LJNDawson.com, Consulting to the Book Publishing Industry
Blog Directory
Back to home.

Hot as a…Firebrand?

Well, we’re back after something of a summer hiatus, and of course there’s news to report. Weirdly, I’m reporting on myself. (It just feels…odd….)

After a whirlwind courtship that lasted all of about 5 days, Firebrand liked it (er, me) and put a ring on it. Me. Whatever. Anyway, as of today I am joining Fran Toolan and his superhot Firebranders as Content Chief, heading up their Content Services.

Yet another job I have no hope of explaining to my mother.

So what does this mean? It means I’m not consulting anymore but will happily refer people to the thoughtful and smart consultants I’ve been working with up till now. Otherwise, everything’s pretty much the same. I’ll still be involved in BISG. I’ll still be speaking and moderating and all the other things I do at conferences. I’ll still be doing #ISBNhour on Twitter.

And I’ll still be doing this newsletter. I’m keeping the LJNDawson.com website, because people have told me that they find it helpful – there’s a lot of good information on it.

So…why?

There are the usual reasons, of course. I love consulting – the independence is incredible. Building a practice is a wonderful creative experience. And I love my clients. But, of course, if you are independent you are at the mercy of market forces. Ahem.

So there’s that.

But I’ve been offered jobs before. For one reason or another, they weren’t a good fit for either me or the company in question, and I carried on with consulting. So what was it about THIS job that got my commitment?

I’ve known Fran Toolan for about 12 years. He is one of the smartest, most agile, and most incisive people in the book industry. He’s seen a lot – and he focuses heavily on the things that, in my own experience, are absolutely critical to publishers now: workflow, infrastructure. Metadata.

I’ve agreed with Fran for a long time about a lot of things, in other words. My own consulting practice has been directed at just those elements, as everybody knows. I live and breathe infrastructure; I pontificate about metadata at the drop of a hat; and, thanks to the StartwithXML project, agile workflow has been a cornerstone of my work since 2008.

So when Fran approached me, I naturally flipped out. He doesn’t know this yet, but I was DANCING around my apartment when I got off the phone with him. Because it was such an obviously good thing, a RIGHT thing.

I’m still dancing. You can see me up at the Firebrand Community Conference next week, bouncing a little in my blue shirt. (Yeah, Fran, about that shirt…)

Here’s the official press release. And yeah, I wrote my own comment at the end. Workflow. Infrastructure. Metadata. Deliciousness.

PRESS RELEASE

For Immediate Release: September 15, 2010

Laura Dawson Joins Firebrand as New Head of Content Services Initiative

September 15, 2010 — Newburyport, MA — Firebrand Technologies today announced that Laura Dawson has joined the company as Content Chief and head of Firebrand’s Content Services group. Laura Dawson is a 24-year veteran of the book industry who specializes in technology issues. As an independent consultant, Laura has worked with an impressive list of publishers and service providers, including McGraw-Hill, Cengage, Carson-Dellosa, Scholastic, Chuckwalla, Berrett-Koehler, Loyola University Press, Book Industry Study Group, Ingram Library Services, Audible, Harvard University Press, Yale University Press, and Dial-a-Book. Previously, she worked at Doubleday, Muze, Barnes & Noble.com and SirsiDynix. She is a leading voice on technology, standards and metadata issues and blogs frequently at LJNDawson Blog. She also serves as co-chair of the Book Industry Study Group’s Identification and Rights Committees.

Laura Dawson replaces Daniel Lee, who is leaving Firebrand to pursue a new direction as Managing Editor at the Bard Graduate Center in NYC.

“Laura Dawson is a natural addition to our team. Her unique voice, proven expertise and industry background will all be tremendous assets as Content Services is put into action. She understands perfectly our commitment to a unified approach to managing content and metadata, internally and throughout the publishing supply chain,” said Fran Toolan, Chief Igniter of Firebrand Technologies.

Firebrand announced the Content Services initiative in May 2010 as an integrated part of their Title Management Enterprise and Eloquence metadata distribution services. Content Services will be a major focus of Firebrand’s Community Conference next Tuesday and Wednesday September 21 and 22nd in Newburyport, MA—where Laura Dawson will make her debut as Content Chief.

“I’m so excited about joining the Firebrand team – Fran’s emphasis on infrastructure and workflow have been key elements in my own consulting to publishers over the years. I’m anxious to hit the ground running and get good work done for publishers and for the industry as a whole,” commented Laura.

About Firebrand Firebrand Technologies (www.firebrandtech.com) provides steadfast leadership and seamless information flow throughout the publishing process. Our newest addition, Content Services, helps publishers manage, store, convert and distribution final book content. Firebrand’s Title Management Solutions track titles from pre-acquisition through post-production; our Eloquence Metadata Solutions are the fastest, most accurate and cost-effective way to implement ONIX. NetGalley delivers digital galleys to professional readers; our Ecommerce Solutions help deliver direct-to-consumer sales and landing pages.

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Managing Joy

This week at the ECPA Executive Leadership Summit, Kelly Gallagher of Bowker reported that over a million ISBNs were produced in the last year.

I remember when the entire content of Books in Print was less than a million titles. That was 20 years ago.

