Tuesday, January 31, 2012

fyi // Publishing’s Ecosystem on the Brink: The Backstory | The Authors Guild Blog

I have my differences with the Authors Guild (viz., which deity anointed as representative of all word-based intellectual-property creators in dealing with Google?) -- but this piece is right on point.

The "Backstory" examples are particularly relevant. For a couple of decades now, we have seen (and some of us have been thrashed by) the tension between enabling technologies and trends that enable and foster independence (cheap shipping, cheap computing, the Internet) and the consolidation of market power at key points in the supply chain.

What doctors, authors, filmmakers, musicians, chicken farmers, brewers, better-staple inventors, and mobile-phone manufacturers all have in common is some gore point that forces them to kowtow to insurers, publishers (yes, publishers), studios, networks, theater chains, venue chains, processors, distributors, superstores, and mobile carriers whose veto will dry up their markets.

It is fair to say that this isn't new and we shouldn't be so naive; that if your don't like churches you shouldn't be a preacher and if your don't like hospitals you shouldn't be a surgeon.

What has changed is that there used to be at least a few competing "buyers" in the supply chain, and there was the occasional antitrust watchdog action to keep them in line. Since 1981 (another tidbit from the vaunted and mythologized Reagan Legacy), not so much.

The first couple of reader comments below the story warn us of both typical monopolist thinking and of always fighting the last battle. Amen.

At the time they did it, what Standard Oil and U.S. Steel did in the marketplace wasn't illegal -- but it sure was wrong, and over decades Congress and the executive corrected it. More than a century later, is it too much to wish that politicians would honor Theodore Roosevelt with actions to reaffirm Sherman and Clayton and Robinson-Patman?

And we claim we don't publish fantasy...

//Scott

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[from http://blog.authorsguild.org/2012/01/31/publishings-ecosystem-on-the-brink-the-backstory/ ]
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Publishing's Ecosystem on the Brink: The Backstory

Subtlety is out. Bloomberg Businessweek's January 25th cover shows a book engulfed in flames. The book's title? "Amazon Wants to Burn the Book Business." A towering pile of books dominates the front page of Sunday's NYT Business Section. The pile starts well below the fold (print edition), breaks through the section header at the top of the page, and leans precariously. Books are starting to tumble off. "The Bookstore's Last Stand," reads the headline.

These stories capture pretty well the state of book publishing: this appears to be no ordinary, cyclical crisis that future authors and publishers will shrug off. To understand how the book industry got into this predicament, however, a broader perspective may be needed. The cover story of February's Harper's Magazine provides that, discussing a fundamental shift in the federal approach to antitrust law that's affected bookselling and countless other industries. It's a story that hasn't previously been told in a major periodical, to our knowledge.

We'll get to that in a moment. First, let's set the stage with the other two stories.

Burning Down the Houses

Brad Stone's Businessweek story discusses Amazon's campaign to prevent other booksellers from securing a foothold in the booming e-book market and the company's furious reaction to Random House's decision last March to adopt agency pricing for e-books, just as five of the other "Big Six" trade publishers had the previous year. (Before agency pricing, Amazon could sell e-books from Big Six publishers at deep discounts, taking losses at a rate that Barnes & Noble could never afford to match. See How Apple Saved Barnes & Noble, Probably for more.)

Mr. Stone writes that after Random House's March 2011 agency-pricing announcement,

Amazon could no longer run the best play out of its playbook – slash prices and sustain losses in the short term to gain market share over the long term. … "For the first time, a level playing field was going to get forced on Amazon," says James Gray [of UK bookseller John Smith & Son and formerly of Ingram Content Group]. Amazon execs "were basically spitting blood and nails."

Amazon's response to Random House's move was stunning and swift:

The next month, an Amazon recruiter sent an e-mail to several editors at big publishing houses, looking for someone to launch a new New York-based publishing imprint. "The imprint will be supported with a large budget, and its success will directly impact the success of Amazon's overall business," read the e-mail, which was obtained by Bloomberg Businessweek.

Even with a large budget, directly affecting the success of Amazon's overall business is a tall order for a new publishing imprint. Amazon pulled in well north of $40 billion in revenue last year (final numbers aren't yet in), dwarfing the combined revenues of the Big Six publishers.

Luring a substantial contingent of bestselling authors away from the Big Six seems the only plausible route for an imprint to affect Amazon's overall business. Amazon needed someone with a substantial industry pedigree to pull this off. Amazon quickly – in time for last spring's Book Expo America — landed just the man for the job: Larry Kirshbaum, formerly of Warner Books.

