It’s been 550 years since Johannes
Gutenberg pioneered a new printing technique and began to publish on
a mass scale for the first time. With the dawn of digital publishing
a new frontier revealing itself to us. Digital is being promoted as
the future of the publishing industry and as tablet computers and
e-books become increasingly widespread the ways in which we devour
our media is changing faster than ever before.
While this is only a brief analysis of
the arena of digital publishing and it wouldn't surprise anyone if
this information is rendered irrelevant in 6 months, looking at the
industry as it stands provides an interesting view.
Political
As digital generated content and
Internet access is becoming increasingly widespread there is a new
generation of writers from all backgrounds on an international scale.
These new writers can create followings and generate interest in
their pursuits, whether they are political or creative. With a wider
field of reporting and the repercussions of coverage can be felt in
political institutions across the world. The recent Arab Spring was
accelerating by the use of digital communications and localized
revolutionary reporting. The flip side of this is that those with an
extreme agenda have the same soapbox from which to speak.
Economic
There are a series of new revenue
streams that digital publishing presents for the industry in general,
which goes some way to explaining why the leaders of publishing
companies are fiercely pursuing it. While 40% of tablet owners have
purchased a magazine app and 25% regularly read magazines on their
device, there are still considerable gains to be made in that market.
Advertising has been deemed more effective if it is seen to be
interactive. With companies such as Facebook have been quick to adopt
purchasing software such as Synapse and Alvenda buying direct from a
digital magazine can hardly be light-years away.
Social
There is an increasingly social side to
the way digital content is created and eventually published.
Publishing efforts from 37 Signals have pioneered the use of blogs to
release parts of their book over time and in order to engage with
their readers to see how they were being received. Wayne
Gladstone’s book Notes From The Internet Apocalypse was originally
a serialized novella published on Cracked.com but will soon be
published by Thomas Dunne books.
Technological
The reading experience has been
enhanced by the dawn of this new technology. The time spent reading
magazines rises with digital publications, the average number of
minutes spent on Vanity Fair rose from 65 minutes to 200 when the
audience used a digital copy. Since their release in 2010 over 100
million iPads have been sold worldwide and this is a considerable
audience for any publisher.
Legal
With digital content being so easily
exploited, copied and reproduced there are a number of legal issues
revolving around the rights of digital content. Acknowledging the
right of workers and professionals is one key aspect of this but also
the rights of the purchaser. Looking at the widely reported story
that Bruce Willis was to sue Apple in order to leave his considerable
digital music collection to his daughters raises an interesting
question, who actually owns downloaded content? In reality customers
never actually buy a lot of digital content, rather they purchase the
license to use it. The same is as true for ebooks and magazines as it
is for music. There may be a digital artifact on your kindle but we
cannot say that you “own” it in the traditional sense of the
word. As such that feeling of “buying” something may be
misplaced.
Environmental
A great deal has been made about the
benefits of digital readers to the environment. If there are less
trees being felled for magazine paper then there will be a positive
impact. However, the natural resources that have to be harvested and
mined for the creation of tablets and various e-readers could have a
negative impact on the environment. Books and magazines are easily
recyclable whereas technology is particularly hard to dispose of and
can lead to terrible amounts of waste and landfill.
Even this blog (which was meant to come
in at a tidy 300 words) cannot fully incorporate every aspect of the
burgeoning digital publishing industry, but hopefully it has
demonstrated that in this relatively infant medium there is plenty of
potential for great success.
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