Traditional
publishing, like network television, is built on scarcity. In traditional
publishing, “airtime” was shelf space...
Because
the shelf space is limited, traditional publishers only kept books with a
fantastic sales record in print. The other books had a short shelf life before
they were taken out of the stores and eventually out of print.
…
Everyone
currently working in traditional publishing, from the publishers to the editors
to the writers, learned the scarcity attitude. Everyone. That includes
me. That includes any unpublished writer who tried to break in before 18 months
ago. That includes agents. That includes book reviewers, copy editors, book
editors, and the publishing executives.
Our
attitudes got formed in a model based on limited shelf space and expensive
production costs. On “gut” decisions instead of quantifiable decisions.
...
The
very idea of abundance is confusing. How, everyone raised in scarcity wants to
know, does anyone find anything? How can something become “big”?
People
who come at publishing from the new world of publishing—always-available
titles, e-books that might stay in print forever—understand the long tail. They
understand that something may not be a hit when it first appears, but word of
mouth (or an abundance of page views) will lead to a wider audience. That wider
audience will then bring its friends and family to the table, introducing yet
another new group of people to the item.
These
two attitudes—scarcity thinking and abundance thinking—are greatly different
from each other. In scarcity thinking, the bigger the audience, the better.
Which means that items have to be geared toward a mass audience because you
need to hit a home run one out of one hundred times.
Abundance
thinking takes the pressure off each individual item. Instead of trying to
appeal to millions with one item, appealing to thousands or even hundreds works
just as well provided there are other items available from the same
company/individual/provider. The other items don’t have to be similar to
the first item (although it’s nice if there’s a grouping). Niche audiences
communicate with each other, and slowly bring the fan base to the table.
Traditional
publishing, like network television, is built on scarcity. In
traditional publishing, “airtime” was shelf space. Only so many
brick-and-mortar stores that carried books (of any type) existed. Those
stores only had room for a certain amount of shelf space. Only a handful
of books could fit face-out on those shelves. Several more could fit
spine-out, but it’s harder to sell a book based on its spine than it is
to sell a book based on the cover.
Because the shelf space is limited, traditional publishers only kept books with a fantastic sales record in print. The other books had a short shelf life before they were taken out of the stores and eventually out of print.
I called this the produce model, because I couldn’t think of any other way to express what was going on. Traditional publishers treated books like produce that would spoil because, in effect, sales do decline if a book has been out for a long time. (Sales don’t evaporate and in some cases, sales increase. But they will eventually plateau.)
- See more at: http://kriswrites.com/2012/03/14/the-business-rusch-scarcity-and-abundance/#sthash.NbjHuIDZ.dpuf
Because the shelf space is limited, traditional publishers only kept books with a fantastic sales record in print. The other books had a short shelf life before they were taken out of the stores and eventually out of print.
I called this the produce model, because I couldn’t think of any other way to express what was going on. Traditional publishers treated books like produce that would spoil because, in effect, sales do decline if a book has been out for a long time. (Sales don’t evaporate and in some cases, sales increase. But they will eventually plateau.)
- See more at: http://kriswrites.com/2012/03/14/the-business-rusch-scarcity-and-abundance/#sthash.NbjHuIDZ.dpuf
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