Just three months after Random House's announcement, Amazon had all but declared war on the six unruly members of its book supply chain. Jeff Bezos had $6 billion in cash, the patience to absorb losses for years, and a former Big Six chief to lead the fight. The long-running behind-the-scenes battle for control of the publishing industry had finally broken into full public view.

Barnes & Noble's New Role: The Contender

While Amazon directly threatens traditional publishers with its new imprint, it continues to undermine the ecosystem on which book publishers, and most new authors, depend. Julie Bosman describes this well in her NYT article, focusing on the last remaining brick-and-mortar bookseller with nationwide clout:

Without Barnes & Noble, the publishers' marketing proposition crumbles. The idea that publishers can spot, mold and publicize new talent, then get someone to buy books at prices that actually makes economic sense suddenly seems a reach. …

What publishers count on from bookstores is the browsing effect. Surveys indicate that only a third of the people who step into a bookstore and walk out with a book actually arrived with the specific desire to buy one.

"That display space they have in the store is really one of the most valuable places that exists in this country for communicating to the consumer that a book is a big deal," said Madeline McIntosh, president of sales, operations and digital for Random House.

Established authors, for the most part, do fine selling through online bookstores. It's new authors who lose out if browsing in bookstores becomes a thing of the past. Advances for unproven and non-bestselling authors have already plummeted, by all accounts. Literary diversity is at risk.

To understand just how precarious things are, realize that last year's Borders' bankruptcy represented an enormous reduction in browsing space, shuttering 650 stores. (B&N has about 700 stores.) One benefit of the loss of Borders should have been a short-term lift to B&N's 700 stores and the 1,500 or so remaining independent bookstores. B&N's sales were indeed up in the nine weeks before Christmas, Ms. Bosman reports. How much? Borders' collapse led to a bounce of just four percent, compared to the prior Christmas. That's what's passing for good news in brick-and-mortar bookselling at the moment.

There is a bright spot, however. Barnes & Noble, led by William Lynch, has exceeded all expectations in the past two years with its launch of the Nook. B&N's 300-member Silicon Valley office, after giving Amazon's Kindle developers a two-year head start, beat Amazon to the tablet market by fully twelve months, and introduced what's generally seen as the state-of-the-art e-ink reader, the Nook Simple Touch, eight months ago.

B&N, in other words, has been out-engineering Amazon, and Ms. Bosman's story is the best account we've had of B&N's efforts. In the process, B&N has seen its e-book market share climb from zero, two Christmases ago, to roughly 27% today.

B&N remains vulnerable, however. The engineering race against Amazon continues, and Amazon has leverage for acquiring content for its Kindle (see Contracts on Fire: Amazon's Lending Library Mess) that B&N can't match. And, critically, one tool that should help B&N, our antitrust laws, is instead poised to undo it.

This brings us to an unlikely tale of books, chickens, beer, and a Silicon Valley gentlemen's agreement.

The Backstory: Amazon, Chicken Processors & Silicon Valley

Harper's cover art rivals Businessweek's: an enormous businessman wearing a gray pinstriped suit is preparing to literally eat the competition, a jumbo handful of gray-suited men and women. In the article, "Killing the Competition: How the New Monopolies Are Destroying Open Markets," (key excerpts at link, full article by subscription) Barry Lynn views the state of book publishing through a different lens.

Mr. Lynn makes the case that Amazon's dominance isn't just a story of an industry disrupted by online commerce and digital upheaval, it's about the abandoning of New Deal era protections of retailers in 1975 (promoted by backers as a means to fight inflation, says Mr. Lynn) and what he portrays as a shift in 1981 in the Justice Department's interpretation of antitrust law based on "Chicago School" theories of efficiency and consumer welfare. The upshot appears to be that non-consumer markets (business-to-business markets and labor markets) are often insufficiently protected from monopolies.

To a chicken grower, for example, the relevant market isn't restaurants or household consumers of chicken, it's the market of chicken processors. Through a variety of machinations, including long-term contracts and the physical placement of processing plants (think baseball, before free agency), chicken growers now routinely have a market of only one processor to sell to.

Chicken growers own their land, buildings, and equipment, and all of the debt and risk that go with them, but these entrepreneurs have no real control over their economic lives. Growers buy their chicks and feed from their poultry processor, for example, and processors often require growers to make new investments in buildings and equipment. The processors, Mr. Lynn seems to suggest, have something much better than mere capital: the economic power to dictate how others use theirs.

