Public Library of Science and others are excellent, but I don't think they are the result of anti-publisher sentiment but rather a legitimate desire to make available everything to everyone for free. The problem is there is no such thing as a free lunch, and a good value one can be pretty sustaining.

 

Q: This article is for Against the Grain, which is read by academic librarians, publishers, and vendors. Anything else you'd like to talk about related to libraries?

A: Library acquisition budgets should be increased significantly as the productivity of librarians improves. But I would say that, wouldn't I?

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 Saturday, January 27, 2007

Back in November I wrote about a British Government consultation aimed at preventing criminals profiting from their crimes through publication earnings. The deadline for responses to the Home Office is 9 February. At Macmillan we have taken this potential threat to freedom of expression seriously not least because we have been threatened on several occasions including around the publication of Cries Unheard by Gitta Sereny, the story of Mary Bell.

Cries Unheard: the Story of Mary Bell

There was also quite a ruckus over the publication of Jeffrey Archer's Prison Diaries.

A Prison Diary

As a result we commissioned a Macmillan employee, Tim Howles, to discuss the issue with editors and lawyers internally and externally and generate a response. Here is the opening part of it - the full document will presumably be uploaded to the Home Office website in due course.

In principle, do you think that a new measure is necessary? Please say why or why not?

Response:

 

The response of the Macmillan Publishing Group to this consultation paper is as follows:

                     i.      The Macmillan Publishing Group supports in principle the need to avoid causing undue offence to victims and to the families of victims of serious crime due to the publication of writing by the convicted offender that refers directly to the crime;
 

                   ii.      However, the public interest is ultimately served most by safeguarding the freedom of expression and by protecting the right to receive information about serious crime;

                  iii.      For this reason, the first concern of the Macmillan Publishing Group is that no proposal would prevent the publication of such writings. This includes any mechanism that would tend towards either direct prohibition (such as the introduction of criminal or civil liability for the publisher) or indirect action (such as making the writing of relevant material less attractive to criminals or too expensive for the publisher to contemplate);

                  iv.      The Macmillan Publishing Group believes that proposal options (1), (2) and (3), as set out in the consultation paper, are unacceptable, since they would all in practice equate to a prevention of the publication of such writings;

                    v.      The Macmillan Publishing Group strongly asserts that no new measure is necessary. This is on the grounds of cost (these options would be expensive and time-consuming to implement), efficiency (they would be hard to define and implement) and public interest (the market should be the ultimate arbitrator of what is acceptable);

                  vi.      Therefore, the Macmillan Publishing Group strongly believes that proposal option (4) should be pursued in order to allow market forces to determine whether or not the publication is read.

I cannot believe that the Government would be silly enough to try to enforce unenforceable and constrictive legislation in this area. The problem is that Governments sometimes do silly things in response to tabloid headlines. The book trade should help the Government not to be silly on this occasion.

As part of my 'academic' duties I sit on the board of a partnership between the London Business School and the University of the Arts London. It is called the Centre for Creative Business and its aim is to help organisations which focus on the development of creativity also to cope with the demands of business. They run an excellent and heavily subsidised course, Building the Creative Business, and you can download a prospectus here.

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 Friday, January 26, 2007

It's Australia Day down under and the Aussies are enjoying it in the traditional way - humiliating England in a cricket match.

It seems appropriate therefore to complete the global review of our bestsellers with Pan Macmillan Australia's top ten.

Guinness World Records 2007

The Valley - the latest from Australia's highest selling female writer.

My Story - Schapelle Corby's chilling story of her imprisonment in a Bali jail.

The Great War - Les Carlyon's  new classic history has sold over 90,000 copies in hardback in Australia - how many serious history books achieve those numbers proportinately anywhere else in the world?

Cat on the Mat is Flat by the brilliantly funny Andy Griffiths.

Circle of Flight by the best-selling author for teenagers ever in Australia, the legendary John Marsden.

