1 / 37

Manifesto 2.0: What does the future look like for publishers?

Manifesto 2.0: What does the future look like for publishers?. Sara Lloyd Digital Director Pan Macmillan. A little bit of history (1). 1448 – Gutenberg’s printing press 1839 – commercial telegraph; electricity runs a printing press 1876 - telephone 1920 - radio 1935 – television

michon
Download Presentation

Manifesto 2.0: What does the future look like for publishers?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Manifesto 2.0:What does the future look like for publishers? Sara Lloyd Digital Director Pan Macmillan

  2. A little bit of history (1) • 1448 – Gutenberg’s printing press • 1839 – commercial telegraph; electricity runs a printing press • 1876 - telephone • 1920 - radio • 1935 – television • 1951 – first mass-produced computer • 1959 – the microchip • 1969 – first ARPANET nodes installed

  3. A little bit of history (2) 1969 – First ARPANET nodes installed 1976 – Queen Elizabeth II is first world leader to send an email 1981 – First digital version of Encyclopedia Britannica; JISC launches JANET 1983 – ARPANET switches to TCP/IP protocol, birth of the Internet 1991 – CERN releases the world wide web; Elsevier’s TULIP project launched 1993 – WWW goes public, first graphical web browser (Mosaic) 1994 – Encyclopedia Britannica goes online; c.75 online journals 1995 - ScienceDirect 1998 – XML is created 1999 – Official launch of the Google search engine 2000 – Grove and OED launched online 2002 – 75% of journals in Science Citation Index are online 2004 –Google Print, Google Library and Google Scholar launch 2008 – ebook Readers become available in UK bookstores; Kindle sales spike after Oprah votes it her favourite gadget in US; Lexcycle’s Stanza for iPhone is downloaded 500,000+ times; Google launches Android and settles with AAP….

  4. Ever felt like you’re operating on shifting sands….?

  5. ….So, what does the future look like?

  6. Photo: Associated Press

  7. Some interesting numbers 1,280,000,000,000 121.5 2.2 5 out of 10 1,200,000

  8. Some more interesting numbers 50 30-70

  9. technical revolution: dial-up broadband desktops connected devices

  10. social revolution content is king comments are king “Content isn't king; conversation is. If you had the choice of bringing your friends or your books to a desert island, we'd call you a sociopath if you took the books over the breathing humans.” - Cory Doctorow, Boing Boing

  11. What needs to change about the way publishers do business?

  12. publisher = intermediary

  13. publisher = enabler?

  14. publishers understand markets… …not customers

  15. …and learn how to collaborate…

  16. A sorry reminder A sorry reminder…. http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2008/01/music-lessons.html

  17. Sara Lloyd Digital Director Pan Macmillan s.lloyd@macmillan.co.uk http://thedigitalist.net The Manifesto at the digitalist: http://thedigitalist.net/?p=155 The Manifesto at Library Trends: https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/library_trends/toc/lib.57.1.html

More Related