It's not just chicken growers who face constrained markets, Mr. Lynn writes. In free-wheeling Silicon Valley, computer engineers and digital animation workers employed by Apple, Google, Intel, and Pixar, among others, were subject to a secret agreement not to bid on each others' employees, according to a Justice Department lawsuit filed, and settled, in 2010. (On Friday, former employees of some of the companies filed an antitrust lawsuit in federal court in San Jose based on the Justice Department investigation.)

It's even hit beer. The 1,750 U.S. microbrewers may appear to operate in a competitive environment, but they nearly all sell through two distributors: ABI and MillerCoors control 90% of the distribution market.

For book publishers, the relevant market isn't readers (direct sales are few), but booksellers, and Amazon has firm control of bookselling's online future as it works to undermine bookselling's remaining brick-and-mortar infrastructure. Amazon controls every growing segment of the industry: online physical books, downloadable audio books, online used books, and e-books. Amazon commands about 75% of the online market for print books, and 60% of the e-book market (a percentage that decreased from Amazon's reported 90% two years ago, as a result of agency pricing).

Mr. Lynn reports on a conversation with the head of one of the largest publishing houses in the U.S.:

He explained that Amazon was once a "wonderful customer with whom to do business." As Jeff Bezos's company became more powerful, however, it changed. "The question is, do you wear your power lightly? … Mr. Bezos has not. He is reckless. He is dangerous."

The head of a small publishing house in Manhattan, Mr. Lynn reports, was even more blunt:

"Amazon is a bully," he said, his voice rising, his cheeks flushing. "Anyone who gets that powerful can push people around, and Amazon pushes people around. They do not exercise their power responsibly."

Neither man allowed me to use his name. Amazon, they made clear, had long since accumulated sufficient influence over their business to ensure that even these most dedicated defenders of the book – and of the First Amendment – dare not speak openly of the company's predations.

Mr. Lynn then turns to Amazon's blackout of Macmillan's buy buttons, two years ago this week:

At the time, Amazon and Macmillan were scrapping over which firm would set the price for Macmillan's e-books. Amazon wanted to price every Macmillan e-book, and indeed every e-book of every publisher, at $9.99 or less. This scorched-earth tactic, which guaranteed that Amazon lost money on many of the e-books it sold, was designed to cement the online retailer's dominance in the nascent market. It also had the effect of persuading customers that this deeply discounted price, which publishers considered ruinously low, was the "natural" one for an e-book.

In January 2010, Macmillan at last claimed the right to set the price for each of its own products as it alone saw fit. Amazon resisted this arrangement, known in publishing as the "agency model." When the two companies deadlocked, Amazon simply turned off the buttons that allowed customers to order Macmillan titles, in both their print and their e-book versions. The reasoning was obvious: the sudden loss of sales, which could amount to a sizable fraction of Macmillan's total revenue, would soon bring the publisher to heel.

This was not the first time Amazon had used this stratagem. The retailer's executives had previously cut off small firms such as Ten Speed Press and Melville House Publishing for bucking their will. But the fight with Macmillan was by far the most public of these showdowns.

In the late 1970s, when a single book retailer first captured a 10 percent share of the U.S. market, Congress and the regulatory agencies were swift to react. As the head of the Federal Trade Commission put it: "The First Amendment protects us from the chilling shadow of government interference with the media. But are there comparable dangers if other powerful economic or political institutions assume control…?"

***

Today, … a single private company has captured the ability to dictate terms to the people who publish our books, and hence to the people who write and read our books. It does so by employing the most blatant forms of predatory pricing to destroy its retail competitors. … [It] justifies its exercise of raw power in the same way our economic autocrats always do: it claims that the resulting "efficiencies" will serve the interests of the consumer.

The book industry is in play, and has been for a while. The good news is that people are finally starting to pay attention.

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Comments:
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Showing 13 comments

  • C. Heyer
    If you're surprised by the negative comments on this article, it must be because you haven't tried to sell a book lately.  Would you think that 40,000 in sales might get you a contract on your next one?  Nope.  Not good enough.  So the writers went elsewhere--to Amazon.  Now Amazon is getting so big, they're pounding the writer too.  The publishing establishment waited far too long to do anything productive to address the problems in their own business.  The part I like about the eBook business is that you license your book.  You don't end up liking the deal, you can get out of it.  Some big company hasn't grabbed all your rights and told you you're lucky you were one of the chosen and you're getting a whopping 15%, of which you give 15% to the agent.  This probably isn't even live online yet, and Amazon is trying to figure out how to take the rights in perpetuity.  Jeff Bezos wants to be "the only one."  The publishing companies need to start making better deals with the writers.  Make it a real partnership, change the game.  Is there enough imagination within the business to do that?

