Wednesday, June 20, 2007

There is an organisation with the snappy name Broadcast Advertising Clearance Centre who have informed the equally snappily named British Egg Information Service that their proposed marketing campaign featuring today's title as its slogan should not run. Read the story here. In essence, the watchdog is concerned that the campaign does not promote adequately the concept of a varied diet. What a load of nonsense but it does give me the opportunity to link to these wonderful original egg commercials by Tony Hancock - brilliant. I hope this blog doesn't count as broadcast advertising. If it does, I could be in big trouble now.

gsr.jpg

I spent yesterday with the senior management team from our Latin American companies. We were reviewing performance and working on three-year plans. As you can imagine, given that there are some forty business units spread across a dozen countries publishing more than a thousand new titles a year, there were plenty of numbers - sales, stock, overheads, cash collection etc. But one line stood out. Our total number of full-time employees (excluding temporary sales staff etc) has risen in five years from 273 to 772 and we plan to grow more. That's real investment. Here's wishing all our Grupo Macmillan employees (including of course the ones in Spain) mucho suerte.

 

#    |  Comments [2]  | 
 Tuesday, June 19, 2007

I promised a photo of Bavarian merry-making and here it is courtesy of Thorsten Jochim.

The controversy over the Google heist posting has quietened and there are the signs now of some sensible debate emerging. This piece from Even Schnittman writing on the OUP Blog is an example. There's also rather a good piece in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung marred only by their describing me: 'von Statur einem Möbelpacker ähnlich...' - not quite sure what it means but I suspect the worst. One lesson I've learned from the affair is that increased visitor traffic (visits leapt several fold for a few days) doesn't necessarily translate into increased ad revenue. Dammit!

I know some of my readers are more interested in the ins and outs of the British independent book trade than significant events in the world of scientific information. I am also aware that I've blogged about things going on at Nature Publishing Group a lot recently. But I can't help it. They keep coming up with really interesting new projects and ideas. Here's the latest, Nature Precedings (no, it's not a spelling mistake) described here by Timo Hannay:

'Nature Precedings is a free online service that enables researchers rapidly to share, discuss, and cite their early findings.

Written scientific communication takes place mainly through journals, but the web provides new, complementary opportunities for more rapid, participative and informal approaches. Nature Precedings accepts contributions from biology, medicine (except clinical trials), chemistry and the earth sciences. Submissions are screened by a professional curation team for relevance and quality, and are usually posted online within hours. The service is free of charge to both authors and readers. It has been created in collaboration with an outstanding group of partner organisations: British Library, European Bioinformatics Institute, Science Commons, and Wellcome Trust. You can find out more at Nascent, Nature's own blog, and on O'Reilly Radar.'

 

#    |  Comments [3]  | 
 Monday, June 18, 2007

This link will take you to the original mission statement (although I don't think that particular piece of jargon was current in 1869) of Nature. For those with click fatigue here is the essence of the objectives it was seeking:

 FIRST, to place before the general public the grand results of Scientific Work and Scientific Discovery ; and to urge the claims of Science to a more general recognition in Education and in Daily Life ;
   And, SECONDLY, to aid Scientific men themselves, by giving early information of all advances made in any branch of Natural knowledge throughout the world, and by affording them an opportunity of discussing the various Scientific questions which arise from time to time.

Now, Nature is better known for the second of these aims and that has been the core of  its, and its associated journals', success. However, it has never lost sight of the the first objective and today sees the launch of two free websites on two of the hottest topics around today.

Nature Reports Climate Change and Nature Reports Stem Cells both address highly contentious issues within the community and both have significant social, ethical, economic and medical implications for all of us. There is a range of content aimed at the non-specialist as well as the scientist. Both sites allow comment and discussion and we are building facilities for social networking and community involvement. Nature intends to be at the centre of scientific debate in all spheres.

It was a beautiful day In Munich yesterday. The afternoon was spent playing and eating Bayerische style - and milking cows (picture to follow!).

And the evening was special with a concert and dinner at mad King Ludwig's Nymphenburg Palace.

The concert was given by seven members of the Vienna Philharmonic and there was a fascinating ta about the importance (or possible obolescence) of classical music by the conductor and pianist Daniel Barenboim. It was quite a day.

#    |  Comments [0]  | 
 Sunday, June 17, 2007

Britain has an absurd, out-dated, elitist, imperial, patronising and hugely loved and revered honours system. Twice a year or so, the Queen publishes a list of the great and not so great who have been awarded what is technically known as a gong - a peerage, a knighthood and various forms of orders, medals and companions of the British Empire. The liberal establishment tends to sneer and there's probably a real element of honours in exchange for political favours delivered - and even sometimes the sniff of money playing a part. But nonetheless, the recipients - the real ones who deserve their recognition - by and large appreciate it.

The latest list contains some celebrity heroes - Salman Rushdie, Ian Botham, and the wonderful Barry Humphries aka Dame Edna Everage below. But the gongee who gets my vote for most deserving and most decent is less well-known outside the world of Shakespeare scholarship - Stanley Wells whose Shakespeare for all time we published - and who edited the magnificent Oxford Shakespeare which we are now challenging with the new RSC Shakespeare.

