Saturday, January 19, 2008
Is A Long Way Gone Just A Thousand Little Pieces?
Thus far, there has been no response from Farrar, Straus and Giroux the US publisher and I hope there is some reasonable explanation for the identified problems in this book. Beah has gone on to become a United Nations advocate for children affected by war as well as a frequent spokes person in support of his book. This is important work and it would be horrible if this work were impacted. The Australian is an important news organization in Australia so they will not have taken this story lightly.
The disparities in Beah's account came about through some very elemental research by someone who had just read the book and then found themselves working in Sierra Leone. It doesn't appear that it took too much effort to find these errors. It remains to be seen if this escalates into a Frey type melt down or the record is corrected in some minor inconsequential way.
More from The Australian: Here
Monday Update: Here
Friday, January 18, 2008
Quebecor Update
Failing the Test
Much of the work is done by five giants: CTB/McGraw-Hill, Educational Testing Service, Harcourt Assessment, Pearson Educational Measurement and Riverside Publishing. Together, the companies own about 90 percent of the state-testing business, which has become a $1.1 billion industry since passage of the federal No child Left Behind Act in 2001. The law, which took effect in January 2002, requires states to give annual reading and math tests to third- through eighth-graders, and to test students in those subjects once again in high schoolThe absence of both Federal guidelines and consistency from state to state has also created significant disparity in testing approaches and effectiveness. This coupled with a tendency to manipulate the test outcomes - thereby making the educators look more effective - has some worried that the objectives in the testing program are compromised.
“States are not putting any more resources into the testing infrastructure, and as a result, we are getting testing on the cheap, and that is working against No Child Left Behind’s efforts to produce high-quality assessments that promote higher standards,” said Thomas Toch, the co-director of Education Sector, a nonpartisan think tank. “If we’re going to make tests the driver of quality in public education, then we need to invest to ensure that we get tests that are up to that task.”There is little doubt that the testing business will continue to grow. In the absence of 'no child left behind' teachers and administrators have now 'drunk the cool aid' and understand that they can use testing to their own advantage. Ironically, without uniform objectives, practices and policies it is the students who will be left disadvantaged. There is much more in the article.
One Man's Trash...
Courier Struggles
From the press release:
"We were hit by simultaneous challenges on both sides of our business this quarter," said Courier Chairman and Chief Executive Officer James F. Conway III. "In book manufacturing, despite all indications pointing to another full year of strong sales in education, textbook reprint orders were unexpectedly slow this fall, sharply reducing the segment's capacity utilization and profitability even as we continued to gain share. Normally, publishers order textbook reprints during the fall to spread manufacturing workloads throughout the year, but this year a variety of industry factors significantly reduced that order flow. In publishing, Creative Homeowner sales continued to be held back by reduced consumer traffic at home improvement centers, its most important sales channel.
The stock is trading at $26.01 which is a 52week low.
Thursday, January 17, 2008
George Wins Lottery
Despite me, George went on to build a huge solo career and release popular albums during the 1990s. He hasn't done much recently unless you count arrests for recreational drug use, driving while intoxicated and performance of lewd acts in public. Some might say he was better at those than singing. Certainly more consistent. George was in the last episode of Extra's where he basically owned up to all of those 'errors of judgement' in a very hilarious way. Well done George.
Yesterday his autobiography became another in a long list of expensively purchased celebrity blather. I am sure everyone is all a twitter about whether George is going to name names and that can really be the only reason why any publisher would consider this a potential commercial success. According to Harpercollins, George is one of the most popular pop figures in the world and has an 'extraordinary story' to tell. They forgot to add the bit about 'humble upbringings' and his 'life of adversity'. HC has paid 'millions' and the deal is 'one of the biggest ever concluded in British publishing'
Will the book soar into the stratosphere or plummet like a stone. One thing is certain, I did my part back in 1990 and the book is not getting into the PND household. What more could he have to say that we don't already know?
Press Association
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Jobs Kicks the Kindle
Unfortunately, that's hard to take seriously and I would have expected better. I would always have given Apple and Jobs more credit in understanding market dynamics and trends. On the surface his comment is partly accurate, but there is no cause and effect here.Mr. Jobs can be like that when he assesses the competition.
Today he had a wide range of observations on the industry, including the Amazon Kindle book reader, which he said would go nowhere largely because Americans have stopped reading.
“It doesn’t matter how good or bad the product is, the fact is that people don’t read anymore,” he said. “Forty percent of the people in the U.S. read one book or less last year. The whole conception is flawed at the top because people don’t read anymore.”
Does this mean we aren't about to see books on the iPhone in quantity? Of course, it could be misinformation.
From another perspective, it has been the media industry and the publishing community specifically that has kept this company (Apple) relevant for the past 15years (at least) via their loyal devotion to the Mac platform. To all those dedicated authors, marketing and design professionals in the publishing industry locked into the Apple mystique this comment should come as a kick in the processor.
Future of Bibliographic Control
Here is a sample from their executive summary:
The report also states that they want the report to generate a wider discussion - a "call to action" that will lead to more specific plans and recommendations.The Working Group envisions a future for bibliographic control that will be collaborative, decentralized, international in scope, and Web-based. The realization of this future will occur in cooperation with the private sector and with the active collaboration of library users. Data will be gathered from multiple sources; change will happen quickly; and bibliographic control will be dynamic, not static.
The Report is based on the key premise that the community is at a critical juncture in the evolution of bibliographic control and information access/provision. It is time to take stock of past practices, to look at today’s trends, and to project a future path consistent with the goals of bibliographic control: to facilitate discovery, management, identification, and access of and to library materials and other information products. Libraries must work in the most efficient and cooperative manner to minimize where possible the costs of bibliographic control, but both the Library of Congress and library administrators generally must recognize that they need to identify and allocate (or, as appropriate, reallocate) sufficient funding if they are serious about attaining the goals of improved and expanded bibliographic
control.
Cruising for a Lawsuit
SMH
Edge Boston (Where they name the author 'Thomas' Morton).
Pearson Near Sale of FT Deutchland
Bloomsbury Guidance
Full year results will be released on April 1st.
Bloomberg
Guardian
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
LiveMocha Update
Seattle Post
Prior Post
(I am personally interested in this due to my work at Berlitz many years ago).
