Business Management - Industry Trends

NFL Playbooks: There’s an App for That
November 6, 2012

Want a competitive advantage? As NFL teams are discovering, there’s an app for that. Across the league, teams are trading in their 500-page printed playbooks for iPads. In the last year alone, NFL teams using the iPad have quadrupled from three to 12, representing more than one-third of all teams.

Those using PlayerLync report that it has revolutionized the way they push out film and significantly altered the way they communicate.

In addition to saving printing costs, digital playbooks are increasing effective, real-time communication by allowing coaches and quarterbacks to add and share plays with the click of a button.

The Magazine King and Print’s Future
November 2, 2012

Like much of print, magazines are at the convoluted intersection of old and new consumption models and technologies. In many instances, a look at the print and Web versions of many mags reveals much the same content in each.

Why eBooks Are Inspiring a New Age of Print
October 30, 2012

Instead of killing physical books, eBooks have actually encouraged a new level of fetishization of the printed page. Beautifully made editions that sit as objets d’art on the shelf or coffee table are becoming more prevalent. Publishers are investing in more luscious, expensive print editions.

Taschen makes stunning art books that are artworks in themselves, often costing hundreds of dollars. McSweeneys continues to experiment with formats and materials. The attributes that eBooks don’t do well or at all—heavy paper stocks, bookmark ribbons, book plates, artful typography, metallic foils, and stunning, colorful covers—are being implemented in a new flourishing of mass-produced

Canada’s Book Publishers Are Looking Beyond Mere Survival
October 30, 2012

Last week was a painful one for book publishing. On Monday, D&M Publishers in Vancouver filed for bankruptcy protection, laying off staff and leaving authors uncertain about their future as the company attempts a reorganization. Most reports about the D&M situation mention a number of other Canadian publishers who are no more, thanks to bankruptcies or financial reorganizations.

One inaccurate report in The Globe & Mail newspaper even went so far to assert that this latest news confirms the failure of the independent Canadian publishing industry. That assertion was alarming for two reasons.

The first reason is that it’s not true.

Focus On Media’s ‘Great Realignment’ at the ACT III Conference
October 25, 2012

Magazine publishers from a broad cross section of the industry spent two days presenting their best practices and innovative ideas for an era of transition during the third annual ACT III conference at the University of Mississippi. Like at the AMC in San Francisco last week, the underlying theme of the event was whether print media's best days are behind it. And if it is, the question was how long the decline will take, and how far down print will go.

And like at the AMC, there was no broad agreement...no one really knows what form the business will take

Publishers Fight Back Against Schoolbook Piracy
October 24, 2012

Textbook piracy is on the rise, spurred by the expense of course materials and the popularity of computer tablets and e-readers. Some in the publishing industry have likened the proliferation of book-sharing sites to the launch of Napster a decade ago. But learning from the missteps of the music industry, textbook publishers have been quick to embrace the new technology.

Until recently, the industry’s war on piracy has been focused on shutting down the numerous websites devoted to the illegal trading of textbooks. No one went after the users of BitTorrent file-sharing software…That changed last year, when John Wiley and Sons

Newsweek’s Print Shutdown not a Sign of Broader Magazine Troubles
October 22, 2012

Newsweek’s decision to stop publishing a print edition after 80 years and bet its life entirely on a digital future may be more a commentary on its own problems than a definitive statement on the health of the magazine industry. Magazine ad revenue in the U.S. is seen rising 2.6 percent this year to $18.3 billion, according to research firm eMarketer. That would be the third increase in three years, driven mainly by gains in digital ad sales, though print ads are expected to be flat.

Paid magazine subscriptions were up 1.1 percent in the first half of the year

Magazines vs. Digital Startups
October 22, 2012

Simon Dumenco (of AdAge) has a question: Would you rather own a magazine, or a digital startup? He notes that some magazines are making real money these days, including Marie Claire, even as most digital startups fail. Old Media isn’t sexy, he says, but “a lot of magazines continue to be not only damn good businesses, but are doing better than ever.”

I don’t know about the better-than-ever thing: I’d need to see some numbers before I was persuaded on that front. At any given point in time, statistically speaking, some small set of magazines is going to be having a

AMC Day 2: Reality Sets in Around Print Challenges
October 18, 2012

One of the first speakers of the day [at the American Magazine Conference]—Ben Horowitz, technology entrepreneur and co-founder of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz—suggested that print will likely vanish completely as today’s younger consumers become the dominant generation. “Babies born now will never read anything in print,” he told the audience. “At the same time, people in their 40s and 50s will never stop reading print.”
   
Dr. Jeffery Cole, research professor and director of the Center for the Digital Future at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School, presented a similar scenario—print, he predicts, will eventually go away.

My Book Doesn’t Break When I Drop It
October 17, 2012

While charging up my MacBook Pro and iPad last week in Chicago, the latter slid off the bed and dropped to the floor. The power adaptor split into several pieces. Having this happen right before a 2.5-hour flight to Boston couldn’t have been more inconvenient.