  • truman
    This is a classic case of technological disruption. It was only a few years ago when publishers were worried about B&N having too much power over the distribution of their books, and now publishers are counting on B&N to save them from the Amazon beast.  On the retail end it's natural that consumers will come to expect lower prices; this has happened in every other "software" category, especially music. No one plunks down $18.99 for a CD anymore so why buy a book for $25.99? So the game has changed; get used to it. One thing the author fails to mention is that the publishers themselves went through a stage of mergers that placed most of the power within a few big players. Shareholders from these big corporate powers  demanded never-ending growth and profits and weren't willing to invest in new talent then.  Funny how it was okay when publishers were exhibiting the same behaviors that Amazon is being accused of now.

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Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Season of hope... // Thirty years of a disease: The end of AIDS? | The Economist

It's the time of year to imagine the end of war, of hunger, of disease. 

Here's to all those folks who have looked through their grief toward a better future.

Merry Christmas... /Scott

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The end of AIDS?

ON JUNE 5th 1981 America's Centres for Disease Control and Prevention reported the outbreak of an unusual form of pneumonia in Los Angeles. When, a few weeks later, its scientists noticed a similar cluster of a rare cancer called Kaposi's sarcoma in San Francisco, they suspected that something strange and serious was afoot. That something was AIDS.

Since then, 25m people have died from AIDS and another 34m are infected. The 30th anniversary of the disease's discovery has been taken by many as an occasion for hand-wringing. Yet the war on AIDS is going far better than anyone dared hope. A decade ago, half of the people in several southern African countries were expected to die of AIDS. Now, the death rate is dropping. In 2005 the disease killed 2.1m people. In 2009, the most recent year for which data are available, the number was 1.8m. Some 5m lives have already been saved by drug treatment. In 33 of the worst-affected countries the rate of new infections is down by 25% or more from its peak.

Even more hopeful is a recent study which suggests that the drugs used to treat AIDS may also stop its transmission (see article). If that proves true, the drugs could achieve much of what a vaccine would. The question for the world will no longer be whether it can wipe out the plague, but whether it is prepared to pay the price.

The appliance of science

If AIDS is defeated, it will be thanks to an alliance of science, activism and altruism. The science has come from the world's pharmaceutical companies, which leapt on the problem. In 1996 a batch of similar drugs, all of them inhibiting the activity of one of the AIDS virus's crucial enzymes, appeared almost simultaneously. The effect was miraculous, if you (or your government) could afford the $15,000 a year that those drugs cost when they first came on the market.

Much of the activism came from rich-world gays. Having badgered drug companies into creating the new medicines, the activists bullied them into dropping the price. That would have happened anyway, but activism made it happen faster.

The altruism was aroused as it became clear by the mid-1990s that AIDS was not just a rich-world disease. Three-quarters of those affected were—and still are—in Africa. Unlike most infections, which strike children and the elderly, AIDS hits the most productive members of society: businessmen, civil servants, engineers, teachers, doctors, nurses. Thanks to an enormous effort by Western philanthropists and some politicians (this is one area where even the left should give credit to George Bush junior), a series of programmes has brought drugs to those infected.

The result is patchy. Not enough people—some 6.6m of the 16m who would most quickly benefit—are getting the drugs. And the pills are not a cure. Stop taking them, and the virus bounces back. But it is a huge step forward from ten years ago.

What can science offer now? A few people's immune systems control the disease naturally (which suggests a vaccine might be possible) and antibodies have been discovered that neutralise the virus (and might thus form the basis of AIDS-clearing drugs). But a cure still seems a long way off. Prevention is, for the moment, the better bet.

There are various ways to stop people getting the disease in the first place. Nagging them to use condoms and to sleep around less does have some effect. Circumcision helps to protect men. A vaginal microbicide (none exists, but at least one trial has gone well) could protect women. The new hope centres on the idea of combining treatment with prevention.

A question of money

In the early days scientists were often attacked by activists for being more concerned with trying to prevent the epidemic spreading than treating the affected. Now it seems that treatment and prevention will come in the same pill. If you can stop the virus reproducing in someone's body, you not only save his life, you also reduce the number of viruses for him to pass on. Get enough people on drugs and it would be like vaccinating them: the chain of transmission would be broken.