Barry Humphries, also known as Dame Edna Everage

Yesterday was busy. The Mayor of Munich Christian Ude told our annual Georg von Holtzbrinck conference that Munich is the second largest publishing centre in the world after New York. Sounds like nonsense to me but I guess it depends how you define large - numbers of titles, sales, profits, review inches. My own similar but unprovable statistic is that Oxford is the single most profitable publishing centre in the world (ahead of New York etc) when you include Elsevier, Harcourt International, Blackwell Wiley, Oxford University Press, Informa, Macmillan Education and a host of smaller but highly successful businesses.

In the evening we were entertained at the headquarters of the Max Planck Society where the President, Professor Peter Gruss, argued strongly for the open access availability of scientific research.

In between we were treated to great presentations by our sister companies based in Munich - Droemer Knaur, Holtzbrinck Networks and eLab. Take a look here to get a feel for the investments we are making in the digital world. It's beginning to look impressive.

 
 
 
#    |  Comments [1]  | 
 Saturday, June 16, 2007

I'm in Munich at a conference this weekend and this is more or less the view from the fitness centre in the hotel. It doesn't get much better.

I came across a wonderful orange juice description on the unopenable-without-squirting-everywhere carton on the plane coming here - 'slightly pasteurised orange juice'. Now, I know you can have gently carbonated water and lightly simmered peas but...I suppose they only wipe out half the germs.

I try not to use this blog as a press release distributor but sometimes linking to a release makes sense. This one is all about our efforts to develop scientific publishing in China. It's a big deal for us and a big deal for scientific communication and what's more it's been made possible by sponsorship from the pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca for which we are hugely grateful.

 

#    |  Comments [0]  | 
 Friday, June 15, 2007

I was at Barts Hospital last night for the party to celebrate a number of literary prizes administered by the Society of Authors. The full list of winners will be published later today. The event was held in the beautiful Great Hall. It made a welcome change for a book trade party to see authors outnumber publishers by 50 to one.

The last time I was at Barts was when I was editor of Oxford Medical Publications (which is celebrating its centenary this year. Happy birthday OMP). I was working with the authors (A.E.Mourant, Ada C. Kopec and Kazimiera Domaniewska-Sobczak - and I remembered the names and spelling to this day) on the second edition of The distribution of the the human blood groups and other polymorphisms. It was over 1000 very large pages crammed with incomprehensible (to me) statistics and symbols. It was typeset in hot metal and then photographed for litho printing. We had galley proofs, page proofs, revised page proofs, ozalids and I know not what else. The typesetting cost was more than £100 per page. The book was a monster. We published in 1976 at £55 (roughly equivalent to £250 in today's money). It received a rave review on the op-ed page of the Times ('Here's a book to throw at racists'), amazing coverage in the medical press and we sold more than 2500 copies in the first month (probably not many thereafter, it is true). Those were the days when a serious book was reviewed seriously, priced seriously, stocked seriously and sold seriously.

Whilst on this nostalgia theme I was slightly sad yesterday to hear that Les Editions Grund depuis 1880 has been taken over by Editis ('Where creativity meets culture' - should there be a competition for the most hifalutin publishing strapline?). Not sad because anything terrible will happan. Editis are an excellent company and will treasure the Grund business. Sad because Alain Grund and Monique Souchon have played such important roles in French and European publishing and in particular for children's books. They are staying on and Editis have promised full editorial independence but I fear it just won't be the same.

But we must loook to the future and I see that this blog has a new competitor The Charkin Group committed to saving lives at sea. I didn't know there were Charkins in Nigeria but you live and learn.

And finally for Londoners, a recommendation. King's Cross where we have our London offices is not traditionally renowned for the quality of its restaurants. At various times it has led the world indices for availability of crack cocaine and ladies of the night, but not for food. However, things are changing fast and the latest indication of this is the opening of Camino Cruz del Rey (geddit?). All very chic but great food.

Some pics taken around the venue...

Some pics taken around the venue...

 

 

#    |  Comments [1]  | 
 Thursday, June 14, 2007

I wrote about the launch of our new Spanish-language children's list. Unlike most publishing launch parties there was very little warm white wine, no smoked salmon rolls and Salman Rushdie wasn't there. Instead, the Spanish book trade - retailers, wholesalers, distributors, book reviewers, authors, illustrators - brought their children to a games and storytelling party in Madrid. It was a huge success and here are some photos to tell the story.

I also mentioned an article by Gordon Graham about the international trade press. It was published in the excellent forum of the book community, Logos, and I have their and the author's permission to republish it here.

THE LAST WORD

The provincialism of the book trade press

56 LOGOS 18/1 ©2007 LOGOS

The Last Word

For more than fifty years I have been a follower of, and an occasional contributor to, Publishers Weekly in the US and The Bookseller in the UK — and have given similar respect to The Bookseller’s challenger, Publishing News, since it was founded in 1979.

