Wednesday, April 21, 2010

The future of Publishing - a talk with media industry expert Scott R. Singer

Scott R. Singer has spent the past 20 years advising companies on how to adapt to change, to embrace technological advances, and to put the best strategy in place to deal with the next big thing—essentially, teaching them how to hit curveballs. Therefore we thought he is the right person to speak with on the changes that the book publishing industry is going through.

Scott, a noted media industry expert, investment banker, strategy consultant and the author of HOW TO HIT A CURVEBALL: Confront and Overcome the Unexpected in Business, join us for an interesting conversation on the future of publishing. Here it is:


What is the influence of the launch of the iPad on the book industry?
I think the iPad's launch is a game changer. Not only is it a fantastic Internet surfing, photo storing, app powered, movie viewing device, but it's also a powerful iPod with a gorgeous screen, functionality, and e-reading capability. The iPad opens the door for full color books and magazines to jump into the digital reading sphere.

Do you think the trend of transforming from print to digital is currently no more than just a hype when e-books sales are less than 2% of the market?
Clearly, not everyone will want to read books or magazines in a digital format. There is still high demand and great pleasure derived from reading materials in printed form. That said, a large and growing base of consumers are on the go, looking for more convenient ways to consume
the content they enjoy, and like the eco-friendly nature of an e-reading device.

It is important to keep in mind though that for the most part, every child that's born is "digital" and every elderly person that passes away is "analog." As a result, we are experiencing the third
tectonic shift in traditional media - first music, then video, now print. My middle school-aged children don't have printed text books. They are all electronic.

What is your advice to bookstores, both independent and big chains, who look for innovative models that will help them to thrive in the digital age?
Bookstores need to reinvent themselves as centers of learning and brand development for the content industry. They can be the social hub of all types of media, not just print. By realizing that a portion of their retail sales are likely to be disintermediated by digital content, they
should focus on ways to keep customers coming to their establishments and offer them products that can be consumed in such a manner.

Bookstores are still a place to browse, socialize, and share ideas. They're not libraries, so you don't need to keep quiet. You can drink coffee, meet friends, and buy many things. Not just books.

What's the potential of the e-book market in the next 10-15 years?
There are many projections concerning the penetration of tablet devices. It is my view that there is a huge market for a device that can fill the gap between full computing and a PDA. The more content that's available, the greater the potential. And by that I mean magazines,
newspapers, and text books, not just consumer fiction and non-fiction books.

It is clear that newspapers in a printed form are headed the way of the dinosaur. That industry needs to embrace this change and redesign its business model to deliver valuable, hyper local content in a form its consumers want. No one else is better at reporting on high school sports, the goings on at town hall, or issues facing local school boards.

Do you think the publishing industry can actually gain from the cannibalization of physical books market by e-books?
TV was supposed to kill radio, VHS tapes were supposed to kill TV, and the Internet was supposed to kill them all. But that's not what happened. More content is being created on more platforms and consumed to greater degrees than ever before. I think the publishing world will
thrive in this environment, especially if it is able to deliver more quality products at lower costs, not to mention in shorter production times.

Do you think the publishing industry can actually gain from the cannibalization of physical books market by e-books?
TV was supposed to kill radio, VHS tapes were supposed to kill TV, and the Internet was supposed to kill them all. But that's not what happened. More content is being created on more platforms and consumed to greater degrees than ever before. I think the publishing world will
thrive in this environment, especially if it is able to deliver more quality products at lower costs, not to mention in shorter production times.

Do publishers still have the same added value in the age of POD (print on demand) and social media?
The need for the curatorial and editing skills publishers bring are even more important in the digital world when anyone with Internet access can essentially be a published journalist/author. We as consumers will rely to an even greater extent on our media brands to help us sort through
the online clutter.

Finally, we are going to celebrate Earth Day tomorrow - what should be done to make the book industry more eco-friendly?
Well, the e-reader is perhaps the best answer to saving trees and lowering the use of fossil fuels and reducing emissions. Fewer trees will need to be cut to make books, newspapers, and magazines. Fewer chemicals will need to be mixed to create ink. And fewer trucks will
need to roll to deliver these physical products assuming e-reading grows to the levels many expect. A great result for our planet overall.

Thank you, Scott.

