Posts Tagged ‘E-book’

IBM Selectric Typewriter

by Bill Ruesch

I nearly tripped over an IBM Selectric typewriter, once the King of all the offices,now leaning against a painted door, relegated  to a basement hallway’s supply closet, forever consigned to be a lowly doorstop.

My, how things have changed.  What was once considered swell was using the word my as an exclamation at the beginning of a sentence, or even using the word swell at all for that matter. I’m not really into archaic slang, it just seemed somehow appropriate to the topic.

Indexing somehow seems like a quaint idea, more fit for the 19th century than the present. After all aren’t there more and better solutions via the Internet and such? Tia Leschke contacted me to ask if an article on indexing would be of interest to Chicken Scratching readers. She sent the information below and we send to her our thanks.

Tia Leschke’s four very important things to consider when it comes to indexing

Tia Leschke -- Indexer

An Index? Why?

You’ve finally finished your book. It’s been edited and proofread and has a wonderful cover design. You’re looking forward to reading sales figures and doing signings. Wait a minute…if it’s a non-fiction book, it should have an index.

Wouldn’t a key word search on an e-book be better?

You wonder, “Why would my book need an index?” If it’s an e-book, you might believe that a simple keyword search function will be sufficient, and maybe it will be. Your readers might get frustrated trying to find the right keyword, though. Let’s say she wonders whether there’s information about vaccines in the infant health book she’s browsing, so she searches on vaccines and finds nothing. The author used the word inoculations. A good index would have a see reference to guide her from vaccines to inoculations. She might also be guided through see also references to information about vaccine safety, as well as the various diseases for which vaccines are available.

Searching for information shouldn’t overwhelm one with a zillion barely connected hits.

We’ve all run Google searches that gave us thousands of hits. Most of us don’t go beyond the first page. In an e-book, the search will stop on every instance of word usage. Let’s say there’s a reader looking for information about using Twitter for business. A general book on social media will refer to Twitter probably hundreds of times, but how many mentions will be relevant to their particular search? Moreover, how much time is wasted by  readers checking every single reference?

Indexing is one of the least respected sales tools.

One more reason for having an index is that it can help a purchaser decide whether to buy your book. If she glances through the table of contents and doesn’t see anything about her particular interest, she might put it back on the shelf without realizing that there’s actually quite a bit there. A glance at the index would show her that, if there’s an index to peruse.

A quick off-the-shelf reference is not so easy to lose.

Whether your readers are wondering whether certain information is actually in your book, or whether they remember something that they want to refer to again, an index is the map for finding that information.

For more information, you can reach Tia at http://ca.linkedin.com/pub/tia-leschke/14/923/a09 or http://tia-leschke.ca



Dr. Gary S. Goodman and I have been connected on LinkedIn for some time now. His comments on my various blog posts have always been insightful and on point. Recently he sent me a link to an article he had written regarding e-Books and I thought it shed some new light on the question of to e-Book or not to e-Book? I enjoyed his perspective so much that I asked his permission to republish it on this blog.  –Bill Ruesch

Best-Selling Author Asks: How Do You Autograph An E-Book?

Author: Dr. Gary S. Goodman

At one of my most memorable book signings, I had just finished speaking to a group of 450 managers. Each had been provided a copy of one of my books, and it took me a good half-hour to inscribe autographs to those that patiently stood in line.

That happy scene came to mind I was just reflecting on some advice I gave to an aspiring author.

I suggested she start the journey into print and prestige by publishing an e-book. Build a track record with one of those, and then pitch a bricks-mortar-and-paper publisher on transforming the piece into something tangible.

Separately, I mentioned she should tell publishers that she performs before “live” audiences, which would make avid book buyers in the foyers of various venues.

Then it hit me. You can’t AUTOGRAPH an e-book, can you?

This is one of the medium’s major drawbacks. As an author of hard-copy volumes, some of which have reached best-seller status, I can tell you much of the allure of purchasing a speaker’s tome is that it is a memento.