Amazon: The law est un idiot
As the Trib notes, this fine will be reviewed after 30 days and if the government(court) really wants to penalize them the fine will be raised substantially and so will end this symbolic effort. However, perhaps the court will recognize the ground swell of support (after all who wants to pay for something they could get for free - even the French agree that) and take the view that this is a archaic rule. Perhaps they will be enlightened and lower the fine.
From the Trib:
The 1981 Lang law was passed at a time when booksellers were losing sales to supermarkets and other new competitors. It was meant to assure that the French public had equal access to a wide variety of books, both high-brow and low-brow, not just heavily marked-down publications. The law has twice come before the European Court of Justice and both times it has been affirmed. The law is not considered anti competitive because all book retailers are held to the same standard, Manara said. In the Amazon case, a union of French bookstores won its lawsuit against the company last month over the free-shipping offer, which applies only to deliveries within France on book orders of more than €20.
Stay tuned to this riveting story.
Quebecor Gains Lifeline
Some analysts had suggested that declaring bankruptcy would have been both a better course of action and a recognition of the inevitable. Management and the primary owner believed bankruptcy to be the worse possible option. According to The Canadian Press, Tricap has been involved in a similar rescue in Canada when they stepped in to provide funds for Steelco which was in administration at the time.
Globe and Mail - Updated
Other posts
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Queen Victoria On The Hudson
Serves 8 to 10
Of course, had I been more inspired I would have pictures; but it is just a matter of time.Caramelized Bacon
You can make this up to 3 days in advance. Keep in a tightly sealed container at room temperature. This is a dish that can’t be ruined. You can freeze the leftovers. But why are there leftovers?1 pound bacon
1 1-pound box light brown sugar (about 2 ¼ cups).1. Go to a butcher and spend as much money as you have on very good bacon. Cut it into medium-thick slices, say, 3\16 of an inch.
2. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Line a large, rimmed cookie sheet with parchment paper. Dump a box of brown sugar into a big bowl. Light brown sugar is best, but if you want to use dark brown, I won’t stop you. Add ¼ cup of water, so that the sugar becomes more than damp but less than soupy. Some bacon caramelizers add a dash of cayenne pepper, but I think this makes the dish too nutritious.
3. Dredge the bacon in the sugar, one slice at a time. If the sugar isn’t sticking to the bacon, add some more water a teaspoon at a time until it sticks. (By the way, you won’t use all of the sugar, but it’s good to have extra.) Place the bacon strips on the paper. I then smear some sugar on top of the bacon, on the theory that if a little sweet is good, more is better.
4. Place the bacon in the oven. It’s impossible for me to tell you how long to cook the bacon because it depends on whether you like it chewy or crispy. Some recipes tell you to keep it in the oven for 8 to 13 minutes per side, depending on the thickness of the bacon. I keep it in on the longer side. You should take yours out when it resembles the kind of bacon you would like to eat. Cut it into roughly 1 1/2-inch triangles. Serve at room temperature. Serves 8 to 10.
Friday, January 11, 2008
Borders Reports Holiday Sales
These results reflected 'continuing operations' and the company included international operations in the press release. International revenues increased 36% including currency gains. Sames store comps were driven by strong performance in Australia. (It makes one wonder why they need to sell up down-under but I've already made that observation).
The real crux of these results is the impact they have on operating margin and as B&N were sanguine about their full year results and adjusted eps accordingly, this is what George Jones had to say about Borders results:
Still, the overall holiday shopping environment was intensely promotional and impacted the bottom line more than we anticipated. As a result, we anticipate fourth quarter consolidated operating earnings per share from continuing operations (excluding non- operating charges and discontinued operations) to be flat to down slightly compared to last year's $1.45 per share (excluding non-operating charges and discontinued operations). Overall, we continue to move forward with confidence in our strategic plan for a turnaround of the company and are encouraged by the progress we are making."
Borders will report in March.
The Riverdeep Deal
While the broker said it is too early to discuss how investors will realise gains, potential exit strategies over the next two to five years include a stock market flotation in America or a trade sale "to a large international publishing company such as Newscorp or Viacom". It said a third option of refinancing the group is the least likely route, given the current state of the debt markets and EMPG's relatively high existing debt.In the Independent article all so notes the potential for cost and efficiency gains that are assumed in the combination of HM and Riverdeep.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
BISG Wants Your Comment on Digital Content
Here is the executive summary and I encourage you to contact BISG with comments. (Report)
The identification of digital book content A discussion paper commissioned by the Book Industry Study Group and Book Industry Communication and prepared by Michael Holdsworth.Executive summary Although there are strong similarities between the identification needs of physical books and of digital book content in the supply chain, new business models and new delivery channels challenge existing practice. There is a pressing need for clarity on the use of standards for the identification and description of digital products.The International Standard Book Number (ISBN) is considered fit for purpose for trading,discovery and reporting of digital products within the supply chain.Every digital manifestation traded separately should be assigned an individual ISBN and publishers should adopt the principle that products should be separately identified to the extent that they need to be so identified.The Digital Object Identifier (DOI), though not in any way a substitute for an ISBN, is a valuable additional identifier which enables content to be “discovered” on the Web.Publishers and others should explore the possible opportunities for using the International Standard Text Code (ISTC) as a means of collocating different manifestations of the same textual work.Publishers should review their practices relating to the assignment of identifiers, particularly where a digital product is traded through an intermediary and accurate reporting of sales is required for royalty payments or management information.The practice of using a single ISBN for all digital manifestations of the same work is strongly discouraged.The use of “ISBN‐like” 13 digit identifiers other than those properly assigned by the ISBN agencies is strongly discouraged in all circumstances.
Trading Update from B&N
Barnes & Noble store sales for the nine-week holiday period from November 4, 2007 to January 5, 2008. were $1.2 billion, a 4.1% increase over the same period in fiscal 2006. For the 48 weeks ended January 5, 2008, Barnes & Noble store sales rose 4.8% to $4.3 billion, while comparable store sales increased 2.0%.
Barnes & Noble.com comparable sales increased 10.9% for the holiday selling season and totaled $129.4 million. For the 48 weeks ended January 5, 2008, Barnes & Noble.com sales were $428.8 million, representing a comparable sales increase of 12.8%.
Based on holiday sales results and January sales trends to date, the company is reducing its earnings per share guidance to $1.57 to $1.76 and $1.81 to $1.99 for the fourth quarter and full year, respectively. The company’s previous earnings per share guidance was $1.67 to $1.86 and $1.91 to $2.09, for the fourth quarter and the full-year, respectively.
