Welcome from BookExpo International Airport

June 5, 2013 in Conferences, Digital Publishing Platforms, Digital Strategy, Publishing Industry News by robert.weisberg

To the dumpy Sheraton on West 52nd Street: all is forgiven.

Obviously you can’t have 20,000 or so, ahem, “industry insiders” rolling suitcases around a giant exhibition floor trolling for Advance Reader Copies (ever heard of ebooks?) in just any old venue, but if there’s a worse place to have a conference than a convention center masquerading as a Las-Vegasian-glass-enclosed-airport terminal, complete with overpriced food courts, escalators to nowhere, wifi that could have traveled forward in time from the center’s other possible inspiration (London’s mid-19th-century Crystal Palace), a VIP lounge, and no good way to get there short of taxi or bus, I’m unaware of it. Expos and Cons are one thing, conferences quite another. THIS. IS. A. TRADE. SHOW. MOVE. THE. CONFERENCE. SOMEWHERE. ELSE.

There. Now back to your regularly scheduled post.

I was at BEA on a panel, organized by the indefatigable Anne Kostick, dedicated to the MetPublications portal I worked on with co-presenting colleagues Gwen Roginsky and Amy Liebster (The visionary project leader Teresa Lai was not in attendance). I’ve described MetPubs here before so I won’t do so again, I’ll just mention that the panel, covering how the project was pulled together and lessons learned since then, was well-received by the 60 or so in attendance. (Anyone there when the feedback from the lectern mike became a sonic riot-control weapon, I trust your hearing has returned.) The questions afterwards, as expected, were dominated by concerns about rights and the impact of a digital publishing route on the Met’s print program. Our answers were pretty much the same as they’ve been since the project launched in October. 1) There’s no easy answer on rights but don’t be predatory, don’t be greedy, and with that and good boilerplate language and a sign-off by a lawyer you should be okay. 2) Our print program is not going away as long as mission-driven publishing matters and as long as easy digital publishing solutions for art books remain elusive. (More on that in many future posts.)

The MetPublications presentation was a coda to my attendance at the sidebar-y International Digital Publishing Forum, overlapping BEA by one and a half days, and providing a kind of shoulder-season Tools of Change nostalgia. There isn’t too much to say that wasn’t already said about Digital Book World and the late-lamented TOC. I can’t tell if IDPF was a remake of a movie that everyone pretended not to notice (like Never Say Never Again and Thunderball), or a sequel that had nothing really to recommend it other than, you gotta have something to do for a couple of days in late May (Hangover 3). So let me try to focus on what might be of interest to us in the museum publishing field.

IDPF started with a keynote by four “visionaries” who all attempted to provide a metaphor for the digital book vis-à-vis print: Corey Pressman of Exprima Media, Richard Nash of Small Demons, Hugh McGuire of PressBooks, and Craig Mod, an independent designer and writer who byted an influential essay late last year proposing a emphasis on super-low-entry-barrier publishing. The specifics of their metaphors are less important than the fact that we are in a stage that lends itself to such activity, searching for metaphors to provide the intellectual underpinnings of our still-unproven business models. (Pressman’s “Book as Electronic Incunabula” sent the early-morning pre-caffienated audience onto their smartphones for a definition.) To paraphrase the sports maxim, digital books are what we think they are, or, more precisely, what we use them for. If we want connectivity and conversation with our pages, we can tweet or tumble; if we want easy storage, we kindle them; if we want disruption, we look for the avant-garde, the app-y; and so on. (And all print books are not created equal, either, or else there wouldn’t be a thing called a trim size.) And Pressman read a poem by Neruda about books. I appreciated that.

After a conversation between digital publishing journalist extraordinaire Laura Hazard Owen and HarperCollins chief digital officer Chantal Restivo-Alessi, the next panel discussed different platform technologies–ePub3, HTML5, Open Web–and their impacts on digital publishing. Think rock-paper-scissors, or perhaps Spy vs Spy vs Spy. You can find evangelists for any of the three to be the primary focus of a publisher’s digital strategy. (From a realistic, skill-set-teachable point of view, I would put my money on HTML.)

I’ll skip the next two presentations, by Writer’s Digest and Goodreads, respectively, except to say: slides with tables and graphs and lots of data. DON’T DO IT. Presentations starting with reading off said facts. DON’T DO IT. Send us links or Slideshare them.

The panels I attended over the next 24 hours were basically on different aspects of digital workflow, whether involving coding (ePub guru Liz Castro in a really interesting, well-received talk) or ePub features of the new InDesign Creative Cloud version (Adobe, whose presenters had the earnest smiles of the near-monopolists). Of all these, a panel on the pros and cons of in/out sourcing may have been closest to my workflow wonk heart, with speakers from Simon & Schuster, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Open Road Media, and Parragon (yes, that’s the correct spelling) taking turns saying that some degree of internal workflow evolution and coding quality-control knowledge is essential.

