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Death of Print (Vol. 79): Weekly High Five
HighFive 300x275 Death of Print (Vol. 79): Weekly High Five

Weekly High Five lists the most interesting, compelling, and/or useful links of each week.

Weekly High Five lists the most interesting, compelling, and/or useful links of each week.  This week’s theme looks (tongue in cheek) at the “Death of Print.” I kid because I love. Print isn’t dead (or dying) but it is getting beaten to within an inch of its life and is going to need some serious cosmetic surgery after the beating is over.

#5: Changes to the Marketing Budget Landscape in 2011

I can hear the newspapers, magazines, telemarketers, and radio stations now – “Nothing to see here. Move along.” This chart from MarketingSherpa is about as surprising as the sun rising in the morning and shows that 2011 is going to be another year for the trees to rejoice.

chartofweek 01 25 11 lp Death of Print (Vol. 79): Weekly High Five

Link: MarketingSherpa

#4: Amazon’s e-book sales beat paperbacks

More good news for trees was revealed with Amazon’s earnings report last week, when they reported that they are selling more Kindle e-books than paperbacks.

Link: USA Today

#3: Ebooks Hit the Big Time With Amazon Singles and TEDBooks

This announcement from Amazon came out just days before they revealed the e-book vs. paperback sales figures. It’s a long-awaited move by Amazon to get their paws on the exploding popularity of self-published e-books. By lending credibility and “gravitas” to this category of books, the publishing world continues to transform itself.

Link: Hubspot

#2: How ready is the publishing industry for 2011?

This presentation by Forrester for Digital Book World (DBW) presents some figures that show how publishers are preparing themselves for the “printpocalypse.”



Link: Slideshare

#1: Digital Book World: Content>Consumer; Tweet Notes, Wrap-Up

Bob Mayer is a NY Times Best-Selling multi-published author. He is a West Point graduate, served in the Infantry and Special Forces (Green Beret) commanding an A-Team and as a Special Forces operations officer, and was an instructor at Fort Bragg. In this blog post, he takes exception to some assertions made at Digital Book World and offers some interesting insight and predictions about the future of books and book stores.

Link: Write It Forward

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High Five for Week Ending 7-Mar

Published on March 7, 2010 by in High Five

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High Five for Week Ending 7-Mar
HighFive 300x275 High Five for Week Ending 7 Mar

Weekly High Five lists the most interesting, compelling, and/or useful links of each week.

This week’s High Five is about protecting and promoting content.

#5: DMCA Muscle Kills DVD Copying, for Real

I’ve been covering several different lawsuits in which the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) is prosecuting a scorched earth assault against its own customers guilty of piracy.  While those arguments are about the punishment fitting the crime, this story is much more disturbing because it deals a serious body blow to the “fair use” aspect of copyright protection.  This is the principal that makes it legal to make a copy of a CD (music, program, or otherwise) for your own personal backup purposes.  However, in this case a judge has ruled that the crime exists in the breaking or bypassing of any encryption.

Link: Wired

#4: Bogus Copyright Claim Silences Yet Another Larry Lessig YouTube Presentation

This story is a preview of things to come.  In previous “High Five” posts, I’ve linked to articles about legislation that could threaten net neutrality by compelling Internet Service Providers to police their user base for copyright violations.  If forced to do so, it will lead to several undesirable side effects.  First, and most obvious, it will increase prices as these service providers will have to invest in additional resources to police their own customers (not to mention insurance policies for increased risk).  Second, it will lead to far more restrictive policies as their terms of use will no doubt give them final say in what is or is not acceptable – legal standards will not be applicable because they will be more concerned with avoiding litigation than their own users’ rights.  Finally, this story is obviously an example of an automated software application that is simply looking for digital footprints and stomping them out with extreme prejudice and no room for fair use.

Link: TechDirt

#3: Apple Stacks The Deck Against Amazon’s Kindle App

It’s no great secret that the true source of success for many devices is the “killer app.”  The most famous example is VisiCalc for the Apple II.  The real secret to Apple’s domination of the personal MP3 player market was the iTunes store.  This article discusses the potential impact of the iPad’s e-reader application being directly linked to the iStore, and how a couple of mouse clips could be a serious impediment to Amazon’s Kindle Reader application.