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Supreme Court Says No to Copyright Law Review
The Supreme court has refused to review a case that may have resulted in declaring an element of copyright law unconstitutional. (Lots of 'ifs' there). From the article:
In the case, Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle challenged the copyright protection given to so-called "orphan" works, or material for which the owner can't be found. Currently, if Kahle or other Web companies post such material, but the owner later steps forward and sues, the companies can't defend themselves on the grounds that they couldn't locate the owner. Kahle, represented by the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford, had hoped to change that by arguing that the law protecting orphan works--passed before widespread Internet access--violated the First Amendment.
News From England: New Fairy Tales
There is a lot of publishing industry and book related news in these newspapers. This weekend The Times reported on the ranking of the top 50 best post war British writers. Philip Larkin was ranked at the top of the list for those who care. Personnally, I only have a casual interest in lists like these. I think the composition of these lists is subject to whim and justification is hard to fathom. Here is how they put it: "Because there is no scientific method for making such a list in the correct order, we applied no scientific method. But we considered a number of factors — sheer quality of writing, longevity, lasting impact and, naturally, commercial success." The Times asked a number of current authors to write some of the profiles which is an interesting twist.
Other interesting news in The Times was the news that the BBC is developing several bo0k derived projects. Unknown in the US, Arthur Ransom wrote a series of adventure titles for boys and girls refered to as Swallows and Amazons. I found these titles when I was eight or nine and loved them. The BBC is close to gaining options on all 12 titles. From the article:
Unknown to me until I read this article was that Ransom married Trotsky's secretary and spied for the Bolsheviks. Who knew?Inspired by the success of The Dangerous Book for Boys, the BBC is betting that camping, fishing and messing about in dinghies will seem as thrillingly exotic to modern children as any special-effects-laden superhero movie. The producers believe that the resourceful young heroes of Swallows and Amazons and the book’s idyllic Lake District setting possess an allure that they did not have when the tale was last filmed in 1974, before childhood hobbies became as sedentary, solitary and technology-driven as they are today.
The BBC is also broadcasting new versions of old fairytales. This effort is similar to their ShakespeaRe-Told series which ran on BBC American early last year. The BBC will broadcast Rapunzel on Thursday in the UK and I suspect it will be here soon. From The Times tv guide:
After the success of their updated Chaucer and Shakespeare dramas, the BBC have set their cross hairs on the fairy tails of the Brothers Grimm, Han Christian Andersen and Charles Perrault. Fairy tales work on subconscious levels, quite unlike normal stories and plays. Their plots are weird and the characters are symbolic rather than human. For Rapunzel, the writer Ed Roe has concocted a farcical little fantasy about a useless Eastern European tennis player who pretends to be a woman in the hope of beating Rapunzel the long haired woman's champion.All told an interesting weekend in the British press for publishing. Rent the Shakespeare titles if you can find them.
McGraw Hill Job Cuts
The cuts will result in a $43.7 million pretax restructuring charge and reduce fourth-quarter earnings by $27.3 million after taxes, or 8 cents per share, McGraw said.Also of note, MGH shares have fallen 39% over the past 12 mths in part because of what some have seen as faulty advice from its S&P unit with respect to the sub-prime banking crisis. While McGraw attributed the restructuring to the financial market issues the largest cuts look to be in their education unit. Given the amounts being invested by the other large players this seems counter intuitive.
"For 2007, we still expect double-digit earnings per share growth" excluding the restructuring costs and other charges, McGraw said.
NYTimes
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
Macmillan Acquisition
Brian Napack, president of Macmillan, said that custom publishing was the fastest-growing arm of the textbook market. He said that while Hayden-McNeil was “not huge at this point,” its revenue had been growing by double-digit percentages in the last five years.
Some of the larger educational publishers have established custom publishing operations already having built them organically. They have also reported similar growth percentages in revenues.
Redroom.com: Author Central
Ivory Madison who wants to create a site that is "...a household name, where people start when they're looking for an author, a book or what people are saying about current ideas or events...Because we have the writers, we have the potential to be the smartest conversation on the Web."
The site is starting off with a number of well known authors including Amy Tan and Salman Rushdie and Madison expects as many as 400 to establish their web presence in the short term. From the article:
All writers join the Web site for free, and soon readers will be able to have their own free pages, too. Publishers also will be invited to have free Web pages on Redroom.com, with Chronicle Books serving as the Web site's first test case. Madison has collected $1.25 million in venture capital for the business and has hired a staff of 15, and anticipates raising $2 million more in the coming months. She said she expects to break even in 2008 and make $15 million in gross revenue in 2009.Revenues will be generated by ad revenues and tranaction fee and a portion of revenues will be designated for charity.
Whether this will succeed is any ones guess. It does seems a long shot to me that this will develop into a sizable web presence that a significant number of consumers will be interested in. I am of the belief that the market for author sites or book sites is fairly narrow. Witness the long list of consumer oriented magazines about books and authors that have failed over the years. These outlets failed both because ad dollars were sparse and subscritions were minimal.
On the other hand, the initiative is worth attempting and it is worth noting that potentially 'natural' developers of a site like this such as Publisher's Weekly or Kirkus (or even Bowker) continue to be non-players. Innovative projects like Librarything.com and possibly Redroom fill gaps that for some reason the existing players don't see or can't react to. Redroom may be worth keeping track of and I do like the design and navigation of the site: It is very well done.
Monday, January 07, 2008
Raincoast Gives Up On Canadian Publishing
Raincoast is the Canadian partner of Bloomsbury and has published and distributed the Harry Potter series. It is on the back of the success of these titles that the company has built their distribution business into the "preeminent distributor in Canada" (Globe&Mail).
As a result, yesterday's announcement should be seen as aWhether this will have a material impact on Canadian publishing is doubtful although some commentators will be all doom and gloom. The domestic Canadian publishing industry is a strange beast with significant amounts of government money distributed to small publishers on the basis of maintaining cultural heritage who wouldn't survive commercially without the funding. In fairness, this active nurturing does produce some great Canadian titles but no doubt most are less than commercially viable.
back-to-the-basics move, and a return to Raincoast's core competency, as a distributor that represents an estimated 50 domestic and foreign-owned publishers, including Bloomsbury U.K., Bloomsbury U.S., Chronicle Books, Lonely Planet, Grove Atlantic and Harcourt/Houghton Mifflin.
More ominously the article also contains a veiled suggestion that Raincoast may be planning to rightsize some of their distribution clients as well. More news on that "in the next several weeks".