In terms of takeaways, I did get a sense that the age of XML-first hasn’t so much passed as been recast as a debate over workflow, and by workflow I mean keep it the old way or transform it, probably at the point of a staple gun. But otherwise, and perhaps typified by the metaphor slam of the first day, there’s a certain stasis right now–the publishers who have gone all in on digital are either fine or out of business, the publishers who haven’t are either fine or out of business, and those people dabbling in apps and all sorts of interesting content approaches are probably closer to being out of business but having a lot more fun doing so. (Those in traditional publishing having fun are those who love workflow. We aren’t the Borg, we just have resonant voices.)

For the next year, I’m targeting events which have a more creative vibe, with whiteboards and raised hands and people shouting out ideas. (Or maybe I’m thinking of an improv performance.) Seriously, though, I’m on a mission to get museums, and the amazing things that we and other non-profits are doing in digital publishing, a seat at the table at these kind of “mainstream” publishing events. Maybe the enthusiasm that pervades our more focused gatherings can help breathe some life into the staggering conference corpses of the publishing industry.

Oh, and I was the fourth most active tweeter at IDPF, according to Epilogger. So unless one of the people ahead of me turns out to have been doping, I’m out of the medals.

TOC, RIP

May 7, 2013 in Conferences, Digital Publishing Platforms, Publishing Industry News by robert.weisberg

Those of us in the shallow, print-y end of the digital publishing pool can be forgiven for thinking that Tools of Change was the company, and tech publisher O’Reilly and its Safari Books Online merely adjuncts of that glorious and grueling confab. Which made last week’s announcement that O’Reilly was discontinuing the Tools of Change conferences (the New York flagship and its smaller meetings, including those timed to book fairs in Frankfurt and Bologna) and its blog all the more surprising.

In retrospect, we shouldn’t have been all that surprised.

Topmost for me is concern for the two indefatigable leaders of the TOC conferences, Kat Meyer and Joe Wikert, who are out of jobs, though I trust not for long, considering their skill in bringing the conferences together and expanding its scope over the past several years. (Which can be cold comfort–as we all know, physical, butt-in-chair jobs are harder and harder to come by in the vaporware publishing world we increasingly inhabit.)

Which is only one of the reasons that the end of TOC could have been anticipated. Besides the slushy misery of hosting a huge conference in New York every February, the very digital technologies that we trumpet to make virtual visits and bit-driven reading possible can render lots-of-butts-in-conference-chairs harder to justify. (The museum world still seems to like its get-togethers, thank goodness, and if the need to meet our colleagues in person is a residue of the academic-world conference mentality, I’m all for it.)

But as anyone who’s been to more than a few of these things and eventually got over the “why am I here?” nerves, what made these conferences so valuable were the conversations sprouting like tubeworms in the tectonic gaps between panels, often running into and through the next scheduled talks. (Check out any run of tweets from a conference Twitter stream or Epilogger–if people hailed what they learned chatting with a newfound colleague instead of sitting in too-cold-or-too-hot ballrooms, then save the date for the following year.) This past February, at my third TOC, I finally felt empowered to miss a panel or two in favor of talking to people whom I’d found, or who found me, on the conference message board. Those conversations continue to this day, broken up by weeks in the here-to-Neptune timelapse of modern time un-management, and I expect they will bear fruitful results, if only through metaphors and pie-high schemes that make this digital age so strange and nervy and exciting.

But just as a trillion-dollar manned space program is an inefficient way to develop Tang, a giant conference is an expensive excuse for chats, both for those who are supposed to attend, and for the organizers. There are only so many iterations of the question, “so what’s next for digital publishing?” or “what’s the new platform or tech we need to invest in?” Eventually, the descriptions of the tech become the thing itself, especially in digital publishing, in which the agile process of putting content together can become the product. How many digital pubs could be birthed in three days? (And try monetizing that. And, yes, it’s being done in “hack-a-thons” everywhere. Or so I’ve heard.)

So, while bummed, I get O’Reilly’s reasoning for stopping for conferences, though the callous manner in which it was announced has the publishing world extremely annoyed. A little odder is their decision to focus on “bringing their own tools to market.” They are extending their own in-house publishing platform, an authoring-to-publication tool, and monetizing it, leveraging the considerable brand recognition they’ve developed on the mutual backs of their Safari Books and, since (to quote The Matrix) “Fate, it seems, is not without a sense of irony,” the TOC conferences themselves.

