And even Friday, as I was writing this article, Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch made a very nice reference to my Andrew Wylie interview (http://bit.ly/2tdvKpe), but he wrote that Wylie was «interviewed by FBF's Publishing Perspectives.»
In Kobo Continues To Press Case To Preserve Agency in Canada
at Publishers Lunch, Michael Cader catches us up on some interesting statements being made in legal proceedings there.
Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch is offering an important caveat, noting that The State of Digital Publishing in Canada, an annual report, is a survey of 50 responding publishers, not the marketplace data exercise we frequently see conducted by Nielsen or NPD and others.
In Bowker: Number of self - published books up 287 % since 2006, Laura Hazard Owen picks up on points raised by Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch:
In his recent New Insights on eBook Unit Sales from Nielsen, Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch had a couple of explanatory paragraphs about how the traditional publishing market action is reported.
As Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch points out in Ingram to Distribute Amazon NY's eBooks, the deal with Ingram's Core Source services arrives just in time.
Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch is reporting that Kobo Writing Life (the self - publishing platform) terms and conditions have been updated to tell indie authors that they'll be paid from a monthly pool of overall subscription income at Kobo Plus, «based on reads — counted when a user has read «at least 20 percent of the ebook» — with each book's read pro-rated from the pool at a rate of 60 percent of the list price.
Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch has reported that Penguin Random House is asking Amazon re-sellers «specifically how and from whom you are acquiring our books.»
Seth Godin: Not $ 40,000 but $ 216,783 (and counting) on Kickstarter Sarah Weinman
at Publishers Lunch wasn't caught off - guard when Godin's «Icarus Deception» Kickstarter bid flew sunward.
As Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch noted along with many of us, however, there's no way to know what the actual rate per page will be for a given month because of «Amazon's procedure of determining the final pool size after the month of reading / downloading has transpired.»
And this week, we have Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch on Simon & Schuster (S&S) where CEO Carolyn Reidy tells him:
And the rattling sabre of the price wars then passes to Weinman's colleague
at Publishers Lunch, Michael Cader.
Over
at Publishers Lunch, Michael Cader, in Kobo Expands Device Line, was raising up points from the Kobo presentation with a bit of call - and - response that might work well in a good Macon church, pausing for the Nook Amen!
In fact, I like that Sarah Weinman
at Publishers Lunch reported in Macmillan Expands eBook Library Lending to Total of 11,000 Backlist Titles the means by which we learned this:
In it, we went over some of the reactions to the American Association of Publishers» (AAP) recent numbers (based on the input of some 1,200 publishers), indicating that, as Michael Cader wrote
at Publishers Lunch, «ebook sales by established trade publishers are in decline.»
Back
at Publishers Lunch and in this current season, Cader writes about the new November statistics for this fall, a year later:
In his write, HBG Moves to Agency Lite with Amazon and Others, Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch (which requires a very worthwhile subscription) joins Owen in clarifying a couple of things about the publisher's sales practices on its new DoJ - settlement - mandated status:
Almost every commentator taking up this debate presses home that essential, inescapable problem, including Michael Cader in the first of two Ether - length posts («It's a quiet «news» day»)
at Publishers Lunch, The Discussion Over «Author Earnings» (Part 1).
This is according to data tabulated
at Publishers Lunch: http://lunch.publishersmarketplace.com/2014/07/daily-update-influence-kindle-unlimited-amazon-bestsellers-grows/.
In Kindle Lending Library Reaches Out to KDP Authors — With Cash, Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch writes up the inclusion of books self - published in the KDP program.
DeFiore is handily chasing Cader's big wave
at Publishers Lunch.
As Michael Cader
at Publishers Lunch wrote, what Mathrani said during an earnings call was this: «And just case in point, you've got Amazon opening brick - and - mortar bookstores and their goal is to open, as I understand, 300 to 400 bookstores — and it should sit back and say the last mile is all important.»
Okay, and here is John Sargent's response, from Macmillan, which also appears in full
at Publishers Lunch in the Jan. 30, 2010 edition:
Early in the melee Thursday, Sarah Weinman
at Publishers Lunch pointed out the reality of the situation:
She refers to Michael Cader's report
at Publishers Lunch, BN's Big Ask Is Back in the News.
