Showing posts with label simon and schuster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label simon and schuster. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Simon & Schuster eyes digital space


The booming publishing market in India has lured yet another international publishing firm, Simon & Schuster, which is high on the country's growing digital reading space.

Simon & Schuster, the publishing segment of CBS Corp, Wednesday opened an India-specific unit.

The publishing house wants to cash in on digital transformation, the demand for inexpensive books and the inherent financial advantages like lesser material and allied costs in India, said Carolyn K. Reidy, president and CEO of Simon & Schuster.

"In India, the digital book revolution has bypassed e-readers and tablets (reading e-tablets with screens) to reach mobile phones, unlike in the US and UK. Everyone in India has a mobile phone but not all own e-readers or tablets," Reidy said.

Full report here Economic Times

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

S&S plans a unique marketing strategy

Simon & Schuster, a global leader in the field of general interest publishing, providing consumers worldwide with a diverse range of quality books across a wide variety of genres and formats. It is the publishing operation of CBS Corporation, one of the world’s premier media companies.

S&S Director of Sales and Marketing, Rahul Srivastava spoke to IBNLive about the company, its strategy and future course of plan in India.

Which segments of the market is S&S targeting? With what kind of books?
Our target readership will be the family as we offer many different subject categories and want to market and promote the same. Our niche is certainly business, non-fiction and self help books.

Who are the marquee authors on the list? And who are the best-selling ones?
We will begin our operations with three of our best-selling authors, Stephen R Covey – The Third Alternative, Irshad Manji – Allah, liberty and love and Brendon Burchard’s Millionaire Messenger (self-published best seller in the USA)

Full interview here IBNLive

Monday, September 13, 2010

Visit India with a good murder mystery

Reading murder mysteries, if you read the right ones, can be a bit like reading National Geographic. You don't get the maps and the photographs, but you can get some good insight into how people live and how they think in other parts of the world.

Vish Puri, the creation of Tarquin Hall, is among the latest in a growing list of detectives solving murders and other crimes somewhere other than the United States and Great Britain.

Puri, who operates out of Dehli, is India's greatest private investigator - he says so himself. The man's vanity about his work is, in fact, one of his most endearing traits.

Two Vish Puri adventures have been published so far -- The Case of the Missing Servant (Simon & Schuster, 310 pp., $14 paper) and The Case of the Man Who Died Laughing (Simon & Schuster, 309 pp., $24) -- and both provide good fun.

Full report here Mansfield News Journal

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Business books on the double

The financial crisis is happening so fast that books about it can be outdated before they hit the shelves, says a Reuters feature. Some US publishers and authors are responding by bringing books to market faster. While it normally takes 9 to 12 months from the time an author turns in a manuscript to when a book is released, that is down to just a few months for some publishers trying to keep up with the 24-hour information age.

One example is A Colossal Failure of Common Sense, a book about the collapse of Lehman Brothers by former vice president Lawrence McDonald. Crown will publish it in July, after acquiring the manuscript only last month. "With something as current as this, unless your timing is right, you can lose your audience for it," said John Mahaney, executive editor of Crown Business. Crown is a division of Random House, part of Bertelsmann AG.

Changing events are an added burden for authors. Shari Olefson's Foreclosure Nation -Mortgaging the American Dream was due to be published in October last year, but when the economic meltdown erupted she realized it would be "wrong and outdated." "Really the whole book had to be rewritten," she said. After resubmitting her manuscript at the end of December the book was published late last month by Prometheus Books.

"Writing a book about an ongoing financial crisis is like herding cats, it's just really challenging," Olefson said.
Simon & Schuster, part of CBS Corp, is publishing several books related to the financial crisis that it says have been turned around at a faster rate of four to six months

"Books that are related to any ongoing, shifting crisis are best published as close to when they're written as possible," said David Rosenthal, Simon & Schuster executive vice president and publisher.

Among them is Bold Endeavors: How Our Government Built America, and Why It Must Rebuild Now by Felix Rohatyn, released in February, just as the U.S. government was considering stimulus plans.

Meanwhile, Public Affairs released The New Paradigm for Financial Markets as an e-book in March last year, just 10 days after billionaire investor George Soros submitted his manuscript. A print copy was out just two weeks later and a paperback with four new chapters came out last month. "Things were moving fast and we wanted to make sure we were in the marketplace," said Peter Osnos, PublicAffairs founder and editor-at-large. "I do think that now you want to hit it hard and fast."

Portfolio, an imprint of Pearson Plc's Penguin Group, will publish Street Fighters: The Last 72 Hours of Bear , the Toughest Firm on Wall Street by Kate Kelly in May, just three months after receiving the manuscript."Every time there's a big news story like this there tends to be books that are timed to come out in the news cycle before they would normally come out," said Adrian Zackheim, president and publisher of Portfolio.

"The failure of the banks and the resulting economic turmoil is the story of our time right now," he added. Kathryn Popoff, vice president for adult trade books at Borders (BGP.N), said customers want to understand what happened and protect themselves. "The financial crisis has led to several instant books," Popoff said. "The publishers want to be timely and the sooner they can get it out, the closer they can get it to the event happening, the more relevant the book."