But the question is, are the conference audiences in search of such a platform? That’s exactly what came across at this year’s TOC, as the platform-and-protocol mania of previous events gave way to a more flexible, audience-driven set of goals. I have no doubt that O’Reilly can pull off the techie end, but have they read the market correctly? Were the TOC conferences actually Trojan Horse marketing experiments? (Not that there’s anything wrong with that. Okay, there is.) The money that went into my attendance at TOC is not going to be rerouted to chase the next collaborative platform. It’s not the idea that’s the problem. It’s that, in this day and age, it’s hard to go with one vendor’s version over another.

I wish O’Reilly the best because it’s bad karma to do otherwise. (And it would be the epitome of hypocrisy for me to have told people “eh” when Amazon bought Goodreads, and to then bash O’Reilly in public when they chase dollars–I mean vision–in a different way.) I wish Kat and Joe the very, very, very best because they’re the actual victims here. (I suspect that the carcass of TOC will feed more than a few smaller, more nimble conferences which will be great.) Personally, I’m extra bummed because I had spoken with Kat recently about getting more museums and other non-profits to attend future TOC events–as panelists–and describe the great things that museum technologists have been doing while the publishing world convulsed into spasms at each new digital flavor of the season. Of course, all the information presented at these conferences will be available over the intertubes, but the handshakes and the chats will be a little harder to generate in the skype-a-verse, and for that, we should all be bummed.

The Coming Hybrid Era: Tools of Change 2013 and The Future of Art Book Publishing

February 22, 2013 in Business Models, Conferences, Digital Publishing Platforms, Digital Strategy, Publishing Industry News by robert.weisberg

The week before last provided an enlightening conference convergence, as the annual Tools of Change meeting coincided with a panel deep beneath the New York Public Library’s main building. The latter, linked, I believe, to the College Art Association conference, was called The Future of Art Book Publishing (full audio is here) and had representatives from different parts of the art book ecosystem speaking with great optimism–and defiance–about the prospects for this niche’s survival.

What I found most interesting at the Art Book panel, despite the indisputably declining sales described by Margaret Chace of Skira-Rizzoli, was the fact that art books are being sold in more outlets than ever before–not just museums, but stores like Anthropologie and pop-up shops mentioned by Charles Kim of MoMA. This is a critical innovation (a “tool of change,” even?), as large physical bookstores seem to enter their death throes and Amazon becomes nearly ubiquitous. If the ability to touch a book is unmatched for leading to sales, I would expect this to be doubly so for art books. Especially, as Sharon Gallagher of D.A.P. forcefully stated, if the future form of the art book, whatever that is, will still have a bookish-ness about it, will still have pages. (Gallagher told a story about her book-industry husband berating a shopper at P.S.1’s store, who asked if he could just buy said book at Amazon. You can not, the outraged husband said, buy this particular copy at that particular online seller. It’s a good thing the guy didn’t also want his parking stub validated.)

I mention that anecdote because it’s exactly the kind of preciousness that is so anathema at Tools of Change, which is insanely content-agnostic. The text being provided isn’t the point, it’s the delivery, getting it out to the audience, having the audience come and find it. Declaring that art book publishing is special and must survive is like telling a non-anthropic-principle cosmos that it’s humanity’s destiny to explore the universe. (Try saying that to an onrushing meteor.) My point isn’t that art books aren’t special–Tools of Change had panels on the importance of literary endeavors in digital publishing, and even an entire day devoted to self-published authors, many of whom are poets and lit novelists–it’s that the modern publishing environment doesn’t care what you make. Just make it available and discoverable. (And good.)

If January’s Digital Book World conference was obsessed with Fifty Shades of Gray as the bogey-Bildungsroman, then Tools of Change couldn’t shut up about Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl, which apart from being a critical and monetary smash, was also an example of the new kind of word-of-fingers-on-keyboards that everyone says is necessary to generate sales in this era. Flynn herself wasn’t active in social media, but her potential readers were, and that’s the key. Tools of Change had an entire panel with Goodreads’ CEO, Otis Chandle, which hit all the expected points, as his company is reaching a certain critical mass in book discoverability. (I myself spent this past long weekend obsessively entering books I’d read into the Goodreads system, and it was a great memory-jogger about books I like but can’t always name when asked.) But there was also a panel with Owen Teicher, president of the American Bookseller Association, who, other than an extended raspberry to the Department of Justice for favoring Amazon’s business practices over the publisher-Apple agency model, was unfailingly positive about what bookstores, especially indies, are doing to merge digital reading with physical sales. (Note to self: walk down to the Met’s store, which just re-organized its book area, and see what the book-sales traffic is like.)