Cat O'Nine Tails  - the first Pom in the list - Jeffrey Archer on top short story form.

The Unknown Terrorist - a simply brilliant novel from Richard Flanagan.

Seven Ancient Wonders from Matthew Reilly, Australia's (and progressively the world's) leading adventure writer.

Triumph of the Sun by the ever popular Wilbur Smith.

I reckon that side would beat any team in the world and, in addition to the authors, the success is down to exceptional publishing people. I have a nasty feeling that the Pan Macmillan Australia publishing team would also beat the current England team at cricket too.

And while on the subject of publishing teams, last night we had a very special party on our Kings Cross offices. It was to celebrate the careers of two of our top management team who are retiring. This blog would become very boring if I recorded and commented on every retirement but Mike Barnard and Geoff Todd deserve special mention. Neither of them has featured heavily in the pages of the Bookseller. Neither claims to have the secret of publishing. Neither is interested in bullshit. Betwen them (for over thirty years each) they have ensured that the machine which makes Macmillan tick is in good working order. The accounts come out on time and are accurate, royalties are paid, books are produced beautifully and economically, offices function and conform to the law, IT systems work and don't cost the earth, distribution is the best in the industry. Since I joined Macmillan, I've had to worry about many things but I've also known I could trust the machine to function because it had two such high-quality operators. They are also exceedingly decent and fun people. Thanks guys.

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 Thursday, January 25, 2007

Prospect magazine is the brainchild of David Goodhart, its editor. It was launched in 1995 and has been described as  "more readable than the Economist, more relevant than the Spectator, more romantic than the New Statesman." They have just launched a blog and I was invited to contribute a piece on scientific publishing. In the process of writing the piece I rediscovered the difficulties of explaining a complex situation in very few words and of typing more than one sentence on a Blackberry in the departures lounge at Bangalore Airport.

One theory of success in publishing is that the chances of survival are directly linked to intelligent property policy. Faber's ownership of its offices in Queen Square, Souvenir Press's office in Great Russell Street have helped the companies through difficult times. John Murray's wonderful Albemarle Street offices allowed it to hold on to its independence for more than two centuries.

This article from the New York Times suggests that our Nature team in New York are following an equally sensible property policy. And here are photos of their brilliant (and economic) offices.

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 Wednesday, January 24, 2007

As we all know, India is almost perfect. The economy is booming. The human resource is adapatable and plentiful. The food is outstanding. However, every institution can improve and I have four recommendations to put to the Indian Parliament.

1. Move the time zone 30 minutes forward or backward so that dimwitted and jet-lagged foreigners know what the time is when they wake up. Try subtracting 5 and a half hours from the local time.

2. Abolish lakhs (100,000) and crores (10.000,000) except for literary and poetic use.

3. Introduce the New Rupee which is 100 Old Rupees.

4. Persuade British Airways to invest in more than one phone per check-in staff.

I estimate these amendments would increase India's GDP by at least one percentage point.

I am indebted to Tim Coates for the following costs of borrowing a book from libraries in various parts of London. The cost is derived by simply dividing the total costs of library provision in the area by the number of loans. Both the absolute costs (it would be cheaper simply to give the books away?) and the variations suggest that there are huge savings to be made which could lead to enhanced book stocks and even better service.

Camden £11.50
Greenwich £7.14
Hackney £10.07
Hammersmith £6.63
Islington £10.46
Kensington £8.54
Lambeth £10.29
Lewisham £5.77
Southwark £6.89
Tower Hamlets £9.90
Wandsworth £3.64
Westminster £5.91

And finally the mission statement from the only cafe in Bangalore Airport:

To be the best cafe chain by offering a world class coffee experience at affordable prices.

I'm thinking of adapting this for the Baldons Cricket Club which has been obliged by some new regulation to invent a constitution. To be the best village cricket team offering excellent teas at affordable prices. Shame about the pavilion and the pitch.

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