George Macdonald Fraser
The entire series of books was based on G M Fraser finding a collection of memoirs at a house sale and it written in the first person narrated by Flashman. They are all hilarious and historically accurate but with respect to Flashman entirely fiction. Fraser made up the entire story of Flashman's travels through British History but what a ride it was. Each book included a sizable addendum that noted the significance of the events, places and people mentioned in each episode. As someone interested in history, these sections were almost as interesting as the fictional work that preceded.
At 82, Fraser died this week after a year long battle with Cancer. As the Times puts it "There will be no more Flashman books chronicling the the life of Brigadier-General Sir Harry Paget Flashman, VC, outstanding Victorian soldier, coward, bully, womaniser, cad, bounder and hugely admired all-round bad egg." Times
Friday, January 04, 2008
Informa: Buy Rating
The Board is confident that the 2007 performance will be in line with our significant growth expectations. Organic revenue on a constant currency basis* is projected to increase by 9%. All three of Informa's divisions: Academic & Scientific, Professional and Commercial, are contributing well to the year on year increase. Commercial is having a particularly strong 2007 of double digit growth. Trading within each of the divisions is good across all of Informa's business activities: events, performance improvement and publishing.
Shares in Informa have under performed the UK market by 22% and are currently trading at 466p. Panmure is targeting a price between 530 and 550p. Over the past six months the stock has traded over 550 but has fallen recently.
CafeScribe: e-Textbooks are working
Like iTunes, the model features a type of digital rights management that allows users to download individually purchased e-textbooks to three separate computers or laptops. But like Apple’s digital music service, the success of ventures like CaféScribe depend on the availability of content. Johnson estimated that the company would have some 15 publishers on board in the first quarter of 2008, including more content from Oxford. Still, he conceded, he receives hundreds of requests for titles each day. “Content is our biggest obstacle right now,” he said.
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Quebecor in Strife: More News
Quebecor World said it agreed to a requirement to obtain $125-million in new financing by Jan. 15, and also agreed to complete a "refinancing transaction" by Jan. 31. That transaction will require the company to reduce its current credit facility to $500-million by Feb. 29. In addition, the company said it must repay the full borrowing facility and terminate its North American securitization program by June 30. The company said it is in "active discussions" with financial institutions, but no firm commitments have been obtained so far "and there can be no assurance that such financing commitments will be obtained."It is probable that the company will cover the $125mm if for no other reason than this will give their primary shareholder some breathing room to review their alternatives. Regardless, the amounts in question - quoted in the article an analyst says 'it is a lot of money' - and the present difficult market for financing Quebecor is certainly in a lot of difficulty.
How Literary Reading is like the Dodo
To those in the publishing industry the recent confirmation of the decline in book and newspaper reading merits significant concern and reaction. Most of us recognize that reading is still being conducted but not of ‘publishing’ material as we know it. In his article however, Crain takes the stats a step further and suggests that the impact of the decline in formal reading that helps readers develop and hone their ability to evaluate character, argument, plot and perspective is leading to a population of dumber readers.
More alarming are indications that Americans are losing not just the will to read but even the ability. According to the Department of Education, between 1992 and 2003 the average adult’s skill in reading prose slipped one point on a five-hundred-point scale, and the proportion who were proficient—capable of such tasks as “comparing viewpoints in two editorials”—declined from fifteen per cent to thirteen. The Department of Education found that reading skills have improved moderately among fourth and eighth graders in the past decade and a half, with the largest jump occurring just before the No Child Left Behind Act took effect, but twelfth graders seem to be taking after their elders. Their reading scores fell an average of six points between 1992 and 2005, and the share of proficient twelfth-grade readers dropped from forty per cent to thirty-five per cent. The steepest declines were in “reading for literary experience”—the kind that involves “exploring themes, events, characters, settings, and the language of literary works,” in the words of the department’s test-makers. In 1992, fifty-four per cent of twelfth graders told the Department of Education that they talked about their reading with friends at least once a week. By 2005, only thirty-seven per cent said they did.Reading for pleasure is a relatively recent phenomenon in human history. It is possible (and maybe a Phd project) that the development of mass market reading also wrought massive hand wringing and consternation from those who controlled media in the 18th and 19th century. No doubt these owners and social and political leaders believed that society was being eroded and undermined and that the youth (and/or the lower classes) of the day were dooming the traditional publishing business to ignominious death. Whether the comparison with the drivers of change we currently see – social networking, gaming, television, etc. – represents a similar transition I do not know. What is certain however, it that publishing and reading will not disappear but will change and adapt to suit the market and perhaps evolution.
Why evolution? Read the article to understand how the brain develops based on external stimuli. This discussion might lead you to conclude that ‘new media’ could lead future generations to develop different cognitive powers than we currently possess.
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
Emap Break-up
On Christmas Eve, it was announced by Emap and Apax that Apax and Guardian Media Group had presented Emap with an offer to buy the outstanding shares of Emap for just over £1billion. Apax/GMG already own b2b publisher Incisive Media and hope to merge the two businesses together to produce a £2.0billion publisher.
Despite the announcement there is some speculation that a rival bid may emerge and the Emap share price has traded above the 931p offer price. Apax/GMG have already purchases a 19& holding in Emap.
Telegraph
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Predictions 2008
This is the time of year when prognosticators attempt to handicap the future while, at the same time, trying to explain why they were so horribly wrong with respect to the prior year. I am no different. 2007 saw some stunning developments in the publishing and media space--particularly in mergers & acquisitions—and, broadly speaking, I see several trends emerging. First, I expect more change driven by M & A activity in 2008. Second, as more companies bound by traditional publishing models migrate online and join those already there, the application of technology in our industry will accelerate. Third, we will see a ‘squeezing’ of the value-chain (from author to publisher to consumer) driven by publishers looking to build community models around content and authors.
Associated media markets, such as broadcasting, newspapers and games, also influence our industry in interesting ways. We are starting to see our traditional segment descriptors – publishing, newspaper, broadcasting, information – become meaningless as content becomes ubiquitous and network access (or distribution) becomes universal. Publishers and information providers must expand their capabilities beyond traditional market segments if they want to remain competitive. On a related note, there is an escalating ‘compacting of media’ taking place, where the interests of all media players are converging on issues like rights, piracy, market concentration and access to markets or even consumer attention. (Text) book content, broadcast TV programs, movies, music, games and news can all be delivered via Xbox or Ipod: In this environment, where does the power lie? Who “owns” the customer? And how are content-selection decisions made? A publisher can no longer be one-dimensional and hope to survive, which is why companies like Lexis, West and Pearson are building delivery ‘platforms’ where (traditional) content is only a part of the offering.
