Showing posts with label the future of publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the future of publishing. Show all posts

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Jane Friedman: The Future Of Authorship

Jane outside
Jane (left, on the big screen) on the panel


Jane Friedman has spent over fifteen years in the publishing industry as an editor, publisher, and professor. Currently she serves as the web editor of the Virginia Quarterly Review at the University of Virginia, where she also teaches digital publishing and online writing. Her newest digital media initiative is Scratch Magazine (www.scratchmag.net), a quarterly magazine all about the intersection of writing and money. Jane was also the publisher of Writer’s Digest, and her expertise on the transformation of the publishing industry has been featured throughout many events and media, including NPR’s Morning Edition, Frankfurt Book Fair, Publishers Weekly, SXSW, and Nieman Journalism Lab.

Her opening statement on the panel reflects on how much has changed in the last fifteen years, saying,

"Now that everyone can publish, everyone does publish."

She raises important questions:

How is work discovered - and what's the role of companies like Apple, Google and Facebook who control how people reach each other?

What should be/will be publishers' role?

and

How do author careers get made?


On creating author platforms, Jane advises it should be organic, slow and about connecting with readers.

"Platform grows out of your body of work."

The panel discusses how the the bad rap of self-publishing "has disappeared or is rapidly disappearing" - that's a quote from Paul Aiken, executive director of the Author's Guild (which now accept self-published authors as members.)

Jane suggests there can be an experimental approach, with self-publishing mirroring technology startups - it doesn't have to be perfect the first time. And she referenced Abbi Glines' story that Abbi just shared on the panel of how her "The Vincent Brothers" (one of her first self-published books) wasn't as good in that initial launch, and when it was acquired for traditional publishing (Simon Pulse) she went back and spent a year to fix the book. She became a better writer and built her following as she kept writing and publishing.

The panel discusses niche markets, marketing, and what authors have to weigh between self-publishing and traditional publishing - it's a fascinating discussion!

The Future Of Authorship panel begins!


Lin Oliver (far right) expertly moderates the panel of, right to left: Paul Aiken (Executive Director of the Author's Guild), Jean Feiwel (SVP Publishing Director MacMillian Children's Books), Jane Friedman (Web Editor, Virginia Quarterly Review), Abbi Glines (best-selling author of both self and traditionally published books), and Timothy Travaglini (Director of Children's Acquisitions for Open Road Media.)

Sunday, August 1, 2010

David Diaz Shared the Podium with Rubin Pfeffer about the future of publishing


Caldecott-Winning illustrator David Diaz spoke about perfect things that don't change over time. Like the chair. And a fork.

And how in music there have been 10 major format changes in 100 years.

He thinks that in books, we're right around where 8 tracks were.

But he doesn't see problems with this - he sees opportunities. In a world where publishing a picture book costs a publisher $100,000.- they're looking for something to sell enough copies to cover that risk. In a digital world where publishing a digital picture book costs five or ten thousand dollars - that's a much lower risk for the publisher.

"Opportunities will grow exponentially for us!"


And when a book comes out digitally, it already IS international, and the potential audience is enormous.

He cited how TV has changed where we went from 5 stations to hundreds in a few decades - and how each station is now targeted to a niche market.

We may not be sure exactly what the future will look like, but David says we need to


"hold on. Publishing will be HUGE. Bigger than it has ever been before!"