Sentences with phrase «other publishers named»

Not exact matches

You can bet someone somewhere at Google, Netflix, Facebook or Amazon — or, insert any other household - name Internet business or publisher here — is live A / B testing this or that URL on unsuspecting users right now.
Fast forward to today and you'll find that other big - name publishers — like CNN, The Atlantic, and Wired — have followed suit, looking to online paywalls and subscription - based models to alleviate their financial woes.
Shel is the primary author of both Guerrilla Marketing to Heal the World (endorsed by Seth Godin, Jack Canfield, Cynthia Kersey, and many others) and the earlier Guerrilla Marketing Goes Green (named a Groundbreaking Indie Book by Independent Publisher magazine) and an international speaker.
Other names that have been publicly floated as potential bidders include Univision and Penske Media (the publisher of Variety and the Hollywood Reporter), but it's unclear who is actually planning to submit a bid.
By purchasing a Kirkus indie review, authors can have the opportunity to build some name recognition and get noticed by agents, publishers and other industry influencers.
The Telemediengesetz («Telemedia Act») requires that German websites must disclose information about the publisher, including their name and address, telephone number or e-mail address, trade registry number, VAT number, and other information depending on the type of company.
Other Republicans who have thrown their names into the ring or are likely to include former Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Joseph Lhota, Tom Allon, a publisher, and George McDonald, the head of a nonprofit that helps the homeless.
5.1.1 Remove, cover, obscure, or alter the authors» names or the Publisher's copyright notices, trademarks, logos, or other means of identification or disclaimers as they appear in the Licensed Materials;
Mudunuri declined to name the other publishers with which the company has cut deals.
However, nearly all have since been picked up by other publishers, with Ghostbusters: The Video Game and The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena landing at Atari and Brutal Legend finding a home at EA, to name a few.
While this would usually point toward an MMO of sorts with any other publisher, Red Dead Online echos the Grand Theft Auto Online name used for the multiplayer aspect of Grand Theft Auto V following its original release delay.
Yes, some other publishers have vanity presses, but they don't add their brand name to those ventures.
traditional publishers, but with the exceptions of Open Road Integrated Media and, possibly, Ruckus Media Group — both run by major publishing veterans, and have partnerships with a variety of «traditional» publishers — you'd be hard - pressed to name too many others that have had any truly notable impact to match the hype surrounding them at any given moment.
In other words, indie publishers, if you have a pen name, make all the stories and pen names under that name seem similar in covers and look, yet be different enough from book to book.
I just incorporated a company to do other business... can I publish using this umbrella name or should I create a new company under the bigger company to become a publisher or Press... thank you so much again
In other words, you are free to use your own publisher name on your actual book, book marketing, etc..
If you want to read other comments, usually how - to, in the 400 or so blogs at this site about any of the «open publishing» sites, go to the SEARCH box at the top, right, of the first page of this blog and type in the publisher's name (one at a time).
The presence of a recognizable publisher's name speaks to the technical quality of the book, a book that has benefited from the involvement of a copy editor, a developmental editor, and other team members.
You insist on clogging up the internet with your fake books and your lies and fake «awards» and fake publisher names (if you're so proud of being selfies, WHY DO YOU LIE???) and all the other schizophrenic, grandiose bullshit.
Meanwhile, Amazon is reported to be in discussion with several other domestic publishers, though no other names are available as yet.
Even if your book page on Amazon gives your publisher name, CreateSpace owns the ISBN and you / your publisher can not take the book to any other book distribution or sales outlets.
traditional publishers, but with the exceptions of Open Road Integrated Media and, possibly, Ruckus Media Group — notably, both are run by major publishing veterans and have partnerships with a variety of «traditional» publishers — you'd be hard - pressed to name too many others that have had any truly notable impact to match the hype surrounding them.
Face it: Your book is competing with millions of other titles — many by Big Name authors from major publishers — for the attention, consideration, and purchasing dollars of your target reader.
NOTE: The lack of ISBN and printing file ownership is the number one problem in dealing with pretty much any of the Vanity Publishers (Included in this group are Subsidy Publishers, POD Publishers, Supported Self Publisher or any other name they call themselves where you do not have full ownership of your ISBN and printing files)
Instead, you will be giving them right of first refusal, your right to publish with any other house under your name (not all publishers require this yet but more are going to it), ALL digital rights and other rights, even for technologies not yet invented, etc., etc., etc..