In the not-too-distant future, we may look back on 2007 as a significant transition year for the media business. In education, a number of large companies were taken private and will reemerge five years from now as fundamentally different, platform-based companies. The Hollywood writers strike will redefine how content producers are compensated as content distribution expands to the Internet. Journal publishers will trace the history of their ad-based revenue models back to Reed Elsevier’s experiment with oncologyonline. And in the news & information segment, NewsCorp’s purchase of Dow Jones and Thomson’s acquisition of Reuters will radically change the model of information delivery. Even the self-publishing market showed a level of maturity with the consolidation of AuthorHouse and iUniverse.com. Outside our immediate universe (but no less relevant as advertising becomes a more important revenue stream) is the purchase by Google of adserver Doubleclick.
Here are my predictions for 2008:
Education:
- Recognizing the potential for aggressive competition, McGraw-Hill will reorganize its business much as Thomson has done. MGH education could be sold to private equity.
Cengage will spend aggressively to round out its content and assessment products with course management and school resource planning tools.
Information:
- We will see at least one mega-deal involving, perhaps, D&B, the information assets of McGraw (S&P) or Bloomberg. Following closely on the heels of past investments in tax, legal, financial information, the insurance segment will become a focus of aggressive new investment for information providers.
Trade:
- It also seems inevitable that there will be some additional consolidation in trade and this could result in a higher profile for Hachette, Bloomsbury and/or Macmillan. One publisher may get out of the self-publishing market but another will jump in with both feet. A company like Lulu.com or the AuthorHouse/iUniverse combination could be targeted by a trade publisher seeking to expand its market and build an author community. More trade publishers will eliminate imprints in favor of theme-specific content.
Retail:
- The ongoing rumors of a Barnes&Noble/Borders combination will continue until one of these retailers purchases a third. This new combination will not materially change the book retail market, but the combination of the two companies will result in a financially stronger retailer.
Other:
- Broadcasters will have a strong advertising year due to the political calendar and the Olympics. (A three-party race for President will be an added boost).
- Facebook and Linkedin will join forces, but we will also see the development of more ‘by invitation only’ social networks. (Potentially, these could be administered by the current incumbents but they are more likely to be new entrants).
- As many as ten brand-name magazines will cease publication or reduce their frequency due to ad-base declines and the rise of specialty web sites.
- News sites (either branded or not) will ramp up efforts to harness niche bloggers and online publishers (either by acquisition or association) in an effort to boost traffic, broaden audience and develop more relevant op/ed and reportage. Incumbent news providers are realizing that acquiring an established online presence with a built-in audience represents a path to growth and they will begin to employ this tactic during 2008.
As always, it looks like the coming year will be an exciting one in media. At least according to me.
Monday, December 31, 2007
The Year In Reading 2007
I was anticipating a hard slog through McCullough's John Adams but this was my personal favorite of the books I read this year. It was especially rewarding to be half way through it when Romney (Presidential hopeful) explained on Meet the Press how Adams would have agreed with him that you can't have freedom without religious morality. That was certainly not my interpretation of what Adams believed. Another notable nonfiction title I enjoyed was Overthrow written by NY Times reporter Stephan Kinzer. Kinzer takes the reader through all our foreign affair blunders from Hawaii to Afghanistan showing how the country and the leadership keep repeating the same mistakes time after time. He shows, using before and after comparisons, that the US involvement had appalling results for the citizens of the countries in question. Naturally, there are highly appropriate references to the current Iraq incursion. Rounding out the top three non-fiction titles was Dawkin's The God Delusion which I found immensely enjoyable. Just knowing our smirking, giggling, singing the wrong lyrics and generally clowning around during required weekly chapel at Melbourne Grammar School is not going to get me in trouble in the hereafter is enough for me.
Fiction. The Night Gardener (Pellecanos), One Good Turn (Atkinson) and Bangkok Haunts (Burdett) were my top three reads this year. Pellecanos sets his crime dramas in Washington DC and this one has the same tight character development and story line. Mrs PND has read Atkinson and I picked this up on her recommendation: She is as good a crime writer as you will find and I look forward to reading her other titles. Burdett launched his Thai/American protagonist about three books ago and he improves with each successive title. I also met the author at the Strand this year which is an added bonus. Read his books to understand more about Thailand and Bangkok generally. Of note, Burdett comes up with some of the most elaborate killing scenarios you will ever find.
Other notable books were Perry Garfinkel's Budda or Bust and Patrick White's A Fringe of Leaves. White won a Noble and is one of Australia's greatest authors. This title sat on my parents shelf since it was published (1976) and I decided to read it based on some controversy reported regarding the current state of Australian literature.
Here's looking forward to another year of reading.
A Year of Reading at The Millions
Friday, December 28, 2007
Graphic Realities
It is amazing to see how much the medium of graphic novels have grown over the past 20 years. And it's been fascinating to see Hollywood come calling. However, I do believe quite strongly that there are some major barriers on the distribution side of things that have inhibited this growth and have prevented comics from growing as much as they could. The main issue isn’t in the book trade, however, but rather in the Direct Market (the “comic shops”).
Diamond's monopoly on the Direct Market has become far too onerous for any of the non-brokered publishers. It boggles my mind that so many of these publishers signed exclusive distribution deals with Diamond that have really gotten them nothing at all. Diamond will still not take an inventory position on titles and "out of stock" titles become defacto "out of print" in many, many cases. Getting re-orders flowing through Diamond in a way that I'm familiar as a bookseller with would seem to be nearly impossible. From this point of view, Diamond is not a distributor at all, but rather a freight-forwarder. And since they are the exclusive supplier in the Direct Market, they really are the only game in town. Certainly the ability to use just-in-time inventory management is a major problem on the retail level as a result of this. Factor in low discounts to retailers and you have a situation that leads to conservatism in ordering. It is fascinating to me that a title like Persepolis performed so much better in the book trade channel. I think the same can be said for manga.
Just to drive this point home even further: it is no surprise to me whatsoever that both Fantagraphics and Drawn & Quarterly have set-up retail operations (in Seattle and Montreal respectfully. The distribution situation is fundamentally untenable as it stands right now and publishers are trying to find alternatives. This all means that if a small press title (and really, that means anything published by anyone save for Marvel, DC, Image and Dark Horse) has small initial orders from Diamond, growing sales long-term is almost impossible. A title is dead right out of the gate.