Not exact matches
At the table near the top of the page, you will find: Sign up for the free version of
Publishers Lunch, our daily e-mail newsletter
Data Guy made his first appearance Wednesday (March 9) in a 35 - minute morning keynote presentation
at DBW 2016, and he followed it during the afternoon with a question and answer session with
Publishers Marketplace's /
Publishers Lunch's Michael Cader.
Publishers Lunch has led coverage of digital transitions for over a decade, and
at the same time is a prime example: Cader was a book packager prior to starting
Lunch and Marketplace.
If you look
at other publishing sites like ours, they all have payways,
publishers lunch, the book seller, digital book world, they all have subscriber only content, our news site, will ALWAYS BE FREE, but launching new things gets more attention on us, as long as we do new stuff and do nt step on any toes.
But yesterday,
Publisher's
Lunch reported that Setterfield had sold a novella described only as «a ghost story» to Emily Bestler
at her Atria imprint, for publication in fall 2013.
Industry newsletter
Publishers Lunch speculates that Random House may get a special nod
at Apple's March 2 announcement.
It is the first shot across the purchasing bow in big
publishers» efforts to reset ebook pricing above the loss - leader $ 9.99 price point and retake control over that pricing by moving from the wholesale selling model to an agency selling model (first reported exclusively in
Lunch Deluxe on January 19),
at least for ebooks published simultaneously with new hardcover releases.
At the second
Publisher's
Lunch of the Frankfurt Book Fair, the topic of discussion turned to digital content for children.
Those results «ratify that using devices for something (reading) that doesn't require a device
at all, and has worked perfectly well for centuries, may not be of obvious appeal to the bulk of readers,» says Michael Cader, founder of
Publishers Lunch, a digital newsletter.
Yesterday
at the Digital Book World conference in New York, Amazon's Russ Grandinetti, Senior Vice President for Kindle, was interviewed by Michael Cader of
Publishers Lunch and Mike Shatzkin of the IdeaLogical Company.
Michael Cader in Here
at the Hothouse in
Publishers Lunch writes «BookExpo America organizers continue to pull off the nifty trick of perpetuating an annual gathering for the US book industry that no one really needs anymore but lots of people still enjoy and find valuable.»
Maybe this is why
Publishers Lunch has a section called «People, Etc.» I think I sat pretty close to Etc.
at StoryWorld.
And just as Cader picked up on this for
Publishers Lunch, John Biggs
at TechCrunch has become interested — as I think many of us are — in Ward's mention of an author - specific approach.
This article was originally published in
Publishers Weekly, online
at www.publishersweekly.com and on Claire's blog at www.clairemckinneypr.com... At lunch with publicist friends, there's one question that we always se
at www.publishersweekly.com and on Claire's blog
at www.clairemckinneypr.com... At lunch with publicist friends, there's one question that we always se
at www.clairemckinneypr.com...
At lunch with publicist friends, there's one question that we always se
At lunch with publicist friends, there's one question that we always seem
From
Publisher's
Lunch back in 2009: ``... we've looked a little bit
at the confusingly broad distinctions in the Bowker counts of new titles published last year and tried to reckon with Amazon's unsubstantiated glimpse into rising Kindle sales.
I mean, look
at those old quotes from
Publisher's
Lunch: they've known for years that the official data they are getting from Nielsen or AAP or whoever is crap.
These «Nielsen numbers» for ebook and print sales get presented to the industry
at «
Publishers Launch» conferences and are cited in
Publisher's
Lunch articles titled «Real Data on Print Sales In The eBook Era — And the eBook Plateau.»
Publishers Lunch points out that much of the financial analysis in the report of the proposed buyout is inaccurate: Among other things, while the report says a $ 1 billion purchase price is «well below the price it had originally bought in
at,»
Publishers Lunch notes that because of the way the original investment was structured, this price would actually represent a small premium.
I've had
lunch or dinner with various people
at such companies or entities, have received or given (proprietary) hardware or free software from several of these
publishers, developers or platforms.