That is a huge task. It is not just a matter of bringing in those who should already be on the drugs (the 16m who show symptoms or whose immune systems are critically weak). To prevent transmission, treatment would in theory need to be expanded to all the 34m people infected with the disease. That would mean more effective screening (which is planned already), and also a willingness by those without the symptoms to be treated. That willingness might be there, though, if it would protect people's uninfected lovers.

Such a programme would take years and also cost a lot of money. About $16 billion a year is spent on AIDS in poor and middle-income countries. Half is generated locally and half is foreign aid. A report in this week's Lancet suggests a carefully crafted mixture of approaches that does not involve treating all those without symptoms would bring great benefit for not much more than this—a peak of $22 billion in 2015, and a fall thereafter. Moreover, most of the extra spending would be offset by savings on the treatment of those who would have been infected, but were not—some 12m people, if the boffins have done their sums right. At $500 per person per year, the benefits would far outweigh the costs in purely economic terms; though donors will need to compare the gain from spending more on knocking out AIDS against other worthy causes, such as eliminating malaria (see article).

For the moment, the struggle is to stop some rich countries giving less. The Netherlands and Spain are cutting their contributions to the Global Fund, one of the two main distributors of the life-saving drugs (the other is Mr Bush's brainchild, PEPFAR), and Italy has stopped paying altogether.

On June 8th the United Nations meets to discuss what to do next. Those who see the UN as a mere talking-shop should remember that its first meeting on AIDS launched the Global Fund. It is still a long haul. But AIDS can be beaten. A plague that 30 years ago was blamed on man's iniquity has ended up showing him in a better, more inventive and generous light.




Monday, December 19, 2011

"impossible!" // Publishers Challenge Audience Report | Adweek

"How could my account be overdrawn? I still have checks..."

"Frankly, I believe any drops, or increases, are less a symbol of a magazine's audience than they are a shining example of deficiencies in the research collection process itself. Do you really think a Wired reader is going to spend that amount of time completing a written and online survey? If so, they're not likely the affluent, intellectual readers we target anyway."

Guess those in-person surveys aren't the way to go, eh? http://www.ostrichheadinsand.com/images/ostrich-head-in-sand.jpg

On the bright side, reported readership of Obsessive-Compulsive Monthly Weekly Daily Hourly is up 10,000%...


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[from http://www.adweek.com/news/press/publishers-challenge-audience-report-137182 ]

Publishers Challenge Audience Report

Fall study shows widespread readership declines

Magazine publishers are demanding explanations from GfK MRI after its fall magazine audience report showed more than two-thirds lost audience versus a year ago, many of them by double digits.

Some year-to-year audience fluctuations are common, but the fall report was unusual. About 70 percent of the 220 magazines measured were down, according to MRI. Big decliners included Wired, down 22 percent to 2.5 million; Bon Appétit, down 17 percent to 5.8 million; O, The Oprah Magazine, down 10 percent; and New York, down 14 percent.

Print ad buyers use the semiannual report to decide where to spend clients' budgets, so declining audiences are the last thing publishers need. Until now, the overall magazine audience had held steady, giving periodicals needed ammo at a time when newsstand sales and ad revenue were falling. The fall MRI report showed the total magazine audience down 3 percent, though.

Publishers' unhappiness doesn't end there, though. Some are complaining that the report under-represents their digital audience.

It wasn't supposed to be this way. Until recently, magazine measurement firms focused on their print audiences, but readers are now getting magazine content on mobile devices and online as well as in print. To that end, MRI, along with rival Affinity, has begun measuring magazines' digital footprint, a step that some publishers hoped would boost their overall numbers. MRI's fall report was its first to include such comprehensive data.

One publisher, whose title saw a double-digit audience decline, fumed, "Magazines with robust readership are showing declines, and magazines with significant digital platforms are not seeing those recognized. MRI is going to have a lot of explaining to do."

Another publisher, Bon Appétit's Pamela Drucker Mann, said it was a "challenge" to understand why Bon App's audience fell 17 percent, given strong year-over-year newsstand sales for the past several issues under new editor Adam Rapoport.

"We did speak to MRI about this, and they said it typically takes syndicated research 12-18 months to reflect an editorial change," she emailed. "Therefore, we conclude these numbers to reflect reader fatigue toward the former Bon Appétit editorial product and the exact reason Adam's team was brought on to reshape the editorial vision of the magazine."

Howard Mittman, publisher of Wired, said the problem was the methodology itself. MRI gathers the information by conducting in-person surveys with 26,000 interviewees.