In my own case, I know that if I tried to launch my graphic novel through Diamond tomorrow I'd be facing initial orders of no more than 300 copies. I'd be looking at re-orders at only another 100-200 if I was very lucky. Even if I managed to get into Ingram, Baker & Taylor, Bookazine, North 49, etc..., orders would most likely be very poor. Printing 1000 copies of my graphic novel is about the minimum I can shoot for with offset printers like Lebonfon. I suspect the odds are long that I'd sell that many over the course of a year.
I think this partially explains why so many graphic novelists are turning to the web and trying to gain traction that way. It certainly does in my case. While I think the diversity in what is being brought to market is truly amazing, I suspect we’re heading towards a schism between the two channels (if we’re not experiencing it already). And that is a somewhat scary proposition for those of us trying to earn a living in this medium.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Predictions 07: How did we do?
I will revisit predictions for 2008 next week.NYTimes will eliminate the Saturday print edition of the newspaper. It will also create local web news sites for every major metropolitan city in the US and will stream video from their owned broadcast television stations, classified advertising will be free. The company will also launch a citizen’s paper: The New World Times. NYT will create suite of news gathering tools – web services – and make available to ‘citizen journalists’ content and research traditionally only available to professional journalists
Some media prognoticators are suggesting that one of the top 100 US dailies will make the move to eliminate a Saturday print edition sometime in 2008. The NYT is at the same time too conservative to try anything so radical but also without motivation that true public company ownership would insist on.
YouTube tv: Just like America’s funniest home videos we will see a TV show based on original YouTube video content. It will win its night by 10% and will be turned into a weekly Saturday night talent show.
Didn't happen but we did see some excruciatingly scripted YouTube insertions into one of the Presidential debates. We also saw content owners get very angry at Youtube during 2007.Using cell phones’ camera as a barcode reader will lead to an explosion of mobile in-context/ in situ mobile advertising – followed in 2008 by RFID based in-store advertising (with software for cell phones). Mobile advertising will surpass 5% of all ad dollars spent by agencies by end 2007. (Web currently at 20%)
Not sure about this one. I think more will happen here in 2008 but mobile is not quite ready for prime time. We did see the immense growth of Twitter which wsn't on the radar 12 mths ago. Integrating an ad model somehow here will be a big deal perhaps by 2009.
Google launches product placement advertising program. Based on similar key word algorithms advertisers will bid for placement in movies, television, other broadcast, ports, etc. prior to production and/or live telecast. Program will represent 10% of all fall 2007 upfront spend. FCC will hold hearings on standards related to product placement advertising in late 2007 as the market explodes
Didn't happen but Google expanded their grip on the advertising space with numerous acquisitions including Doubleclick. Despite their size they still only represent a fraction of the potential ad market. See them grow....
Apple will think about buying Disney and Electronic Arts but will buy Tivo and slingBox. Apple will also launch a Beatles version of the I-Pod including the entire Beatles catalog plus video/movies. The Beatles I-Pod will retain the tradition Apple artwork (Green apple front, cut away apple on the back). Yahoo will by EA and within six months launch a social network gaming site based on EA content
Tivo has re-established its self and is now selling its technology to companies they once viewed as competitors. The company seems stronger than it was 12mths ago. Slingbox was acquired by Echostar (Sat provider). EA will be wondering about the big combination in their space of Activision and Vivendi but they have aggresive themselves and is likely to remain independent.
Yahoo continue to have their problems and haven't established a breakout strategy after Jerry Yang took over 12mths ago.
Hard to believe we don't have a Beatles section on iTunes. We do have Led Zep.
No-one will buy Netflix.Got this one right
Social Media in Education: Several major US colleges will teach various social science courses entirely in simulation. The courses will not be taught in traditional lecture form but entirely within the software simulation.
There hasn't been too much movement here and the biggest news in education were the ginormous monies spread around to acquire Thomson and Harcourt.
News Corp will buy Dow Jones and Financial Times and sell Harpercollins and Hachette will by Harpercollins.
One right. HC may yet be sold in 2008
EBay will by Linden Labs (Second Life). Within six months they will integrate Ebay selling tools into SecondLife enabling virtual store fronts, sales assistance and virtual trading. Will launch program with major retailers and create first Second Life mega-mall in cooperation with Westfield. Ebay also launches SecondLife media placement agency to handle all media inventory on SecondLife. T Mobile buys Skype from Ebay. Linden dollars will be included in the Feds M1 currency calculation.
Ebay has seen continuing deteriorization in revenues from their best customers. The company spectacularly recognized how bad the Skype acquisition had been by reducing its book value by half. Will they sell Skype? If they do it will probably not occur until they have a new CEO. Second Life had some problems: they were hacked and lost some customer information and during 2007 growth has slowed. Hard to know where this will go.
Neil Young’s Living with War wins the Grammy for best Rock Album.
Lost but still an awesome album.
Monday, December 24, 2007
NYC Christmas
Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.
I'm experimenting with this photo viewer thing. Not too sure about it. Each image has a comment but it is not obvious.
Saturday, December 22, 2007
BBC: A Whale of a Story
Friday, December 21, 2007
Year in Stats & Popular Posts
The top label (subject) was 'thomson'. Rounding out the top five were playboy, future of biblio, Harcourt and Educational Publishing. Seasonally, I had my heaviest traffic during the summer when the education publishers were in play. Thomson, Harcourt, Houghton, McGraw Hill and OCLC all provided the most traffic other than that delivered via commercial operators like Comcast, Roadrunner, etc. Top referring sites included the normal suspects: Google, Blogger, Technorati. Additionally, I thank Charblog, Eoin Purcell, Exact Editions, Schlagergroup, Bill Trippe, Lorcan Dempsey, Ed Champion, The Millions, Gladys Bembo , Teleread and PW for their support. (I don't do enough to return the favors and I hope to do better).
The most popular blog posts were:
Amazon & Self Publishing, Headline Guaranteed to Get Attention, Penguin Sued over Dot Parker, High Voltage: Australian Publishers Upset, Five Questions with Rosetta Solutions, Harpercollins reports Higher Revenues, .epub: What it means for Publishers, Endorsement for PND, Scholastic, the future, Five Questions with Lonely Planet.