Much of this is due to format proliferation, where the supply chain requires a separate ISBN for every format of a title, including digital formats. So the fact that an ISBN needs to be assigned to the Kindle format, and another ISBN to the Overdrive ePub file, and another ISBN to the Apple ePub file, and yet another ISBN to the PDF…yes, you can see how the ISBNs pile up.

And much of this is due to self-publishing – more people are publishing more books than ever before, because the barrier to entry in the book market has significantly gone done..

While many are ripping their hair out over metadata and identifier bloat in the supply chain – and yes, it IS worth ripping your hair out about – I would argue that a million ISBNs in the last year is a sign of something very very good. Something that many amazing people (Ramy Habeeb of Kotobarabia, Arthur Attwell of Electric Book Works, Pablo Francisco Arrieta) have been working towards.

A million ISBNs in the last year means that more books are available in more formats to more people than ever before.

It means that more books have the chance to get into more hands the world over than ever before in the history of books or hands.

And sure, a lot of these books are not going to last. Most of them, I’d say. But the point is, words and ideas have flooded the marketplace in an unprecedented way. We are living in an intensely creative time. And that is a cause for joy.

On a practical level…

How’re we going to manage all this joy?

Same way we manage everything else – with tools. We’ve got databases to handle metadata and identifiers. We’ve got XML tools to manage formats. We’ve got digital asset management systems to manage pictures and sound files and video files. We’ve got XML repositories and XML editors to manage words.

And with people. People who are passionate about (and creating order out of all this chaotic joy). People about ,a xhref="http://twitter.com/bsandusky">getting work discovered. People about – and people about . People who and . People who can by saying, ;

And people who can and begin to .

A million books created in a year – in the US alone! What a phenomenal achievement. And we are well-positioned to manage that joy into billions of hungry hands.

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Amazon Buying Lexcycle – Owning Stanza for iPhone

Amazon’s bought Lexcycle, the company that makes the Stanza e-reader for the iPhone. Stanza and Kindle are the leading ebook apps for the iPhone, so now Amazon has cornered that market without Apple having to invent an "iPod for books".

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

AMG/Macrovision Acquires Assets of Muze, Inc.

The press release just came out – Muze’s biggest competitor, AMG, has acquired the assets of Muze for $16.5 million in cash. What this means for staffers and programs in development is not made clear. I’ll have more as I know more.

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Still bleeding

Viacom announced this morning that it was laying off about 850 people – 7% of its staff. Gawker has the deets.

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Today We Bleed

Michael Cader’s had a lot to do today, issuing not one but TWO Publishers Lunches, and his news has been picked up virally and disseminated over Gawker, the New York Observer, and the Times.

As we all know by now, Markus Dohle has announced massive changes at Random House. Irwyn Applebaum is stepping down from Bantam. (His brother Stuart is still at RH.) Steve Rubin is renegotiating his position, as Doubleday is being absorbed into the mothership.

S&S has laid off 35 people. Harcourt Houghton Mifflin is also doing more bloodletting, though they refuse to comment on any of it.

Meanwhile, Hachette’s giving bonuses. My head just exploded.

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Oprah to endorse Kindle?

From Teleread, via Peter Brantley’s Read 2.0 listeserv:

"A Financial Times (FT) journalist believes that Oprah is likely to endorse the Kindle on her show on Friday. The front page of the Amazon store displays a teaser video featuring the talk show star; however, it is modified so that the gadget Oprah holds in her hand is hidden behind a superimposed light burst. The video ends with the injunction, "Watch the Oprah show, then order yours at Amazon.com."

Cader also adds that the side promotes a $50 off the Kindle offer.

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Microsoft bringing Live Search Books to a close

Via Peter Brantley, a link to the Microsoft Live Search blog:

Today we informed our partners that we are ending the Live Search Books and Live Search Academic projects and that both sites will be taken down next week. Books and scholarly publications will continue to be integrated into our Search results, but not through separate indexes.

This also means that we are winding down our digitization initiatives, including our library scanning and our in-copyright book programs. We recognize that this decision comes as disappointing news to our partners, the publishing and academic communities, and Live Search users….[W]e intend to provide publishers with digital copies of their scanned books. We are also removing our contractual restrictions placed on the digitized library content and making the scanning equipment available to our digitization partners and libraries to continue digitization programs.

OMGOMGOMG….

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Amazon to buy Audible

For $300 million, Amazon will be acquiring Audible.com – Amazon issued the press release this morning at 7 a.m. This is on the heels of the departure of COO Glenn Rogers.

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank

Glenn Rogers leaving Audible

Glenn Rogers, COO of Audible and an incredible, reasonable, smart, kind, awesome, all-around-good-guy-mensch, is leaving the company to go back to consulting. I worked with Glenn when I was consulting at Audible and he is fantastic.

Good luck, Glenn!

Bookmark this post: Add this post to del.icio.us Digg it! Add this post to Furl StumbleUpon it! Add this post to Technorati Add this post to Google Bookmarks Add this post to Windows Live Add this post to Netscape Add this post to BlinkList Add this post to Newsvine Add this post to ma.gnolia Add this post to Tailrank
Older Posts »
Developed by Codehead