"The last wave had Wired showing a healthy double-digit increase, and this latest wave has us showing a double-digit decline," Mittman emailed. "Frankly, I believe any drops, or increases, are less a symbol of a magazine's audience than they are a shining example of deficiencies in the research collection process itself. Do you really think a Wired reader is going to spend that amount of time completing a written and online survey? If so, they're not likely the affluent, intellectual readers we target anyway."

Anne Marie Kelly, MRI's svp of marketing and strategic planning, said MRI stands behind its research.

While it's true that MRI changed its questions with this survey to capture digital readership, she said, "We did a lot of testing to make sure this question would be understood by all consumers and would not impact the print numbers."

As for the digital data, she said it's only preliminary and won't be part of MRI's official ratings until the spring when a second wave of research will have been done.

As for the decline in print audience, she suggested that circulation, which has been on a downward trend, played a part.

"Circulation is down," she said. "There are fewer magazines out there. We don't know how much of those [readers] have migrated digitally. I'm not saying it's good news. But we're in the middle of a transition."

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About the Author

Lucia Moses is a staff writer for Adweek.

@lmoses
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Thursday, December 15, 2011

Fail of the Year? / The Year of C.E.O. Failures Explained - NYTimes.com

Here is one more example of the wisdom of "measure twice, cut once" -- it's so ridiculous to see all that scrap lumber on the marketplace floor...

The Year of C.E.O. Failures Explained

In some ways, the most interesting stories in tech for 2011 weren't the products. They were the companies. Or, more specifically, their chief executives.

FDDP

Or, to be more specific still, the C.E.O.'s' idiotic blunders.

There was Hewlett-Packard's chief, Léo Apotheker, whose software company background apparently left him baffled by H.P.'s hardware business. He killed off H.P.'s promising, brand-new TouchPad tablet only seven weeks after its release, along with Palm Pre phones and a huge range of products based on the company's WebOS operating system—and proposed jettisoning the computer business that had made it famous.

After a huge public outcry, he was fired, and the new chief executive (Meg Whitman) reversed the changes or suspended them.

There was Netflix's C.E.O., Reed Hastings, who decided to raise the price of Netflix's most popular plan 60 percent — and then split the company in two. One would just mail DVDs, while the other would offer streaming movies from the Internet. Each company would have its own Web site, movie queues, billing and name (Netflix and Quickster, or Qwikster, or Qwiquster, or something). It would require twice as much administrative effort by its customers, and it made no sense whatsoever.

After a huge public outcry (and after losing a million customers), he backed off from the company-split idea and left well enough alone.

There was Cisco's chief executive, John Chambers, who decided to shut down the Flip camcorder business he had bought only two years earlier for $590 million. Killing off the Flip involved taking the world's most popular camcorder off the market and laying off 550 people.

After a huge public outcry, well, nothing happened. He's still the C.E.O., and the Flip is gone.

These C.E.O.'s may have had their own internal business reasons for these unpopular decisions. But they were internal, self-interested reasons. Reasons intended to please stockholders, perhaps.

Even so, all three committed several cardinal sins: Putting customers last. Rewarding loyalty with rudeness. Failing to make their cases to the public.

All of them wound up looking terrible. All of them increased the sense of disconnection between big companies and the millions who buy their products.

I've never worked a 9-to-5 job, so I may feel the biggest sense of disconnection of all. Maybe life inside a company is so different from real life that what seem like crazy decisions to me seem perfectly justified to the number crunchers.

But it doesn't seem like you'd need a business degree to appreciate that these would be bad decisions. Whenever I see a company shooting itself in the foot like that, I always wonder: how could anyone be so stupid? When do people become so stupid?

Last spring, I taught a class at the Columbia Business School called "What Makes a Hit a Hit—and a Flop a Flop." I focused on consumer-tech success stories and disasters.

I distinctly remember the day I focused on products that were rushed to market when they were full of bugs — and the company knew it (can you say "BlackBerry Storm?"). I sagely told my class full of twentysomethings that I was proud to talk to them now, when they were young and impressionable — that I hoped I could instill some sense of Doing What's Right before they became corrupted by the corporate world.

But it was too late.

To my astonishment, hands shot up all over the room. These budding chief executives wound up telling me, politely, that I was wrong. That there's a solid business case for shipping half-finished software. "You get the revenue flowing," one young lady told me. "You don't want to let your investors down, right? You can always fix the software later."

You can always fix the software later. Wow.