Perusing my traffic reports, I always notice the 'Hilton hotel' or 'Marriott' network ids and think some poor shlepper is on the road and all they want to do is read my humble blog. Well, thanks to all of you stuck in some bland hotel getting your Personanondata fix. I appreciate it and I've been there myself.
The network addresses throw up other interesting items such as spelling mistakes. It always makes me smile when I see my friends from "Nielson" have come to visit. I always say, one thing you should always be able to do correctly is spell your name.
Search strings are another source of (my) amusement. Here is a sample of actual searches that landed on my site from the past 30 days:
“non german or non chinese customer who engage in electronic commerce”
"Motor Mouth barnsley”
"who is an actor"
"supply chain for a gym”
"2007 2008 email contact of chear holders in france @yahoo.com”
"Mr. Katz is in the widget business. He currently sells 2 million”
"escorting for dummies”
"Local news on the 7 October 1997 in London”
While for obvious reasons I hope these people left my site disappointed there is a reason I look at these queries because they often throw up leads for blog posts.
I hope next year is even bigger. Thanks for the support and please tell colleagues, friends and family members about the site.
Thursday, December 20, 2007
HarperRandomCollins or RandomHarperCollinsHouse
This could make for an interesting new year. With Harpercollins' recent financial performance not comparing well with their own high standard and News Corp's expensive purchase of Dow Jones perhaps there is something to this. On the other hand, Bertelsmann already have a $1billion trade publisher and strategically would they want to invest a $1.obillion in a business with slow (if any) revenue growth and low margins. A better solution, would be to invest in an information business that in the right segment would see fast revenue growth and margins greater than 20%. We will see.
On a related note, Bertelsmann confirmed again that they have no intention of sell Gruner + Jahr. Bloomberg.
Scholastic Beat Estimates
Revenue in the second quarter was $746.2 million compared to $735.5 million in the prior year period, and net profit was $75.6 million versus $75.1 million. Earnings per diluted share rose to $1.93 from $1.75 in the prior year period, primarily reflecting accretion from the previously announced $200 million accelerated share repurchase. In the quarter, Direct-to-Home Continuities contributed revenue of $33.2 million and resulted in a pro forma net loss of $6.1 million or $0.16 per diluted share, based on the Company's normal effective tax rate of 37.0%; this is compared to revenue of $38.1 million and a pro forma net loss of $2.8 million or $0.06 per diluted share in the second quarter of fiscal 2007.
"In the second quarter, Scholastic's businesses, excluding Direct-to-Home, performed on plan, and the Company's operating income and margin improved year-over-year," commented Richard Robinson, Chairman, CEO and President. "Profits from School Book Fairs, Clubs and Trade Publishing all rose, while Scholastic Education made progress investing in a reorganized sales force, increased technical support and consulting services, and new technology products. In addition our International segment recorded double-digit revenue and profit growth."
The company has retained Greenhill & Co. and has begun the sales process and will also report direct to home as discontinued operations.
The company maintains their full year revenue forecast of $2.3 to $2.5 billion and earnings per diluted share of $2.35 to $2.85, noting that they expect the solid performance in their core businesses to offset the lower than expected results from Continuities. Full year net income may be impacted by write-downs associated with the sale of the business unit but there is no expectation that cash flow will be adversely impacted. The company also announced a modest stock repurchase plan and is authorized to purchase $20mm of its common stock.
Highlights:
- Harry Potter's boxed set helped the consumer segment to achieve flat revenue and profit
- In education, revenues were flat with prior but operating income was lower due to planned investments
- Large gains in international revenues and profits offset declines in other segments.
- Revenues were up 13% and profit up $4.5mm (22%)
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Philadelphia Graphic
The genre's success has carved out new bookshelf space in bookstores, and caused Hollywood to come calling: In addition to Miller's Sin City and 300, recent movies such as V for Vendetta, Road to Perdition, and A History of Violence began as graphic novels. The holiday season brings the animated film version of Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis, about girlhood in Iran after the fall of the shah; Satrapi served as codirector. Satrapi lives in France, a nation where graphic novels have been a respected form for decades. In Japan, the bulky comics known as manga are read by businessmen on the subway. In many ways, America has embraced its graphic novelists a little late. Even so, the genre's success is due to its global appeal, Mahoney said. Graphics with straightforward dialogue enable the medium to simplify complex issues and cut through language and cultural barriers at the lightning speed of the Internet.
The article orients itself around an exhibit at the Norman Rockwell museum in Stockbridge MA. which is described as 'captivating'. I will do what they didn't which is to link to the exhibition which runs from November 10 - May 26, 2008.
LitGraphic: The World of the Graphic Novel
A burgeoning art form with roots planted firmly in history, graphic novels, or long-form comic books, have inspired the interest of the literary establishment and a growing number of readers. For today's aficionados, graphic novels, with their antiheroes and visual appeal, are positioned to usurp the role that the novel once played. Focused on subjects as diverse as the nature of relationships, the perils of war, and the meaning of life, graphic novels now comprise the fastest-growing sections of many bookstores‹an accessible, vernacular art form with mass appeal.
Reed Business Expect Slower Growth
Quebecor in Strife
Predictably, the markets have identified parties that could be circling the sinking ship and these include Donnelly and Transnational (Transnational have said they may only want parts) with some private equity companies for good measure. Another option is for Quebecor's primary shareholder Quebecor Inc. (35% of shares and 84% of voting) to take the company private. Certainly, if Quebecor Inc, stepped in they would want some assurances but their shareholders may not be happy with any type of rescue. Quebecor Inc's shares also dropped on news of Quebecor's problems.
From The Globe and Mail:
The company was once a money-spinning jewel in Pierre Karl Péladeau's Quebecor Inc. media and printing empire. Now, it is viewed as a drag on Quebecor, which has to decide whether it wants to throw it a lifeline or cut it loose by selling it or letting it fend for itself. At this point, it appears less likely that Quebecor World's banks will want to extend credit lines after having recently lowered the credit facility to $750-million from $1-billion, National Bank Financial analyst Adam Shine said in a research note. There would have to be assurances of help from parent Quebecor, but coming to the printing subsidiary's rescue appears "increasingly burdensome and certainly wouldn't sit well with [Quebecor] shareholders," he wrote.