There are other reasons for the authors who fall between these extremes; all are stigmatized against by the big name publishers and chain bookstores.
Posted by Victoria Strauss for Writer BewareThe other day, I received this email: Dear Writer Beware, A couple of years ago, I published my mystery novel with [insert name of well - known deadbeat publisher here].
To find out what other authors have experienced, Google the name of the publisher and add the word «scam» at the end.
You have a better shot of getting your poetry book published with publishers that call themselves «vanity press», POD (Print on Demand) publishers, or other such names.
We've come a long way since the days when authors had no other option but to knock on the doors of agents and publishers — or failing that, from paying «vanity publishers» for the glory of seeing their name in print, along with 500 unsold copies languishing in the basement.
You simply input all of the necessary fields such as Name, Title, Cover Art, Series Name, Imprint, Publishers Name, and others.
A Rogue by Any Other Name by Sarah MacLean HarperCollins Publishers, Avon Books Carrie Feron, editor
It would be interesting to know if Overstock is actually doing as the name implies and gathering up leftover merchandise — in this case, books from publishing houses — or simply brokering the books directly from the publishers like any other retail outlet.
Amazon is also known to be holding talks with some other leading players of the Russian book publishing market, though no additional publishers names have been made public.
It's the few big names that pay for the others getting published, and yet, publishers act as if they never got it wrong.
One of the major holdouts in the settlement offers was Penguin Group, which also happens to be the publisher named more often than any of the other publishers involved in the investigation and resulting lawsuit.
You purchased an E-book that was published by Hachette, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Penguin, or Macmillan (as well as all other names under which these publishers also publish E-books), and 2.
Beyond other publishers whose titles allow for incorporating a name or photo, Put Me In The Story will eventually work for any title in the platform.
Smaller independent publishers or self published authors may also choose a name other than their own or that of their businesses to promote their book publishing work.
As for the name, in thinking about how self - publishers are distinct from other authors and publishers, I concluded it's the difference between operating as an individual and being part of a larger system.
Unless one is a huge name, we have reached the point where publishers do nothing for their authors other than put the physical books together and toss them out into the universe.
Beyond their reviewer access, big name traditional publishers also have well developed distribution networks of bookstores and other outlets.
You can't enter Amazon or the name of an actual publisher like Random House (or many other publishers you've never heard of).
It would probably be indiscreet to name names or give other identifiers, but there is one publisher who stands out from the herd as a case where writers would be well advised to have their manuscripts professionally edited before submission — or indeed after acceptance.
Based on Kristine Rusch's information, traditional publishers cooperate in launching new releases that will not overlap with other big name titles through their «informal» discussions.
Traditional publishers will trying other means of rights grabs — possibly with more «House Names» both as work - for - hire and fitting superficially similar books into them, if they are sold entirely to the publisher and the publisher registers the copyright in the company name.
What traditional publishers are doing is relying upon those handful of big name authors entirely as their publishing model, forgetting that the majority of their «other» sales are what makes them the money.
One other friend of mine left he was in the real estate space wrote a book with with a major publishing house and then a few years later stopped he left real estate and went into a really strong personal development business and the publisher went up well you're not promoting this book anymore and they took his book word - for - word and put somebody else's name on the cover of it and just put a new introduction on it no credit to anybody he had worked because he had two co-authors help him with it because he's dyslexic so they essentially were the ones that wrote it and he provided a lot of the content and the publisher gave those other authors no credit took his name off and put somebody else's name on the front and then the publisher was 100 % within their rights to do it so you know there's a lot of things that I challenge people to kind of think about what's important and if you're putting all your expertise into this book you want to make sure that somebody's negotiated a heck out of it giving you a contract that actually makes sense for you and your business.
There are other writers I enjoy reading who are also not on Twitter, which seems like a career - damning thing to do, although most of them are established writers with high level platforms in the form of big name publishers or national magazines and papers.
All these guides give the publication date, the title of the used work, the name of the article, place of publication, publisher and other information concerning the book you used.
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