That's right. Use your customers as beta testers. Don't worry about burning them. Don't worry about souring them on your company name forever. There will always be more customers where those came from, right?
That "ignore the customer" approach hasn't worked out so well for Hewlett-Packard, Netflix and Cisco. All three suffered enormous public black eyes. All three looked like they had no idea what they were doing.

Maybe all of those M.B.A.'s pouring into the workplace know something we don't. Maybe there's actually a shrewd master plan that the common folk can't even fathom.

But maybe, too, there's a solid business case to be made for factoring public reaction and the customer's interest into big business decisions. And maybe, just maybe, that idea will become other C.E.O.s' 2011 New Year's resolution.




Tuesday, December 6, 2011

d'oh! // Swearing is good for you (unless you're like Gordon) - Science - News - The Independent

Do we agree with this study? Yes... hell, yes! But we need a American-English translation, dammit...

Why be anti-fane when you can be profane?

cheers//S
P.S. Who the ___ is that guy in the picture?

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[from http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/swearing-is-good-for-you-unless-youre-like-gordon-6270250.html ]

Swearing is good for you (unless you're like Gordon)

Study reveals that cursing can relieve pain – but only when practised in moderation


Thursday 01 December 2011

Victims of paper cuts and stubbed toes don't need scientists to tell them about the pain-healing power of cursing but research suggests the more you swear, the harder pain becomes to bear. A study by Keele University confirms that swearing can act as a form of relief. But those who have become habituated to cursing (think Gordon Ramsay, inset, or The Thick of It's Malcolm Tucker) are less likely to feel the benefits.

Richard Stephens, of Keele's School of Psychology, said there was no "recommended daily swearing allowance", and it remains unclear whether certain swearwords are more effective analgesics than others. "We are just scratching the surface of how swearing can influence our emotions," he added.

His findings, in America's The Journal of Pain, found that those who swear just a few times a day doubled the time they could withstand the "ice-water challenge",- how long they could hold their hands in a container full of ice-water. Those who admitted to the highest level of everyday cursing – up to a chain-swearing maximum of 60 expletives a day – did not show any benefit when undertaking a similar challenge.

The mechanism, the scientists say, is simple, swearing elicits an emotional response leading to what is termed "stress-induced analgesia", also known as the "fight or flight" response, along with a surge of adrenalin.

Frequent swearers can utter profanities without feeling an emotional response,and thus do not get the same pain-relieving effects. So, it seems, swearing lightly in one's daily routine can help in the occasional, stressful situation. "It would be silly to advocate swearing on the National Health Service," Stephens said, "But swearing seems to activate parts of the brain that are more associated with emotions.

"In the context of pain, swearing appears to serve as a simple form of emotional self-management. Whether swearing has beneficial effects in other contexts is something we would like to explore further."


$%!#&!$! A history of swearing

* The original meaning of the adjective "profane" derives from the Latin meaning "in front of" and "outside the temple". It refers to items not belonging to the church. For example, "The fort is the oldest profane building in the town, but the local monastery is older".

* A 2000 report co-commissioned by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) and the BBC ranked swearwords on their severity. The most severe words related to racial abuse. The mildest were "baby words" such as "poo, wee and bum" and rhyming slang "berk".

* Regarding broadcast swearwords, 52 per cent of respondents to the ASA survey said that the "c" word should never feature in television programmes, whereas just 7 per cent had a problem with the word "bloody".

* Every language, dialect or patois, whether living or dead, has its own share of forbidden speech. Additionally, young children will memorise the "illicit inventory" long before they can grasp its sense, be;ieves John McWhorter, a scholar of linguistics at the Manhattan Institute.

* About 80 to 90 words each day – between 0.5 per cent and 0.7 per cent of all words – are swearwords, according to analyses of recorded conversations.

* A 2006 survey found that 36 per cent of 308 British senior managers and directors accepted swearing as a part of workplace culture. "If swearing is discriminatory it is a complete no-no," said employment lawyer Brian Palmer. "Employers have a duty of care towards their employees so they have a reasonable working environment."

Rob Sharp

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Karl Slover, One of the Last Surviving ‘Oz’ Munchkins, Dies at 93 - NYTimes.com

When we were kids, The Wizard of Oz was on TV every year from 1956 on. It gave me the willies, but I watched it every damn time.

By the time I was older (say 12 or 13...) I got un-scared enough to love the technology of the movie, the Munchkins (they trashed the Culver Hotel!)... and then the music.