Tools of Change has always been more philosophical than Digital Book World, squishier in a good way, more alive with the buzz of the moment. This year’s buzz, as I mentioned in my DBW post, is about audience and discoverability, and I was particularly interested in panels which described discovery not just in digital (Goodreads, social media) but in physical terms. Or, better yet, a hybrid of both (“hybrid” being the buzzword-in-waiting). Two panels bookended (sorry) this approach. The first, “Books at the Block Party: The Economics and Outcomes of a Local Literary Economy,” on the conference’s first day, was an open-ended discussion about connecting with book audiences, with experts from digital media (Tumblr), libraries (the Darien library system), audience-building for authors (BooksquareWe Grow Media), and an author (Kevin Smokler, who’s trying to do for reading what every museum should try to do for art long audiences once cared about because it was on a test, but have long since forgotten).

This panel featured the enthusiasm, optimism, and desire for hard work that really makes you glad to have chosen that particular panel over the other possibilities at a crowded conference. One particular quote, from Smokler, really stuck with me: “Publishers: teach and train your authors to have the mindset of the value of connecting with individual readers.” What are we, in museum publishing, doing to connect our authors/curators with potential readers? Sure, we’re getting their content out there, but are we working closely enough with other museum departments–communications, events, membership–to ensure that these words in our books are a part of the community? This excellent panel made me want to organize every content creator in my institution over a really big breakfast and brainstorm until we were ready for lunch.

The second panel I wanted to mention was “Beyond Devices: Is The Real Value Of eBooks Social Engagement?” It was on the conference’s last day, when everyone was tired, a flu was going around, and three days in a New York hotel was just getting a bit much. An eclectic mix of different panelists (author of The Time Traveler’s Wife, a former agent, a book marketing consultant, a social-media-for-book-events entrepreneur, and a book club empowerment organizer) met in the same small room as the panel above and had a similar enthusiastic discussion of just what “digital reading” means: is it physical reading improved by digital communities, or just plain reading on a device? The answer, I think, by lack of a formal answer, was “whatever the audience wants digital reading to be.” For those of us in museums, struggling with what form the art book of the future will take, that’s the right answer. The fact that we were already looking beyond devices, those precious must-have thingies that launched a million very dull arguments, was promising. I found strange connections between a panel called “Creators and Technology Converging: When Tech Becomes Part of the Story” and Charles Kim’s description of some of MoMA’s plans for ebooks. Both were finding possibilities apart from platforms. Paul Chan, who discussed his Badlands Unlimited imprint at the NYPL art-book panel, would have been a perfect fit here or at the author-day track, as his DIY object-making operation was an inspiring analogue to every would-be publisher or app-designer trying to Kickstart their way out of inertia.

There were plenty of other interesting panels, but a discussion of all of them could last as long as the conference itself. In some ways, far more rewarding were the conversations with panelists and attendees outside of the ring of ballrooms surrounding the Death-Star-like central core of the Marriott Marquis. I liked the idea of one panelist that a place like the Met needs to “hack the typical large-museum experience” and make it easier for the tourist or even local-with-an-hour-to-kill to get inside, see something inspiring, buy something, and get out. A place like the Met should be awash in local-oriented events, this person said; and those events should be online and simulcast, other attendees told me. The Met was seen as an imposing edifice but full of possibility. Is this the way a graffiti artist might view an enormous limestone wall, or the way an entrepreneur might view an open but hungry market? Well, that’s the trick that will actually determine if the Future of Art Book Publishing is written from the publisher’s point of view or from the audience’s. The former will always require development funds and subvention, the latter a desire to meet the community at the intersection of digital and physical realms, where the museum is a portal to an infinite world of art, history, scholarship, inspiration, and possibility. I love my fellow art book publishers but I’m putting my money on the latter.

“The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” —Alan Kay

February 14, 2013 in Digital Publishing Platforms, Publishing Industry News by Greg Albers

Not much more than three months ago, I wrote a post here titled “From photocopy to EPUB, artists’ e-books are coming”. Now, in collaboration with The Present Group, I’m building The People’s E-Book, a super-simple online tool to make e-books for free. It’s geared to artists and alternative publishers, but useful for everyone, and is meant as a way of making the .epub format much more approachable and achievable. We’re running a Kickstarter campaign to fund it, and there are more details and more about our vision for the tool on the project page there, or follow along with us at thepeoplesebook.net.

Code of Best Practices for Fair Use to be Developed by CAA

January 23, 2013 in Copyright and Other Legal Issues, Publishing Industry News by Amy Weber Parkolap

The College Art Association announced last week that it has received an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant in order “to develop, publish, and disseminate a code of best practices for fair use in the creation and curation of artworks and scholarly publishing in the visual arts.”  For illustration-heavy digital books where securing rights can be quite costly and sometimes problematic, this looks to be a welcome direction for the field.  Read more about the awarded grant and the project as a whole here.