Link: Business Insider

#2: How The Newspaper Business Killed Itself

John Dvorak is no shrinking violet, and has been making bold assertions and predictions for many years.  In this article, he makes the case that the New York Times’ decision to begin charging for online access is another example of the industry shooting itself in the foot.  Like most brash pundits’ predictions, the vast majority of his predictions prove not to be true and I actually disagree with his opinion on this latest move by the times.  So why am I including it?  Because in describing the newspaper business’ past sins, he uses the simplest and single best metaphor I’ve read on the subject.  After describing how publishers reacted to declining revenues as a result of underestimating the effects of online classifieds by laying off beat writers, he concludes that “It was like attempting to fix a flat by letting the air out of the rest of the tires.”  Perfect.

Link: PC Magazine

#1: What The Heck Is Inbound Marketing (and how you can maximize it) With Brian Halligan

Inbound Marketing” is the single most important concept that will determine the degree to which businesses, associations and individuals will be able to spread their ideas and gain visibility.  In this interview, David Garland speaks with Hubspot CEO Brian Halligan, who literally wrote the book on Inbound Marketing.  If you take the time to watch this video (and I hope you do), I encourage you to think about the concept of inbound marketing for your own personal online identity as well as that of your organization’s.

Link: The Rise to the Top

Feel free to provide your thoughts and/or contributions…

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Reading Is Expensive

Published on February 20, 2010 by in Featured Content, Tech Trends

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Reading Is Expensive

iStock 000010028959 267x300 Reading Is ExpensiveThe human brain uses 20% of the body’s energy while accounting for just 2% of its mass – a whopping 900% premium.  It generates 25 watts of power each day and demands 15% of the heart’s output.  The average reader can comprehend 120 words per minute,  taking nearly fourteen hours to read a typical novel (100k words) at a cost of almost 1,000 calories (or 4.2 kJ), 164 gallons of blood (or 622 liters) and nearly $300 in lost wages (theoretically for average U.S. wage earner at $21/hour).

In terms of energy, blood flow, and time, reading is very slow, expensive, and inefficient.

I think this raises some interesting questions, such as:

  • As an author,
    what is the return on brain-investment for reading my article, novel, or blog post?
  • As a publisher,
    how do I convince the reader to invest in my product(s)?
  • As a device manufacturer,
    how can I make the reading experience most brain-efficient and enjoyable?

Reading for Effect Versus Purpose

It seems to me that there are two reasons for reading; effect or purpose.  Reading for effect is essentially fulfilling some internal, emotional need like escapism, voyeurism, arousal, etc…  Put simply, it’s entertainment and entertainment plays by different rules than other products.  We are, generally speaking, much more willing to give up two hours of our lives to have a good cry Reading Is Expensive or watch a bunch of explosions Reading Is Expensive than to read chapter 12 of our favorite physics textbook.  Reading for enjoyment is an activity that not everyone enjoys, but those who do are willing to invest for the pleasure and emotional fulfillment it brings; they are not necessarily calculating an ROI.

Reading for purpose means doing so specifically for achieving some goal or outcome, or put another way, because one needs to and not necessarily because one wants to.  Reading for educational purposes, staying informed, or as part of one’s job are examples of reading for purpose.  This category is far more sensitive to the high cost of reading than the former.  For example, most people who read newspapers will skim the articles looking for interesting stories, and then skim the story to see if it is worth the investment.  One does not skim War and PeaceThe Catcher in the Rye, or The Lord of the Rings.

2641590444 34f371cec2 b 300x199 Reading Is Expensive

Pacific Coast Highway (Creative Commons license via Frank Kehren's Flckr stream)

I would liken these to the difference between a pleasure ride down the Pacific Coast Highway and commuting to work.  You are performing the same task (driving), using the same tool (car), perhaps for the same amount of time, and maybe even with the same person(s).  Yet everything about the drive is different.  In the case of the former, it’s about enjoying the journey, whereas in the latter it is all about reaching your destination as quickly, efficiently, and painlessly as possible.

Implications

There are obvious implications to looking at reading in these two contexts.  Obviously, it behooves the content producers and consumers to understand whether their writing is intended to be a journey or a destination.  Once this is understood, certain strategies and tactics become clear.

For Authors

When writers intend to take their readers on a journey, the style and tempo must be a cognitive banquet.  The experience itself is the return on the reader’s investment.  Efficiency gives way to pace and style takes precedence over not burying the lead.  When writing for purpose, however, the author must understand that from the first word of the title onward, the reader is calculating the return on her investment and may cancel at any time it seems like the deal isn’t profitable enough.  As such, it is important to introduce the value proposition early on (i.e. don’t bury the lead) and get to the point quickly.  Of course, sprinkling in some color so that the reader enjoys the journey won’t hurt a bit either.

