Originally posted by obarz
Let me first attack your questions in their order and leave your attack to the end.
Er, I attacked you? What, you mean the Great White thing? Right, sorry, I was just emphasising the little fish/big fish metaphor. You know – POD is your subject, your area: your pond, as it were. You’re closely involved in publishing, you know a lot more about it than me – especially in terms of technics, details, etc; I just represent the interested consumer: you’re a big fish, I’m a little fish. I just picked the GWS because it’s a big fish; I didn’t consider other connotations.
Still, methinks the publisher doth protest too much. Although I agree with much of what you say, and I genuinely think that POD has great benefits to offer, I’ll chance my luck and swim around you a bit more. I can’t fully credit some of the assertions you make, based on your interpretation of the industry.
In the United States publishers have been on the decline in numbers--large publishers, that is. They have been combining and buying up smaller companies for about twenty years.
Surely, that results in the same thing. Indeed, you go on to say that
"three biggies control the preponderance of books offered". In fact, you go further:
The large publisher and large bookseller seek to remain that way by insuring large sales. In agreeing as to how to do this, much of the market can be controlled by focusing it on known commodities…
Okay, agreed. But another way to look at it is that the huge profits made from these commodities (such as bestsellers, the prime example) enable the creation of new imprints for less populist writers, and/or give new works marketing exposure and retail availability that vast corporate platforms provide. The percentage of profits used for this may be small but – though I take your point about smaller publishers using a higher turnaround percentage – even the small % is an immense financial amount compared to the higher % of the (let’s say) POD publisher. Furthermore, it has a trickle-down effect; for example, if a new book (particularly a new kind of book, an unprecedented sub-genre; recently Alternative Health, Popular Science, New Age, etc) is published by a big company, and becomes an unexpected success, the market expands as similar books follow it. Publishers great and small jump on the bandwagon, new writers get the chance to be published, and it’s all because the first book had enough money and commercial savvy behind it to get the all-important media interested. And, taking it back one stage further, one reason why this is possible is because Tom Clancy sells millions.
So, when you say
"Focusing in this manner leaves little room for "experimental" publishing", I contest the validity of that point.
Publishers can now be tiny and yield a profit (a tiny profit, yes, but a profit nonetheless). This it can do because of the new technology that doesn't require heavy investment and the concommitant number of sales to "wash" that investment.
However, the numbers in terms of units moved are much lower. That’s what I mean about POD potentially triggering the contraction of the industry.
The large publisher will happily continue along doing big print runs… [which produces] lots of money (generated through lots of sales) to make the public aware of the existence of the book through saturation marketing.
Once again, although it is true, you do not address the fact that this process has worked equally successfully for "non-commodity" books published by those companies.
My example is the example that everyone uses to discuss this problem, the fiction bestseller. That's hardly what publishing is about.
A lot of people would probably take issue with you there. Most of them would be bookbuyers, general consumers. It’s not for you or me or anyone – even Barnes & Noble! – to dictate what publishing is or isn’t about.
With small and tiny publishers now issuing tons and tons of new titles, the potential for spontaneous purchase would seem to be increasing. The wonderful resource that the reader now has to find just about anything on Amazon.com, B&N.com, and others, is stupendous.
I buy books online, as do most people I know. It is not something that’s going to go away – certainly not until Amazon folds (ha!) anyway. Nevertheless, most spontaneous purchases – of anything, not just books – still occur in shops, when a consumer walks in and (crucially) picks something tangible up to have a look. That can’t happen online, and not even the best Special Order service can make a book appear instantly.
(One assumes that if a bookstore operator gets repeated orders for a given book that they will soon enough shelve it.)
Or they might think that all the people who were going to buy it have now done so, and move on to the next thing. Depends what it is, really. And that goes back to not dictating what publishing is/should or isn’t/shouldn’t be about.
…
So, obarz, I am not an ungentle reader; just a thinking one. I hold the same affection for This World of Books as you do, so clearly. There are just some potential dangers attached to this new form of publishing. They may never be actualised. But talking them over – perhaps laying them to rest – doesn’t do any harm.
Tobytook