You can pull it off a shelf, or even display it in a neat tabletop bracket, so your friends and colleagues can be impressed that you got up close and personal with someone at least moderately prominent.

There’s the signature to prove it, and the personal dedication, to YOU!

You can pass that volume down to your grandkids, and beyond, and it may gain significance and even extrinsic value with the passing decades.

An e-book will in all likelihood never be prized as a “first edition.” Nor can it really become a “rare” book, either, as long as it can be preserved in electronic storage systems, which become ever cheaper.

We can’t tout an e-book as being in “excellent condition,” either. Indeed, most of the characteristics that lend books an aura or prestige and uniqueness tend to vanish when they become digital, only.

E-books will be with us for a long time to come. Yet, will they ever serve as reminders of special events or meaningful encounters the way conventional books do?

Authors aren’t the only people to inscribe dedications in books. We do the same thing for friends and loved ones when we give them as gifts.

The fact that we cannot autograph e-books doesn’t necessarily consign them to failure. It just makes conventional volumes that much more valuable and admirable, by comparison.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/ebooks-articles/bestselling-author-asks-how-do-you-autograph-an-ebook-2090439.html

About the Author

Dr. Gary S. Goodman is a top-ranked sales speaker, negotiation speaker, and customer service speaker at Google, and a distinguished, sought-after telemarketing speaker, motivational speaker, and attorney. President of Customersatisfaction.com, he is a frequent TV and radio commentator and the best-selling author of 12 books and more than 1,700 articles that appear in 25,000 publications. President of Customersatisfaction.com, Gary conducts seminars and speaks at convention programs around the world. His new audio program is Nightingale-Conant’s “Crystal Clear Communication: How to Explain Anything Clearly in Speech & Writing,” which you can try for only one dollar at: http://www.nightingale.com/prod_detail.aspx?product=Crystal_Clear_Communication&promo=INTAF416. Professional speaking, seminar, and consulting invitations can be addressed to:gary@customersatisfaction.com.


The following article was originally posted in The Huffington Post, March 8, 2010. I found it to be very enlightening and thought provoking. I asked the author, Nathan Branford for permission to reprint it on this blog and he very kindly consented. Nathan is a literary agent with Curtis Brown LTD.

One e-reader = how many bookshelves?

Don’t Believe the E-book Skeptics

Originally posted at the Huffington Post

Slate’s technology writer Farhad Manjoo recently wrote a very interesting article about some off-base predictions of yore about our digital future. He focuses on a whopper of a Newsweek column from 1995 (which is actually titled “The Internet? Bah!“) about how the Internet would be a passing fad because, among other things, online shopping can’t replicate the experience of a salesperson, an online database can’t replace a daily newspaper, and the Internet was so jumbled he couldn’t even find the date of the Battle of Trafalgar.

Whoops.

Rather than just hardy har har-ing at the article, Manjoo takes a different, and very insightful approach. He notes that the author of the article was hardly a Luddite – he was actually deep in the weeds of the early Internet. The problem with the article wasn’t that the author was dumb, the problem was that he was looking strictly at the Internet of 1995 and ignoring the potential for innovation and change.

Manjoo lays out four principles for more successful predictions about our digital future:

1. Good predictions are based on current trends
2. Don’t underestimate people’s capacity for change
3. New stuff sometimes come out of the blue
4. These days it’s best to err on the side of (technological) optimism

When people make predictions about our e-book future, I find myself mystified that some people are so dismissive of their inevitability. I see blog posts and comments around the Internet from people who look at the nascent e-book landscape and think, “Blech. Expensive grayscale Kindles in a white piece of plastic? No way e-books are going to catch on!” Some people admit that they’re going to be a part of our lives, but do so grudgingly and see them as yet another signpost that we’re all going to hell in a handbasket.

Here’s the thing they ignore: e-books are only going to get better.