Like most of the industry they served in the 1950s, the first two journals were then familyowned Publishers Weekly by the Melcher family (of Bowker) and The Bookseller by the Whitaker family. Both of their histories went back to the 19th century. Both were quiet monopolies. Books were announced rather than advertised. They both attained the position of being trade oracles. Publishers believed themselves to be the most valuable constituents of the two journals, with booksellers forming a second stratum. However, both journals were making significant income from libraries through Books in Print and other bibliographic publications.

In the second half of the 20th century there came to these journals, as to their publisher patrons, the corporate age. Corporations love quiet monopolies (though they seldom say so publicly) and believe that if they can acquire such companies they can make them more profitable. So the heirs of old companies are persuaded to sell out. Bowker went first to Xerox, and later to Reed. Whitaker went finally to the Dutch conglomerate VNU (now rebranded as http://www.nielsen.com/). Neither of these corporations is much interested in book publishing. But they do know how to publish business- to-business magazines. Publishers Weekly and The Bookseller (as well as Publishing News) are now models of glossy design, with liberal use of colour. News columns concern mainly personalities and company finances. “Product” is described in author interviews and feature articles.

In brief, all the weaknesses of the fuddy-duddy 1950s have been corrected. Except one. These journals are still essentially local sheets. This would be understandable if they were serving local markets defined by language — as do Boersenblatt in German or Livres Hebdo in French — or by geography like Australia (Australian Publisher and Bookseller) or Canada (Quill and Quire).

But Publishers Weekly and The Bookseller are the major professional periodicals of a world industry. It was understandable that they overlapped very little fifty years ago. To the international reader with a global view today, local news is no longer the heart of the matter. In the Whitaker days, David of that ilk used to say: “We are a parish magazine.” He is still right. Exports are a kind of bonus. Students of the fortunes of the book who confined their reading to these journals would assume there is nothing of significance going on in Asia, Africa or Latin America.

In the five issues of Publishers Weekly from mid-January to mid-February 2007, only a halfpage was devoted to the UK, one page to Canada and three to other countries. In The Bookseller over the same period, just over one page was devoted to the US and six pages to other countries. This fragmentary coverage, averaging a page per issue, does not reflect the world reach of English-language publishing; nor the fact that the US is the UK’s largest export customer and the UK the US’s second largest after Canada; nor the fact that ownership of publishing today is said to be multinational.

The Bookseller shows more consciousness of the rest of the world than does PW by designating one page per issue “International”. It consists of snippets from freelance correspondents in Europe and the US. PW’s long-time American-in-Paris correspondent, Herb Lottman, has not been replaced and its occasional international supplements — all adbased, the copy written to describe the publishing houses in the regions covered — seem to have faded away.

The only occasions which stimulate spurts of international coverage are the book fairs, principally Frankfurt, London and the US’s BookExpo (the latter two with the same owner as PW’s), where the journals themselves exhibit and produce daily newssheets.

Although corporate publishers subscribe to the concept that book publishing in English is a world business, in practice, once rights are sold, even within a corporation, American books become British and British books become American; and local imprints, no matter who owns them, aim their publicity at their home markets, and the trade journals reflect this.

Yet these journals are also no doubt uneasy about the fact that trade publishing, the highprofile sector of the publishing industry, is being challenged by the Internet and eroded by the boundary-less marketing of the Amazons and Googles.

By contrast, the world market for specialist books and journals, a large part of which is now digitized, is served by specialist journals such as Booklist published by American Library Association, and by established periodicals like Scholarly Publishing, STM Newsletters, Serials, Against the Grain, Publishing Research Quarterly, etc. Specialist journals such as these have loyal supporters. In them the reader is king. Published both online and in print, they have little or no advertising.

In essence, the issue is not national vs international; it’s reader-based vs ad-based. Thinly disguised ad-generating vehicles naturally reflect the intent of the advertisers in the readers’ columns. Whatever the reason, when the world’s trade journals drop through my letterbox these days, the old tingle of anticipation is missing. I think my fifty-year affair is fading. I know what you’re thinking. But you’re wrong. I’m the one who is moving with the times.

Gordon Graham

 
#    |  Comments [3]  | 
 Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Comment number 16 on a recent posting came from Keirsten Clark of the publishers PaperBooks which, to be honest, I'd never heard of. She writes:

We are attempting an unusual and innovative way of marketing each of our titles on pub day - even if it means we are keeping the number of our titles down. We want to give our first time authors the best chance we can so are trying to look beyond (but not ignore) in-store promotions and huge discounting. Our first campaign - a Book Drop around central London - for The Angel Makers by Jessica Gregson seems to have got off to a good start.


I think many publishers, large and small, are trying to do this and it's great to see that this experiment seems to be working. All  power to PaperBooks. The problem is that, even if it is a mega-success the quantities sold are unlikely to exceed a few thousand. In order to attract and reward competitively the very best-selling authors it is necessary to sell hundreds of thousands of copies and 'guerrilla' tactics just won't succeed on a consistent enough basis. We have to work out, as Keirsten implies, how to knit together the very different and sometimes conflicting business models of the supermarkets, high street chains, Internet and traditional independents.

Why hasn't it happened? Is it beause publishers are simply stupid? Or might it just be that it's a really tricky problem?

#    |  Comments [10]  |