Category: Publishing

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The Future of Publishing in 4:33

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NLlGopyXT_g] We have to rethink…everything. (h/t: HarperStudio)

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Rise of the Publetariat

If you’re a self-published author or independent micro-press, these are very interesting times we’re living in as Amazon officially announced the new Kindle, major publishing companies are in meltdown mode, and the entire industry is scrambling to figure out what’s next. While following the Tools of Change Conference on Twitter, I came across an intriguing tweet from @indieauthor: #TOC

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Building Communities Around Content #TOC

Today kicked off the Tools of Change for Publishing Conference here in NY, and while I wasn’t able to attend, I was following it throughout the day on Twitter (#TOC), particularly via the Tweets of @annmichael, @RonHogan and @thewritermama, the latter of whom practically transcribed what appeared to be the highlight of the day: Building

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

The Problem With Self-Publishing

HarperStudio — one of a handful of publishers who really seems to understand how to use the internet and social media — is running a web poll on their home page right now that asks: “Are you less likely to read a book if it is self published?” As I write this, there have been

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Free Chapbook: Crazy White Devil

It’s been years since I created a chapbook. Six, to be exact. I released Selected Squares of Concrete — a de facto “best of” poetry collection of new, revised, never-before-released and old favorites — back in March of 2003, smack in the middle of the razor-thin slice of time between my return to the NYC

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

How the Internet (and Advertisers) Killed Journalism

The Atlantic has a must-read essay from James Warren, “When No News Is Bad News” (h/t @guykawasaki), that does an excellent job of putting into perspective how the Internet played a role in the death spiral of newspapers. Most interestingly, he makes it crystal clear how precarious the road ahead is for real journalism’s survival as a result, while

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Is the Future of Publishing…GOOD?

The bad news in the publishing industry didn’t let up last week as reports of cutbacks and layoffs and dramatically decreased revenues continued to pour in, and TheMediaIsDying tweeted every depressing bit of it, from major publications to small local radio stations, the rare bit of positive news they offered up paling in comparison. One

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Twitter Tips for Writers

I raved about my former Writer’s Digest colleague, Maria Schneider, a couple of weeks back — towards the end of a long rambling post that no one but my wife probably read — because she’s put together one of the best websites for writers out there at editorunleashed.com. She’s not only producing some great content including

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Is Print Advertising Dead?

Check out @themediaisdying on Twitter for a glimpse at the convulsions of an industry that’s either at death’s door or, for the more optimistically inclined, in the midst of a violent but necessary transformation. I’ve worked in magazine publishing for 15 years now — consumer, B2B and non-profit — and as has been noted pretty much

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

The Mind Reels

With only a few days remaining for last-minute surprises, 2008 has been one for the books on so many levels — personally, professionally, globally — the mind truly does reel. And reels, and reels, and reels… perhaps somehow what I imagine bonefishing might be like? (h/t to one of my newfound loves of the year,

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