We all knew "Follow the Yellow Brick Road" was a classic, but who'd have thought that Karl Slover would be still singing it for fans seventy years later?

Or that "Over the Rainbow" would be covered by just about everybody -- and that as grownups we would take it on as a kind of hymn, listening through tears as we send off people who leave us too soon?

I'll wager that lyricist Yip Harbug knew. When Wizard screened in San Luis Obispo, Louis B. Mayer and Mervyn LeRoy tried to cut the song on the grounds that it slowed the pace. Cooler heads prevailed. But one verse was left out, and we hardly ever hear

Someday I'll wake and rub my eyes
And in that land beyond the skies,
You'll find me
I'll be a laughing daffodil
And leave the silly cares that fill
My mind behind me

Godspeed, Karl Slover. See ya one day.

//S

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[from http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/17/movies/karl-slover-one-of-the-last-surviving-oz-munchkins-dies-at-93.html ]

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November 16, 2011

Karl Slover, One of the Last Surviving 'Oz' Munchkins, Dies at 93

MGM, via Photofest // Karl Slover in "The Wizard of Oz" as the lead trumpeter in the Munchkins' band.


DUBLIN, Ga. (AP) — Karl Slover, one of the last surviving actors who played Munchkins in "The Wizard of Oz," died on Tuesday in a central Georgia hospital. He was 93.

The cause was cardiopulmonary arrest, said the Laurens County deputy coroner, Nathan Stanley.

Mr. Slover was best known for playing the lead trumpeter in the Munchkins' band, but he also played an Oz townsman and soldier, according to John Fricke, author of "100 Years of Oz."

Long after the 4-foot-5 Mr. Slover retired, he appeared around the country at festivals and events related to "The Wizard of Oz." He was one of seven Munchkins at the 2007 unveiling of a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame dedicated to the film's little people. Only 3 of the 124 actors playing Munchkins remain.

Mr. Slover was born Karl Kosiczky on Sept. 21, 1918, in what is now the Czech Republic.

"In those uninformed days his father tried witch doctor treatments to make him grow," Mr. Fricke said. Young Karl was immersed in heated oil until his skin blistered and then attached to a stretching machine at a hospital, all in an attempt to make him taller. When he was 9, he was sold by his father to a traveling show in Europe, Mr. Fricke said.

Mr. Slover was paid $50 a week for "Oz" and told friends that Toto, Judy Garland's canine co-star, made more money.

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Friday, November 11, 2011

Zynga to employees: Give back our stock or you'll be fired | The Digital Home - CNET News

Well, isn't this special? 

I may have to rethink my Words With Friends addiction... I need a 12-letter word here.

/S

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Zynga to employees: Give back our stock or you'll be fired

by  

Attracting top employees can be difficult for cash-strapped startups. So, in many cases, they give out company stock to supplement salaries that employees might feel is below-market.

Zynga followed that strategy. But now the CityVille and FarmVille maker apparently wishes it hadn't, according to a new report.

Citing industry sources, The Wall Street Journal reported today that Zynga CEO Mark Pincus, along with his top executives, decided last year as they were preparing for an initial public offering (IPO) that they had given out too much stock to employees. But rather than accept that reality, the executives reportedly tried a different tactic: demand employees give back not-yet-vested stock or face termination.

In order to determine which employees would be asked to give stock back, Pincus and his executives tried to pinpoint workers whose contributions to Zynga--in the execs' eyes--didn't necessarily justify the potential cash windfall they could receive when the company went public, the Journal claims. One Journal source said that Zynga executives were especially concerned with not creating a "Google chef" scenario.

That reference relates to Google's 2004 IPO when one of the company's chefs, who was hired in the firm's early days, walked away with $20 million worth of stock after the shares went public.

After finding people to target, the Journal's sources say, Pincus offered his ultimatum. However, as one might expect, he faced some anger from employees who didn't believe they should be required to give back the stock. The Journal cited two employees--one who has left Zynga and another that still works with the company--who hired attorneys to reach a settlement that saw them give up some, but not all, of the unvested shares.

Although Zynga's decision might be met with some criticism, the firm's executives reportedly justified their strategy by saying it was best for the company. With the unvested shares, the executives believed they could attract more top talent with the promise of stock.

Speaking of stock, the public might soon have a chance to own part of the social-gaming company. Earlier this month, Bloomberg reported that Zynga was planning to go public after Thanksgiving. The company is expected to raise up to $1 billion in an IPO.

Zynga did not immediately respond to CNET's request for comment.

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