Yearly Archives: 2007

Conservative Authors Attack and Whine

Ed Cone pointed to an article in the NY Times about a lawsuit brought by some conservative authors against conservative publisher Eagle Publishing. This caught my attention because Eagle was started by Tom Phillips who also founded Phillips Publishing (now Phillips International) back in 1973 and built it into a newsletter publishing powerhouse.  I spent over 10 years in the newsletter industry and so I often found myself competing with them in various markets. Heck, they offered me a job about 10 years ago.

The lawsuit claims that Eagle is ripping off the authors on royalties because they are selling books from their Regnery imprint to other Eagle-owned entities like book clubs and newsletter publishers at a deep discount.  Those entities are then selling the books at a discount to their members (book club) or using them as promotional bait for newsletter subscribers.  Here’s the rub according to the article:

In Regnery’s case, according to the lawsuit, the publisher sells
books to sister companies, including the Conservative Book Club, which
then sells the books to members at discounted prices, “at, below or
only marginally above its own cost of publication.” In the lawsuit the
authors say they receive “little or no royalty” on these sales because
their contracts specify that the publisher pays only 10 percent of the
amount received by the publisher, minus costs — as opposed to 15
percent of the cover price — for the book.

Mr. Miniter said
that meant that although he received about $4.25 a copy when his books
sold in a bookstore or through an online retailer, he only earned about
10 cents a copy when his books sold through the Conservative Book Club
or other Eagle-owned channels. “The difference between 10 cents and
$4.25 is pretty large when you multiply it by 20,000 to 30,000 books,”
Mr. Miniter said. “It suddenly occurred to us that Regnery is making
collectively jillions of dollars off of us and paying us a pittance.”
He added: “Why is Regnery acting like a Marxist cartoon of a capitalist
company?”

I wouldn’t be surprised if the Eagle newsletter publisher was using these books for promotional efforts.  In all my years marketing newsletters I never found a promotional item that could beat a well-targeted book at increasing subscription sales rates.  Believe me, we tried everything from baby boomboxes to handbags and none of them lifted rates like a good book title.  One newsletter I worked on that covered HR issues for small business owners got the best result from two little books our editors created called "Hired at Will" and "Fired at Will".  In years of trying those books couldn’t be beat.

Don’t you love the line, "Why is Regnery acting like a Marxist cartoon of a capitalist company?"  Personally I think these privileged few are finally getting a taste of the backhand that many average employees are getting from their companies on a daily basis.  The company is merely doing everything it can to maximize its bottom line and from what’s in the article they don’t appear to be doing anything that breaches the authors’ contracts.  It’s really no different than reducing company contributions to employee health plans (or negating them altogether), freezing wages at below cost of living increases, keeping minimum wage below poverty level, etc.  Yeah, the irony is delicious.

If You’re in Junior High You’ll Love My Blog

Junior_high
This will not surprise my wife.  According to the Readability Index my blog is readable for anyone with a Junior High level education.  Thankfully the readers of my business blog are getting Genius Level stuff, or does that mean that I’m talking over their heads?  Out of curiosity I looked at some of the other blogs that I follow and here are the results:

Hat tip to Lex Alexander, a fellow Junior High level blogger, who pointed me to the index.

Wait, how do the websites for some of our Presidential candidates fare?

The Democrats, in their current place in the polls (11/5/07), followed by the % of votes they would get:

The Republicans, in their current place in the polls (11/5/07), followed by the % of votes they would get:

Obviously if you’re a Democrat you want to speak to your base as if they’re a bunch of fourth graders.  Republicans seem not to be put off by candidates using words with multiple syllables, but given Thompson’s late entry in the race and subsequent rocketing up the charts we might see that members of both political bases need to be fed their pablum in monosyllabic addresses.  In case you haven’t guessed this last paragraph is my attempt to move this blog up to the relatively austere heights of high school discourse.  What-e-v-e-r.

links for 2007-11-06

Testing Tumblr

I’ve been reading about a web service called Tumblr.  Lots of the online writers (okay, bloggers) I follow have started using the service and I decided to give it a test drive myself.  You can check out my Tumblr page at www.jonlowder.info.

From the best I can tell Tumblr is a free and easy way to pull all of your online interests together in one place.  For instance I’ve set up the site to grab all of the information that I tag on del.icio.us, photos I upload to Flickr and posts I make to this blog.  So all of that stuff automatically gets pulled into one place and can be viewed by me or anyone who’s interested.  I can also post original entries there with great ease so I might be adding original content that won’t appear here or anywhere else.  We’ll see.

I’ve only scratched the surface of this thing but I’m willing to give it a go because the people that I use as canaries in the online gold mine (Fred Wilson, Steve Rubel, etc.) have been using it and sing its raves.  I’m pretty sure that as I use it I’ll discover dozens of ways it can be used as a tool that I never would have dreamed of on my own.  Stay tuned.

Good PR Through Good Deeds

Local graphic design firm PAVE Creative Group is getting some good PR mileage out of its sponsorship of the Bikes for the World event on November 10, 2007.  They received some notice in the local press, a mention in Smitty’s Notes Winston-Salem’s best resource on local happenings, and they just earned a nice mention on what I suspect is Winston-Salem’s most read blog, Life in Forsyth.

