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The Dynamics of Mass Communication

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Title: The Dynamics of Mass Communication


1
The Dynamics ofMass Communication
Seventh Edition
  • Joseph R. Dominick

2
Part 2 The Print Media
3
Chapter 6 Books
4
Early Book History
  • Hand copied and lavishly decorated
  • Expensive and time consuming to make (1 year
    avg.)
  • Johann Gutenbergs invention of moveable type in
    1455 allows books to be mass produced
  • Printing spreads rapidly throughout Europe helps
    foster Protestant Reformation

5
Books in Early America
  • Colonial publishers often their own writer and
    printer
  • Religious and political works dominate the 1700s
  • In early 1800s, mass audiences, new technologies,
    libraries, and a better educated public spark
    book publishing during the Penny Press era
  • Civil War years help start paperback boom

6
Books in the 20th Century
  • A move to commercialization brought on by
  • literary agents focused on getting authors top
    dollar
  • books expand further into the mass appeal market
  • demand by financial backers to be profit oriented
  • Paperbacks debut again in post WW II market
  • Feature low prices, varied content, mass sales,
    quality works
  • More leisure time and income spur reading
  • Book industry becomes an attractive investment

7
The Contemporary Book Industry
  • A consolidation trend starts in the 1970s
  • Big companies begin dominating industry
  • The Internet opens up new a marketing and
    distribution approach with amazon.com et al
  • Content gets more specialized and varied

8
Books in the Digital Age
  • Most manuscripts are now produced and edited with
    word processors and distributed via e-mail
  • The emerging all-digitally processed e-books will
    establish all new approaches to book production,
    distribution, marketing
  • E-books new challenges to an old industry --
    authors as their own publishers, promoters, and
    distributors

9
The e-book Authors as Publishers and Retailers
E-book technology easily has the potential to
change the entire structure of the book industry,
with authors now conceivably able to write,
compose, promote, publish, and distribute their
own works, eliminating the need for a traditional
publisher.
10
Printing on Demand
  • Essentially a new way to distribute, buy, and
    print books right at the retail outlet
  • Choose your book at the store
  • Store downloads it from publishers database
  • Book printed within 15 minutes at the store
  • Publisher saves print and distribution costs

11
DEFINING FEATURES OF BOOKS
  • Least mass-like of the mass media
  • Potential to have profound social effects
  • Authoritative
  • Permanent

12
ORGANIZATION OF THEBOOK INDUSTRY
  • The publishing industry has three main segments
  • Publishers
  • Distributors
  • Retailers

13
Publishers
  • The Association of American Publishers lists 12
    major publishing divisions
  • Trade books
  • Religious books
  • Professional books
  • Book clubs
  • Mail order publications

14
Publishing Divisions (Cont)
  • Mass market paperbacks
  • University presses
  • Elementary and secondary texts
  • College textbooks
  • Standardized tests
  • Subscription reference books
  • Audiovisual and other media

15
Distributors
  • Thanks to the Internet, there are now two main
    channels by which books can get to consumers
  • The traditional method
  • The online method

16
Retailers
  • 20,000 traditional book stores
  • Major chain stores
  • Online vendors
  • College bookstores
  • Book clubs and mail-order sales
  • direct-to-consumer book-sellers

17
Ownership
  • The industry is dominated by large conglomerates
    with interests in other media. The top five
    companies as of mid-2000 were
  • Pearson Publishing
  • Random House
  • Harper-Collins
  • Simon Schuster
  • Time-Warner Publishing

18
PRODUCING THE BOOK
  • Departments and Staff
  • Editorial
  • Production
  • Marketing
  • General administration of the business
  • E-books

19
PUBLISHING THE BOOK
  • Book ideas come from three main sources
  • Agent recommendations
  • Unsolicited books a.k.a. slush
  • Ideas generated by editors themselves

20
General Steps in Getting a Book Published
  • Author submits a book proposal which can include
  • . cover letter and a brief description of the
    planned book
  • . a list of reasons why the book should be
    published
  • . an analysis of the potential readership market
  • . an outline or a table of contents (and a sample
    chapter)
  • Proposal forwarded to acquisitions editor for
    evaluation
  • . If favorable, contract is signed and author
    begins work

21
General Steps in Getting a Book Published (Cont)
  • As chapters come in, editors review book for
    sense and achievement of original intent
  • Book mechanics checked (writing, footnotes,
    grammar, permissions to reproduce other published
    materials)
  • Design decisions made and production schedules
    set
  • Book printed, sent to warehouses to await
    distribution

22
ECONOMICS
  • Cultural factors continue to cast promising
    economic growth for the book industry
  • Two main sources of industry income
  • money from book sales
  • subsidiary rights

23
FEEDBACK
  • The primary form of audience feedback for the
    industry continues to be the best seller lists
    compiled by newspapers such as USA Today, the New
    York Times, and Publishers Weekly.
  • Internet services like amazon.com are providing
    new feedback alternatives such as their purchase
    circles database and interactive reader reviews

24
End of Chapter 6Books
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