Scott R. Singer is the author of the recently published HOW TO HIT A CURVEBALL: Confront and Overcome the Unexpected in Business (Portfolio 2010). A Managing Director and Head of Media & Entertainment at The Bank Street Group, Singer has more than twenty years experience in investment banking and strategy consulting. He previously held positions at BMO Capital Markets, Deloitte, and Bear Stearns. He lives in New York City and Connecticut. For more information on Scott's new book, see http://www.hitacurveball.com.

You can read more updates on the future of publishing on our website at http://www.ecolibris.net/publishing_future.asp

Happy Earth Day!
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

40 Ways to Green Your Reading

This year we're celebrating the 40th anniversary of Earth Day. We thought how we could contribute to this great celebration and decided to prepare a list of 40 things you can do to green up your reading, hoping it would be of assistance to all the eco-conscious readers out there.

We hope you will find this list useful and that you will get back to it whenever you look for ideas on how to make your reading more eco-friendly. So here we go:


40 Ways to Green Your Reading

1. Join your local library

2. Share books with friends

3. Buy from local
independent bookstores (if you can't walk or bike there, purchase online)
4. Download audiobooks

5.
Check out BookMooch for worldwide book swapping.
6.
Buy books that are printed on recycled or FSC-certified paper
7. Use BookSwim, the 1st Netflix-style online book rental service
8.
Support book publishers and authors who partner with Eco-libris
9.
Read books online by daily email and RSS feed at DailyLit
10.
If you're an avid reader, e-books are probably a preferred alternative from an environmental perspective.
11. Join a book club and share your green insights and ideas with others

12. Buy used books

13. Rent textbooks

14. Donate books you don't want to keep anymore

15. Read books on your
mobile phone
16. Look for books on
Freecycle
17. If you search books on
Chapters.Indigo.ca website, you can filter books that are printed on FSC/recycled paper.
18. Learn more about the debate if
e-Books are greener than physical books
19. Support publishers who are members of
the Green Press Initiative
20. Use a
reusable shopping bag while buying books in bookstores
21. Buy new and used books at
Better World Books
22. Exchange books on neighborrow
23. Buy books that are printed using print on demand technology
24. Support authors who are committed to the environment
25. Not sure which eReader is your best green choice? go with the iPad.
26.
Download individual chapters if you don't want to read the whole book
27. Buy from publishers who established environmental policies.

28. Prefer bookmarks with seeds
29. Prefer publishers with green educational programs
30.
Visit bookstores that collaborate with Eco-Libris
31. Buy from publishers focused on the fields of ecology and a sustainable future
32. Follow the example of President Obama and buy books to your kids on independent bookstores
33. Buy books that promote greater understanding of green issues, especially for children.
34. Use twitter and facebook to tell your favorite green authors how you appreciate their efforts to go green
35. Buy from authors who are self-publishing books with green content
36. Share information on green books you read with other readers on Goodreads
37. Support publishers that for them every day is Earth Day
38. Enjoy outdoor reading
39. Follow virtual book tours
40. Plant a tree with Eco-Libris for every book you read!

Happy Earth Day!
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading

Sunday, April 18, 2010

The future of publishing and bookstores - updates from last week



We are closely following the interesting discussions on the future of publishing, bookstores, magazines and the paper industry in general. Our interest in these shifts are mainly to see how environmental and social issues are been integrated into the future of the book industry. We believe that we will see these issues taken into consideration not just as a form good doing, but also and mainly as business opportunities.


We have created special webpages on our website with updates and resources on the future of publishing, bookstores and magazines and soon we'll have a webpage for the future of paper as well. Not only that, but from this week. we'll update you every Sunday with the latest interesting discussions, articles, lectures and debates that took place last week. So, here we go:

The Future of Publishing:

The Future of Publishing - Ben Werdmuller von Elgg, April 18, 2010

Thanks to everyone who came to Intersection: Publishing yesterday. Our fascinating round-table discussion was cut off far too soon: I think we could have gone on for days and only barely covered the issues. It's clear that an open conversation that treated publishers, authors, readers, technologists and lawyers as equals was long overdue. (Missed it? Watch this space.)

The Future of Publishing - by PastorGear.com, April 14, 2010

There's been a lot of talk about how the iPad is the future of publishing and that's probably true. People point to the various newspaper and magazine apps for the iPad as examples of where the industry is heading. To be sure, a lot of those apps are very strong and I'll be reviewing them here in coming days but to see what publishing is really going to looking like in two years you're going to need some help from Woody and Buzz.