Move over Nostradamus, here are some predictions about our digital book future:

1. The e-book reading experience is only going to improve.

Sure – not everyone loves the current grayscale Kindles and tiny iPhone reading experience, particularly for books that are illustrated or are beautifully designed. But better devices are coming and it’s going to open up a new era of book design of unlimited possibility.

I remember that my high school English teacher told us that when William Faulkner was writing THE SOUND AND THE FURY he wished he could have published the text in different colors to denote the different perspectives, but obviously that would have been prohibitively expensive for publishers at the time. Not anymore. With the iPad and other devices coming soon, E-books are going color.

Tomorrow’s writers are going to have almost limitless ability to include beautiful color photos and art and interactivity and creative design even in the mass-est of mass market books, the ones that are currently printed on cheap paper and sold on supermarket racks and where the idea of including anything colorful or design-y besides the cover is laughable.

Think of how much a fancy illustrated book costs now and then think about how cheaply that can be done digitally. E-books may be uglier than print books now, but they’re about to get more beautiful.

2. E-readers and e-books are only going to get cheaper.

Sure, right now e-readers are out of reach for much of the population. That’s going to change. Every new technology is out of reach until it gets cheaper. Digital toys that would once have sold for $100 are now given out in McDonald’s Happy Meals. Lower prices for iPad-like devices of the future are inevitable.

And while publishers are currently taking a stand against deeply discounted e-books, the $12.99-$14.99 price point that they are fighting for is still half the cost of a $25 hardcover.

It’s soon going to be possible to buy e-books cheaply on an affordable e-reader device, and they’re going to be more colorful and interactive than most of their print counterparts.

3. Finding the books you want to read will only get easier.

One of the most common fears about the coming era is that no one will be able to find the good books in a time when anyone can just upload their novel to Amazon. It’s the Fear of the Jumble, which was also expressed in that column at Newsweek, where the author complained that (in 1995) you couldn’t even find the date of the Battle of Trafalgar on the Internet. He didn’t realize that Google and Wikipedia would come along to give you that answer in mere seconds.

Already there are sites like Goodreads and Shelfari cropping up that allow people to swap reviews and recommendations about books. People increasingly find new books through blogs, forums, and heck, hearing from an author directly. It was never really possible before for authors to reach their audience directly – now it’s a piece of cake.

Humans are really, really good at organizing things. If we can organize the billions and billions of web pages out there so that we can find what we want within a few seconds I think we can manage a few million books.

4. People are ignoring the digital trend.

I was watching a Seinfeld rerun the other day and there was a funny moment when Elaine hated a movie she was watching so much she called the video store and threatened not to rewind it. I’m going to have to explain this joke to my kids. And then I’m going to tell them about this funny thing we used to have where used to get these things called DVDs in the mail rather than having them downloaded straight to the TV (or wall or inside our eyeballs or whatever we’re watching movies on in the future).

Everything that can be digitized is being digitized because it’s cheaper and easier to send pixels around the world than physical objects. First it was music, then newspapers, then movies. Books are next in line.

5. Habits change

Yes, yes. The smell of books, reading in the bathtub, writing in the margins, a bookshelf full of books, etc. etc.

People will still have that choice and there are some books that simply can’t be replicated digitally. But when faced with a better option, consumers shift extremely quickly. Right now the benefits of e-books are a little murky except for early adopters and those that can afford the devices. But that’s just right now. Pretty soon they’re going to be better (color! design! portable! interactivity! instantaneous!) and cheaper. Readers won’t pay a premium for an inferior print product out of habit and nostalgia in great numbers.

The e-book era is going to be one of incredible innovation and unlimited opportunity, and people who don’t see e-books dominating the future of the book world are ignoring the coming innovation and creativity and affordability. I refuse to believe the skeptics and pessimists. Books are about to get better.

Be sure to visit these related posts: You Can Never Trust An E-Book and How Can You Call an e-Book a Real Book?