Mobile phone. Audiobook. Ereader. Social Media. Widget. What do these all have in common? Each of these forms of digital media, and the rate of consumer adoption of them, are rapidly changing the way publishers do business. Print isn't yet dead, but it's definitely in need of a transplant. This presentation explores successful convergence strategies for print media -- the stuff that can get it back on track -- while also glancing into the future of what publishing could ultimately become.
5. > - $157 mil 2007 60% of consumers buying books last year shopped at bookstores 20% bought online 34% went to bigger retailers like Wal-Mart Source: Simmons Market Research Bureau
8. Social Media * Users and Broadband Penetration Worldwide, 2007 - 2012 Note * = MySpace, Facebook, YouTube, and Flickr Source: Strategy Analytics “The People’s Revolution: Implications of Web 2.0 and Social Media Applications,” Dec. 12, 2007
17. Japan’s Story Mobile Phone Sales of Ebooks 331.3% from 1.6 billion yen (about US$14 million) To 6.9 billion yen (US$58 million) in 2006 non-phone Internet sales of electronic books grew 69.7% from 4.8 billion yen (US$41 million) to 8.1 billion yen (US$68 million) Source: Digital Content Association of Japan
18. Japan’s Story The Number One Selling Book In Japan is a Mobile Phone Book Books are composed on phones, Published on Phones, and Read on Phones Primarily Female Tech Savvy Reader who has not read a print book
19. Japan’s Story The Number One Selling Book In Japan is a Mobile Phone Book Books are composed on phones, Published on Phones, and Read on Phones Primarily Female Tech Savvy Reader who has not read a print book
21. Multitouch Microsoft “Surface” Demo By CNET http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Id43juZ3_o0 Perceptive Pixel by Jeff Han [Official Video] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zGDNFpOMcA