For Publishers

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Nothing says "romance" like a black and white printout taped to a light pole (Creative Commons license via sixes & sevens Flickr stream)

Readers interested in going on a journey will evaluate content much like shopping for a vacation.  Cost is always a factor, but so is scenery, adventure, luxury, relaxation, romance, etc…  Therefore, packaging and marketing are going to mean a lot.  It must appeal to the prospective reader on an emotional level and promise to fulfill not only their needs, but desires as well.  Purpose readers, on the other hand, are hunters scrutinizing the landscape for prey.  They will be intent on getting to their destination as quickly and efficiently as possible; a pleasant journey is a fringe benefit and not a primary concern.

Newspapers are perched precariously between both of these paradigms, and so they have a tough job balancing them.  There are news reports, stock quotes, classified advertisements, and other assorted facts and items people want to quickly scan and read if they perceive some return on investment.  Other sections, like essays, travel, or editorials are much more about journey and need to be packaged and delivered differently.

Business to business publications are by and large firmly entrenched in the purpose-reading camp.  Their mission is to deliver industry-relevant information in a non-biased and convenient format.  They face issues of timeliness, relevancy, and ubiquity.  Timeliness is an issue in the age of real time search, self-publication, and social networking.  Answers are frequently a few mouse clicks and moments away, so a weekly or monthly publication is at a disadvantage.  Relevancy is an issue for similar reasons.  Readers are able to find very specific information on obscure subjects relatively easily, while publications are always trying to balance completeness against overload.  Ubiquity is a reference to the fact that publishers can’t always be in the right place at the right time.  Publish your information on your web site, and the reader may not have it available during that lunch meeting with a vendor.  Publish your information in print, and the reader no doubt will have thrown it out before realizing they needed it.  The challenge in B2B publishing is not as much marketing or style as it is timeliness, relevancy, and ubiquity.  They need to have the information the reader wants at the time he wants it, where he wants it.  But just as importantly, it must be in at an acceptable brain-cost.

For Device Manufacturers

I recently wrote that the iPad is heralding the age of content.  There has been much discussion about the impact it will have on print media and other existing content consumption devices.  If you accept the argument that reading for effect is much less sensitive to cost factors and substitute forms, then the likely conclusion is that the iPad (and subsequent tablet products) will have a different effect on different types of content.  If the key to reading for effect is the experience, then I submit that appliances like the iPad and other color readers deliver a superior experience to books.  Content of this type is also inoculated against infection from other forms of media like video.  When reading for purpose, however, it remains to be seen whether the efficiency and usability can be improved when compared to a computer.  But with the (assumed) increased availability of high quality video, which is a more efficient means for acquiring information, reading for purpose is going to be marginalized to some degree.  The key for the device manufacturers is to understand the features that will address each of these types of reading.

The Bottom Line

As Clay Shirky brilliantly observed, we don’t live in a world of information overload but a world with filter failure.  Part of the price of that failure is shorter attention spans and greater sensitivity to the expense of reading.  As more solutions evolve and improve our ability to filter, it would be easy to conclude that it will be more difficult for authors and publishers to get their content “through the walls” and to their audience.  But I rather believe that the filters won’t simply get stronger, they will get better.  This means that it will actually be easier for readers to find the content they are truly interested in and be more willing to pay the brain-price.  However, I think this also spells doom for purveyors of broad swaths of content like newspapers and magazines.  Once these filters get sophisticated enough, readers will be able to find the very best of the content they want with laser precision.  Rather than subscribing to a sports magazine like Sports Illustrated, readers can subscribe to “stories about the New England Patriots, Boston Red Sox, any player named Horatio, or cricket matches played in the southern hemisphere on a Monday.”  Publishers of “reading for purpose” content are going to have to find a way to deal with this paradigm.

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High Five for Week Ending 3-Jan

Published on January 3, 2010 by in High Five

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High Five for Week Ending 3-Jan
HighFive 300x275 High Five for Week Ending 3 Jan

Weekly High Five lists the most interesting, compelling, and/or useful links of each week.