While the sale of the European operations would not have generated a significant (less than $50mm) gain it would have eliminated a loss making drain on the company's resources. Coupled with the loss of their CEO (sixth in four years) and the failed recapitalization, Quebecor shareholders have bailed. Quebecor was at one stage the worlds largest commercial printer but failed management and misguided strategic leadership has left it light years behind industry leader Donnelly.
Cancelled: Lynne Spears Parenting Book!
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Replacing Harry in 39 Steps
From the NYTimes:
The series, to be officially announced by Scholastic on Tuesday morning, will be aimed at readers 8 to 12 and offer mystery novels telling the story of a centuries-old family, the Cahills, who are supposed to be the world’s most powerful clan. According to the books, famous historical figures ranging from Benjamin Franklin to Mozart were members of the family. The plots will revolve around the race by two young Cahills, Amy, 14, and Dan, 11, against other branches of the family to be the first to find the 39 clues that will lead to ultimate power.
Scholastic intend to make non-print publishing a key component of this program recognizing that not only is print less appealing to younger readers but that the web related product could actually create a larger more compelling product.
As a side note, I thought it curious that NYT has chose not to place this story in the media & advertising section of the times but in the Arts section. Seems to me that this is both: Certainly from a business perspective, replacing Potter revenues at Scholastic will be of interest to the business community.
Monday, December 17, 2007
Reed Elsevier: How to Expand a Market
This weekend TimesOnline discussed the impact this strategy was having on Reed Elsevier with CEO Sir Crispin Davis:
Davis said that the shift, which has taken place in the past 18 months, was “a natural but important evolution from print to online and then from online to workflow solutions”, Where possible, Reed is linking its own online platforms with a firm’s intranet, joining them at the hip. It is no wonder, then, that contract retention has gone up from 88% to 97% in science and is almost as high in legal. To a certain extent, the shift maps Reuters’ move from selling share quotes and news to more graphical data and research. But Reed has gone even further. For small legal practices, it will more or less run the office, providing administrative software that can track billable hours and keep a diary of court appearances.Integration and the corollary understanding of the clients workflow is only part of the story. Using their content as their spring board, these publishers have radically expanded their potential market. In the article, Davis notes that they could be limited to participating in a $18billion market but in adding applications and services their potential market could exceed $48billion. Interestingly, when we discuss the size of the publishing market in revenue terms the boundaries will start to be much less clear as integrated products take hold.
Elsevier's experience and strategy is no less important for other segments of the publishing community. Education is the next publishing segment to adopt a platform approach to learning and leading this transition is Pearson. As I have commented before, this company has systematically acquired companies that now enable it to supply a broad array of products and services to the education community. The lines between content supplier and solutions provider are blurred as Pearson can provide content, assessment, remediation, school management applications and community solutions to their clients. Admittedly the sales process is likely to be more complicated; however, the market for Pearson's products is now radically larger, seasonality can be mitigated and their products can now be embedded in workflow and infrastructure. Switching costs are raised for the customer as a direct result of 'embedded' solutions which, while an obvious benefit for the publisher, also enables the publisher to maintain a consistent level of customer directed investment.
While Pearson has led this move in education in the last several years, the privatization of Thomson and Houghton/Riverdeep will result in these companies rapidly making up for lost time in the development of similar solutions for education. Providers like Elsevier have already identified a large new market for their products/solutions which will enable them to post annual revenue gains as they deliver radical new productivity gains for their customers.
Sunday, December 16, 2007
LA Times: A Dismal Year (or maybe not)
"Books are news that stay news," Freeman said. "And because there's so much published, they need to be sifted for the public, to see what matters."Overall, as the publishing world looks back on 2007, it's hard to reconcile the unease people feel about the business with the excitement they feel about the books themselves. When he goes to publishing dinners, bookseller Doug Dutton said, the conversation swings between lamenting the state of the business and exclaiming joy over a new novel or history."It's about as murky a picture as I've seen," said Dutton. Then he amended that slightly: "Sort of like last year and the year before."
The newspaper also manages to speak to a publisher other than Jane Friedman.
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Louis XVI: Let them Pay Shipping
The action, brought in January 2004 by the French Booksellers' Union (Syndicat de la librairie française), accused Amazon of offering illegal discounts on books and even of selling some books below cost.Amazon.com had no comment but they will be required to pay a fine of $150,000 to the booksellers union and are also assessed a fine of $1500/day for each day they retain the free shipping. Now I'm thinking this is a rediculously low amount if the court really intends to penalize them and stop them from providing this service. One would think this is actually good and in the interests of French consumers, mais non.
Assuming they care, perhaps this will go to the European court. As the article notes, pricing is highly regulated in France especially on books.
Sony BMG: Demerge?
"The Court of First Instance rightly held that there had been a failure to state reasons and a manifest error of appraisal in the Commission's decision", said Juliane Kokott of Germany, an advocate general for the European Court of Justice.The merger has actually gained approval twice - Sony-BMG returned a second time and won approval again last October - and this ruling effects the first approval. It is unclear whether the Court will have any say over the subsequent 10/07 approval but the plaintiff (Impala) may decide to appeal this second ruling as well. Aside from taking up significant legal time and expense the impact of this process has not been felt on the business. It is unknown what potential remedies would be required if the merger is ruled uncompetitive and not in consumers interests.
There is no date set for the ruling by the court. It follows the advice of its advocate general in a majority of cases.
The impact on the European competition commission maybe more profound since the court is likely to question the process and objectivity of the commission in evaluating mergers. The lower court noted that significant issues were raised by the commission in the early stages of their review but they approved the merger anyway and left unresolved some of the key issues they themselves had raised. Perhaps the court will request specific changes in the operations of the commission to ensure that this situation is not repeated although these requests are unlikely to be binding. The role of the commission is to uphold consumers interests but it is also to help ensure that deals like these don't end up in court.
Reed Complete Harcourt Sale
Reed Elsevier shareholders will receive 82 pence per share while Reed Elsevier NV shareholders will get 1.767 euros per share. This will be accompanied by a share consolidation, which has already been approved, on the basis of 58 new ordinary shares for every 67 existing ordinary shares.According to ABN AMRO analyst Paul Gooden (also quoted by Reuters) this is good news because some analysts were worried the deal could collapse. Post-sale, the consensus is that share performance will improve as the impact of Reed Elsevier's electronic publishing is more readily apparent. It was generally believed that Harcourt was a drag on the overall business.
Reuters
Borders Australia Decision Delayed
Prior PND report
Reuters
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Technology In Publishing: An Overview
Thanks to Robert Baensch for asking.