Businesses have long known that they can do well by doing good, but
to really do it right a company needs to make sure that its
philanthropic effort is structured properly.  PAVE affiliated itself
with an organization that is doing something unique (collecting
bicycles for developing countries), aggressively communicated their
program (Esbee shot a picture of PAVE’s poster in a local store) and
worked with other local groups like the Wake Forest cycling team and Simplyummy
to pull off the event.  In other words they treated it like any other
marketing effort which benefits them, their partners and most
importantly the people they are trying to help.  Well done.

Full disclosure: Chris Patti, one of PAVE’s principals, is a friend of mine.

Coupons

One of my more often told stories is of my first grocery shopping experience as a married man.  Celeste is a lifelong coupon clipper and I’m not so our first Sundays together I spent reading the Washington Post while she shredded what in our household has come to be known as "her section" of the paper.  After much snipping and planning she announced that we were off to Safeway to shop for our first round of groceries together. 

When we arrived at the store I was mortified to see that she had a whole box full of coupons and a calculator that she stowed in the part of the cart that would later be occupied by one of our rugrats and I just knew that my Sunday afternoon of football watching was dead before arrival.  I groused as we methodically went up and down each aisle and Celeste would look at all fifteen varieties of every item, pull out her coupons for said item and then determine which was the best deal.  I kept saying over and over that the savings couldn’t possibly be worth all the time she, and now I, had invested in this venture.  I was a firm believer that time was more valuable than money, but that’s because I’m inherently lazy so anything that requires lots of the former to save or make the latter just isn’t high on my priority list.

Long story short we get to the checkout line and our food total comes to something like $130 and then Celeste hands her coupons over and I watched the total plummet to $89. Saving 31% is big time no matter what kind of income you have, but when you’re 25 years old and broke that’s a lot of tacos.  Believe me when I say I also started to get excited when grocery stores would announce double coupon days.

All of which leads me to an interesting item I read on The Post Money Value blog.   The blog is written by venture capitalist Rick Segal and you know he’s from the tech-geek pool when you read this:

Back when I could code without creating a hard drive failure (about
the time electricity was invented), I coded up a Coupon Management
System for my own use and, eventually, shareware.  Long long time ago.
You entered in all your coupons and then could enter a grocery list
which got matched to the coupons.  I managed to link all of this to the
local Stop & Shop where we lived at the time and could line the
shopping list up so it matched the flow of the store.  I added other
store layouts and soon was inputting specials from the newspaper to
match coupons.   Yeah, as I said, hard core coupon person. 

I
suffered from the occasional "Daddy, are we having chicken pot pies
again?" but we saved tons of money.  I knew this was a big deal for
families with small incomes. My software was designed to save you money
and manage your shopping list. (Geek alert: Paradox, thanks for asking).

That’s some serious geekery, but I can promise you that when Celeste reads this she’ll wonder how she managed to marry me (king of all worthless knowledge) and not the guy who shares her love of coupons and is smart enough that he wrote a piece of software that could have made her life so much easier.  But I digress.

Mr. Segal also points out that coupons have a historically low redemption rate and rightly points out that the main problem is the time you have to spend clipping and organizing them.  As a web guru he thinks the time might have come and his following observations are food for thought:

1. Value for effort.  Not enough people will dance
for a $2 savings on a $40 grocery bill. 5% just isn’t cutting it.  50%?
75%? Different story. For those kinds of savings you get the kids to
input all the stuff and make it a kids game.

2. Big Revenue Stream.
I believe that if you like Pepsi, you will grab the coupon for 50 cents
off.  But I super, really, totally believe, Coke will pay good/serious
money to target that Pepsi drinker with a  super larger coupon to try
to convert that customer over to Coke.  So far, nobody has broken the
code on how to get this done in such a way that protects privacy and
generates big big results.

Enter Facebook.  Will coupon
clippers migrate/be on Facebook?  I don’t know.  Could a Facebook
coupon app, coupon community, etc work? I don’t know.

The larger point of this blog post is this:

Before
the Internet and lots of always on/always connected people, Ebay was
impossible. No chance of mass adoption trying to do Ebay on
Compuserve.  So, with the Internet and "web 2.0" and "Social media" and
all the rest of the buzz words; What’s possible?  What can you do now
that we couldn’t do before.  Walk around and ‘re-think’ it all. All
those ahead of their time projects may have found the right time.

I think there’s huge opportunity here as well.  Some stores are already experimenting with coupons that show up on peoples’ cell phones so that the customer merely has to show the screen to the clerk and the savings are recorded.  Obviously you can’t do this with dozens of grocery items, but what if you had a way to have your coupons fed to you online, already organized so that they could be printed off with bar codes intact and in the order that you want them?  Much like I set up my Netvibes account so that all my information is automatically fed into various "pages" I could just add a coupon feeder and tell it what kind of items I want coupons for. Literally I would set it up so that I get jelly coupons in one batch, canned vegetables in another, frozen treats in another, and so on.  I could print out those that I find interesting and head off to the store and safe lots of time in the process.  I think it would work.

The key here is simplicity and speed.  I think the average consumer is like me: I still let Celeste do all the clipping because I don’t enjoy it (she really does) and I view it as a time suck.  Maybe if Celeste didn’t do it I would, but I doubt it.  On the other hand if I had a service that automatically pulled it all together for me I’d do it in a heartbeat and I think many others would too.

 

links for 2007-11-05

links for 2007-11-03

links for 2007-11-02