
Albert N. Greco
Author of The Book Publishing Industry
About the Author
Albert N. Greco is a Professor of Marketing at Fordham University. He has published a variety of books in the publishing field such as The State of Scholarly Publishing and The Book Publishing Industry. His research interests are in the book publishing industry, the scholarly journal industry, show more marketing and consumer behavior and market demand analysis. show less
Works by Albert N. Greco
The Culture and Commerce of Publishing in the 21st Century (Stanford Business Books) (2006) 9 copies, 1 review
The economics of the publishing and information industries : the search for yield in a disintermediated world (2014) 7 copies
The Growth of the Scholarly Publishing Industry in the U.S.: A Business History of a Changing Marketplace, 1939–1946 (2018) 2 copies
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The Culture and Commerce of Publishing in the 21st Century (Stanford Business Books) by Albert Greco
These Fordham professors may know more than anyone about the book publishing business when it comes to quantitative measures. That's not saying much, since there isn't a whole lot of shared knowledge about this industry, a point they make more than once (particularly in terms of market research, which the industry ignores almost totally). At times, it reads as excitingly as reading tables in the Bowker Annual, but it's good to have a current and thorough overview of the industry, even if a show more bit on the dry side. Included are historical economic data, information about different publishing sectors, and (particularly interesting to me) information from people in the business. (I'm a qualitative kinda gal, I guess.) Some interesting stuff: a BISG panel study gives the primary reason adults choose a particular book was cover art and book reviews; teens rely more on recommendations from people they know. Children's books are more likely impulse purchases than other kinds of books. Popular fiction is the most common type of book bought (57.3%). When people in the business were asked what issues concern them, consolidation was number one - it drives out smaller presses and choice and makes the business more bottom-line oriented. Other peculiar data points suggest looking at the bottom line might not be a bad idea: 2005 Bookscan data shows that in the first year of publication, 79% of new ISBNs had sales of fewer than 99 copies (!! - 212) Between 1995 and 2004 adult trade harbound books were returned at a rate of 33% with mass market paperbacks in the mid 40% range. Seven out of 10 new frontlist books in 2005 failed to earn any profit (215). Yet, in the US, an average of 22.2 new books are published every hour (214). And yet the publishers don't think market research is necessary because they know what readers want.
There's a lot of information here, and it's more affordable than the annual Book Industry Trends publication that is too pricey for most libraries, let alone curious individuals. Too bad there isn't more institutional curiosity in the book business, since the trends do not look particularly promising, especially if we are tottering on a recession. show less
There's a lot of information here, and it's more affordable than the annual Book Industry Trends publication that is too pricey for most libraries, let alone curious individuals. Too bad there isn't more institutional curiosity in the book business, since the trends do not look particularly promising, especially if we are tottering on a recession. show less
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- Works
- 11
- Members
- 88
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- #209,355
- Rating
- 3.3
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 33