This week’s High Five is as close as I’m going to get to any sort of “best of,” “worst of,” or “top x” post for the new year.  Rather, it’s a look forward that may be best described as “The Times They Are A Changin’.”

#5: It Was a Facebook Christmas; Site Hits #1 in US For First Time

This is an important milestone that I think is going to largely be brushed aside as an interesting but not terribly surprising fact.  When Facebook is a more common destination than Google, it’s worth taking note.  Why?  We all know what Willie Sutton’s answer would be; “Go where the money is… and go there often.” (That’s right, apparently he never really said the quote that is most commonly attributed to him.)  Facebook is where the people are, which means the money and opportunity are both there (see “The Future of Software Is… Facebook?!?!“).

Link: Read Write Web

#4: Apple Tablet Will Launch in 2010 — This Time, For Sure

Last week’s High Five included a story about downloads for the Amazon Kindle eclipsing “real” book sales on Christmas day.  This is illustrative of the size and scope of the move away from printed materials to e-books and the rumored announcement of a new product from Apple is likely the next battle ground in the “Print v. Digital” war.

Link: PC World

#3: Adding Fees and Fences on Media Sites

The battle for paid versus free content will loom large over the next decade.  Though I have my own opinions about what may or may not happen, the truth is that the combination of technology developments and innovation are too complex and fickle to predict.  It will be fascinating to see how this turns out, but as Clay Shirky predicts, it may take as long as fifty years to fully play itself out.

Link: New York Times

#2: Twitter and Me! Why It’s The Only Social Media Tool I Use.

Explaining Twitter is hard.  This article is written by a self-described “tech entrepreneur trapped in academia” and is hands-down the best articulation of Twitter’s value proposition (for non-celebrities) I’ve ever read.  It’s a short article and I highly recommend it if you a) don’t “get” Twitter or b) have an opinion of it that ranges anywhere between negative and neutral.

Link: Tech Crunch

#1: My only prediction for 2010 and it ain’t pretty

Are our copyright laws under assault?  Is the entertainment industry on the brink of stealing the Internet from us?  I’m not sure because I don’t know enough about it right now, but I do know two things: 1) The entertainment industry is on my list of the slimiest, least trustworthy groups of people I know and they are teaming up with the supreme ruler of slimy organizations; the US Congress. 2) I will be paying attention to this story.

Link: The Inquisitr

Feel free to provide your thoughts and/or contributions…

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High Five for Week Ending 27-Dec

Published on December 27, 2009 by in High Five

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High Five for Week Ending 27-Dec
HighFive 300x275 High Five for Week Ending 27 Dec

Weekly High Five lists the most interesting, compelling, and/or useful links of each week.

Well, because of the holidays this was a very slow news week!  Nevertheless, I’ve been able to assemble a list of interesting links, but with no particular theme.

#5: Average Net user now online 13 hours per week

From the “We Kinda Knew That Already” department, statistics show that 80% of adults spend some time online every week (excluding email) and that they spend an average of 13 hours there.   The most active demographic is 30 – 39 year olds.

Link: CNET

#4: Amazon Sold More Kindle Books Than Physical Books On Xmas

From the “Long Tail Pricing Model” department, Amazon continues to change the landscape of consumerism.  Much like recording artists are learning that (lower cost) online downloads are earning them more revenue than ever, authors may soon find out that they too can earn more money from higher volume sales of lower margin products.

Link: The Business Insider

#3: What a Bestselling Author Can Teach You
About Hooking Your Readers

From the “Better Communication Through Storytelling” department and on the heels of my recent post, “ABC: Always Be Collecting” comes this handy article that provides some insight on how to hook your readers.  I think this is applicable beyond the scope of blogging and can be leveraged in emails, memos, job postings, etc…

Link: Copyblogger

#2: 10 non-PowerPoint books that can help you create better presentations

From the “Coming Attractions” department, this post contains a list of books recommended by presentation revolutionary Garr Reynolds.  I’ll be publishing a very interesting post tomorrow about how dramatically my presentation style has been influence by his book “Presentation Zen.”  Be sure to check out all of the before and after screen shots that illustrate this step change by incorporating principles of design and storytelling.

Link: Presentation Zen

#1: Online Footprint Survey

From the “Shameless Self-promotion” department, I am asking readers to fill out this short survey about their online profile.  The winner will be announced on the Domesticating IT Facebook fan page.

Link: Survey Monkey

Feel free to provide your thoughts and/or contributions…

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