We would also like to recommend an interesting talk of Richard Nash(Cursor Books) on BNC Technology Forum 2010 that took place last month and was entitled: Publishing 3.0: Moving from Gatekeeping to Partnerships

The Future of Bookstores:

The bookstore in a future full of iPads - iPad Watcher, April 12, 2010

I love reading books and I love shopping for them. Okay, let me rephrase that. I love browsing through a bookstore, but I rarely buy a paper book these days, always preferring the digital version if one is available. This duality of feelings and the certainty of the inevitable demise of the paper book in the future makes me a bit sad each time I go to a good bookstore.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading


Cartoon:
Alan Moir, The Sydney Morning Herald

Friday, April 16, 2010

Om Baby, Child of the Universe is going green with Eco-Libris!




We're happy to announce on a new collaboration with author
Schamet Horsfield on her book "Om Baby, Child of the Universe". This is the first book in the forthcoming Om Baby children's book series and it will be released on Earth Day next week! One tree will be planted with Eco-Libris for every printed copy!

It is a beautiful book full of colorful illustrations that are about love, peace, and happiness.The book's text emphasizes the importance of family, friends, and community. Children and adults alike will love Om Baby's colors, imaginative characters and settings, and the feelings the book evokes within them.

Om Baby is a superhero for the planet, for love, and for global peace. Om Baby reminds us of the most important things in life: truth, love, friendship, family, community, and the potential for greatness within us all. Om Baby provokes thought and stimulates the imagination. Om Baby invites meaningful conversations that will last throughout childhood and beyond. This is a book that will be read again and again as a valuable part of any child's development and education about caring for our environment and our fellow humans.

Author Schamet Horsfield has gone to great lengths to make Om Baby, Child of the Universe as green as possible, using soy-based inks and recycled paper. In addition, Horsfield is partnering with Eco Libris to plant a tree for each copy sold!

You can learn more about the book and the author on her website - www.ombabyworld.com. If you want to meet
Schamet
Horsfield, there are already few reading events scheduled for next week:

April 20th and 22nd (Earth Day), 11:00 am
Kids Quest Children's Museum
4091 Factoria Boulevard Southeast
Bellevue, WA 98006

April 21, 12:30-2:00 pm

Seattle Holistic Center
Good Shepherd Center
4649 Sunnyside Ave. N, Room 302
Seattle, WA 98103

These are events for children and adults. Schamet will be reading Om Baby at story time followed by book signing.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading

Green printing tip no. 41: Special tip for Earth Day!

We are back today with a new tip on our weekly series of green printing tips, where we bring you information on green printing in collaboration with Greg Barber, an experienced eco-friendly printer.

Today Greg is talking about Earth Day in a special tip for the upcoming 40th anniversary of Earth Day next week.

What is the advice from Denis Hayes, the founder of Earth Day to us today?

Tip #41

What Does Denis Hayes, the FOUNDER of Earth Day advise us to do now to keep their mission going? It is time to review where we stand, heading into Earth Day.

Last night I attended a screening of Earth Days, a movie coming out shortly, that is a review of "40 Years of Going Green"



The filmmaker is Robert Stone and the ORIGINAL Earth Day coordinator, Denis Hayes, were at the screening and we got to hear from them after this absolutely, terrific movie.

I was like a kid, and asked for Denis to autograph my invitation. That is the one and only autograph I have ever gotten in my life tme. I told him that I started my Environmental Printing businss at the 20th Anniversary of Earth Day. So his dream became my reality in forming my business.

It was funny how they said there were no Twitter, Linkedin or Facebook to help spread the word on the first Earth Day.

They went on TV, they got magazines to feature them, they worked around the clock to make it happen, and it was a bi-partisan effort in our government to support this hugely, successful 1st Earth Day.

THEIR ADVICE:

Their panel told us we need to energize ourselves, and keep their vision going. We need to encourage our friends to be environmental, and to not forget how our rivers and streams were so polluted, and how the smog in California was so bad, events got canciled. Just don't get lazy and complacent. Push for a better planet.

