Posts Tagged ‘book camp’

Book2 Camp

Last Sunday was the Book Camp 2 and just like the first Book Camp I think I left smarter.

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We got t-shirts

Also, I got to hang out with Margret Atwood!

Book Camp is an unconference, the schedule is created and set by the attendees at the start.

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Ami Greko explaining how it works

Also, knitting is welcome.

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The schedule for the day

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Laura's pretty yarn

The first session I went to was led by Nick Ruffilo and was called “Brainstorming to come up with a Viable Trade Model”

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Nick Ruffilo

Nick began with a lot of numbers on the whiteboard about sales, titles published and income.  This sparked some rather heated discussion.  “Was this data correct?” “Is it being interpreted correctly?”  “Be careful about what you extrapolated from it because you’re veering into speculation.”  Nick was trying to get the group to brainstorm via the “Harvard Business Review model” and I believe it was Guy who quipped that “some believe that’s what ruined publishing in the first place.”

What makes a published work part of the industry or an outlier?  For instance, would a work consisting of the results of Brett xoxing his butt be an outlier?  In case that the discussion wasn’t lively enough things got rowdy again with the idea that sales and quality can be used interchangeably.

Imagining we were starting with a blank slate, how would we begin to develop a revenue model?  The Music Merchandising Model (sigh) the idea of a Sporting Franchsise (in publishing this is the Gawker model) or something entirely new.   It was a good idea for a session and props to Nick for having a ready answers.

For my second session I chose Guy Gonzalez’s Community Engagement & Development.

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Guy Gonzalez

The major points here can not be said enough times:

  • Community leads to commerce, commerce does not give you community.
  • Customers control the conversation.
  • Engaging with readers directly requires community, you do not have to build a new platform, find your readers.
  • Email is still a valuable tool, in fact its so valuable you need to make sure you’re not abusing it, use it wisely.
  • Also valuable is connecting with an individual user.  If a company @s back to a user it can be powerful – ancedata, I do get a kick out of a quick connection when it feels authentic.
  • The voracious readers and the casual readers have different levels of “brand recognition” with publishers.

Thanks to Bethanne Patrick (aka @thebookmaven) I learned that the CIA has a Director of Social Media – they love Twitter for real time monitoring and hashtags although apparently the use of hastags has dramatically decreased as twitter grew.

Brett Sandusky and I hosted a session on the process involved in creating digital products via an Agile Workflow.

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It's official now

This is more of Brett’s world than mine but I talked about how the small task group helps me stay on schedule, gives participants a stronger feeling of ownership and it can lead to fresh marketing ideas.  It should be said I do not like being the presenter, at all, so this was good for me.

Next session I went to was hosted by Mary Ann Naples and was about Monetizing a Direct Audience.

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Mary Ann Naples

She talked about the Open Sky model but honestly what I learned most in this session was that Margret Atwood should always be in attendance at any conference dealing with the future of publishing.  She was very engaged, entertaining and smart.

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Margret Atwood

Margret likened the idea of commerce destination where an author was curating the content to the Book of the Month club, where overwhelming choice is limited.  Margret Atwood told a story about seeking out hackers to take them to lunch to find out how they tick:  love solving puzzles, find it relaxing, likened to knitting!  And of course, the cheese sandwich was invoked, as in who will pay for her cheese sandwich if the work is pirated.  We also discussed how the internet could just poof vanish… so hold on to your hard copies.  Of course, a lead lined safe may safeguard your discs.

I never made into the last session I had planned on as I got into a conversation….

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Wine

then as it should be, there was wine.

Book Camp NYC

Bookcamp NYC was my first Unconference.  I should have taken some pictures.

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Book Camp was better than Smores

The day kicked off with attendee volunteers creating/hosting the sessions. It didn’t take long for this enthusiastic group to put together a full and varied schedule with topics ranging from Career Paths in Publishing to App Development to Community Building.  It was hard to decide which sessions to attend.

The first session I attended was led by Mark Gomperetz, digital publisher at Simon & Schuster, and titled by the Buddha.  It was very zen and it involved fingers pointing at the moon.

He began with “publishers having visions of sugar plums and ebooks dancing in their heads” but wanted the focus off the “shiny bits.”   It is not the device that will #savepublishing it is the book that will #savepublishing.  The point is that the question everyone wants answered is simply “what do I read next?”

The conversation veered onto brilliant apps where the eBook is useless Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything and  The Elements were cited.   We talked about the Perseus @PeterCostanzo‘s JFK:  50 Days app which also served as a brilliant marketing piece for the book -“living the dream.”

And we talked about bundling.  Bob Miller was excited about bundling backlist or a comparative titles instead of “buy the Hardcover get the eBook.”

Mark ended the session saying the book is the “moon” and the device is the “finger,”  don’t mistake the finger for the moon.

My next session was led by @brianoleary of Magellan Media Partners and was titled “Is There a Career Path left in Publishing.” Brian choose 3 people to offer their views:  someone with a little experience, someone with a few years of experience and someone with a lot of experience.  @DonnLinn was the voice of experience and he thought there are careers in publishing but not within the traditional career paths.  We talked about new skillsets required to do the same jobs.  How the role of editor, marketer, and agent is evolving.  We talked about how each department is not the silo it used to be.  My main takeaway: it is about new mindsets.

My session #3: Curation, Collection & Community with @Ron Hogan of Beatrice.com.   I chatted in the hallway too long on my way in and I couldn’t get a seat.  From the hallway outside Ron’s room I heard about robust publisher created and curated communities Mulholland Books (crime fiction) and independent communities like @annkingman and @mkindnessBooks On The Nightstand.  This morphed into  a discussion about official publisher policies on Social Media. @ami_with_an_i talked about “The Exit Row & Blogging as an employee.”  There are inherent responsibilities but it’s worth the extra legroom.

Last session #4 for me was Paid Advertising with Matt Schwartz, Random House.  We talked about banner ads (approx .08% click through) but when well targeted (Facebook) it gradually builds exposure.  I wondered aloud if banner ads are the (paid & better) equivalent to consumers seeing the same book being read on the subway over and over.

Rich Media ads have a much greater click through rate (I think he said around 12%)  and ads in the right environment don’t feel like spam.  He talked about being careful to not cover content (annoying the audience.)  He wrapped up with an interesting discussion about producing Google TV ads and mobile landing sites.

Onward to cocktail hour!   One of the best things about face to face meetings is seeing friends old and new.

Many thanks (again) to organizer @ami_with_an_i and sponsors sponsors: @cursr, @kobo, @jasonashlock, @openskyproject, @oreillymedia