Don't put all our baskets in Climate Change. We need to control our population, and we need to
save our natural resources, and conserve our energy, etc. It was also funny to hear that President Nixon should be known as one of the most environmental Presidents.

The USEPA and many first environmental laws came because he pushed for them.

So, here we are 40 years later, and we all need to to our part to protect OUR environment.

You can choose to print on 100% Post-Consumer recycled paper.

You can choose to use 100% Processed Chlorine Free paper.

You can choose to be FSC.

You can choose to use a Green E Energy Printer and Paper Mill.

You can choose to call me.

Happy Earth Day!

For additional information, please visit www.gregbarberco.com and www.ecofriendlyprinter.com. You can email Greg at greg@gregbarberco.com.

You can find links to all the tips we published so far on our green printing tips page, which is part of our green printing tools & resources.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: promoting green printing!

Thursday, April 15, 2010

The reissued novel The Birth Machine by Elizabeth Baines is going green with Eco-Libris!






















We're happy to announce on a new collaboration with author Elizabeth Baines
on her novel "The Birth Machine". This is Elizabeth Baines' first novel, which will be reissued by Salt Publishing on October 2010. One tree will be planted with Eco-Libris for every printed copy!

This is the second book of Elizabeth Baines we're greening up. The first one is "Too Many Magpies", which was described as
'Moving and compelling' by Sarah Salway. One tree is planted for each printed copy of this novel as well.

Here are some details on "The Birth Machine":

As Zelda labours in childbirth, she sinks into a surreal world where the past blends with the present, and facts become merged with fairytale and myth. The long-awaited reissue of the groundbreaking eighties novel which exposed a woman’s experience of hi-tech childbirth and tells a gripping story of a long-ago murder and present-day betrayals.

"The Birth Machine" was also adapted by Elizabeth Baines and broadcast as a play for Radio 4

Already it got some great reviews:

A gripping story, a pithy book’Katy Campbell
An increasingly powerful narrative … its presentation of the world of childhood contrasts nicely with sharp satire’ – Laura Marcus, Times Literary Supplement
Elizabeth Baines has a wry humour and satirical edge’ – Martin Nicholls, City Life
This powerful book leaves you with a sense of disquiet, anger and frustration’ – Jessica Corner, Everywoman.

About the author:
Elizabeth Baines was born in South Wales and lives in Manchester. Salt previously published two acclaimed books by Elizabeth, her collection of short stories, Balancing on the Edge of the World (2007) and her novel Too Many Magpies (2009). Elizabeth is a prizewinning radio playwright and she has also written short plays for stage. She is also a performer and has been a teacher.

We'll keep you posted of course once the book is released.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

It's time to clean your body on our green gift giveaway!














We're happy to update you that
we're adding another great green book to our green gift giveaway:

Clean Body: The Humble Art of Zen-Cleansing Yourself


You can get a free copy of Clean Body by Michael DeJong when you balance out 50 books by planting 50 trees with Eco-Libris. You can also choose one of the other five books we offer as a free gift: Raw for Dessert, Greening Your Small Business, The Simple Little Vegan Dog Book, Sweet Utopia and Sustainable Sushi.

All of these books are printed on recycled or FSC-certified paper and readers can choose from this list the book they would like to receive as a gift from us.

So what's Sustainable Sushi about? (from the publisher's website)
Clean Zen, clean green! Clean Body follows the successful Clean: The Humble Art of Zen-Cleansing, by cleaning guru Michael DeJong. As with the first book, this is not merely about washing away the dirt: it embodies a mindset, a philosophy, an alternative to mass consumerism.

DeJong draws
from Eastern belief systems - especially the element theory in Chinese medicine and Asian cooking - and harmoniously balances five pure essentials in his recipes, using baking soda, lemon, olive oil, salt, and white vinegar as the basis for his all-natural concoctions.

Including special, separate sections for men and women, Clean Body has ideas for everything from facial exfoliants and natural aftershave to moisturizers and creams for itchy skin, discolored knees, and smooth feet. EVERY part of the body, from head to toe, is covered.


You can read m
ore about it on Pajama Mommy's review of this book, which was part of our green books campaign.

More details about our green gift giveaway and the other gifts we give to readers who balance out 25 books or more (gift cards for Strand Bookstore and BookSwim!) can be found on the campaign's page at http://www.ecolibris.net/gifts.asp

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!