Unlocked Locks

diva

Electronic publishing, in all of its varied forms, has freed us from the tyranny of packaging. How much longer can the remaining tyrants hold on to their traditions?

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A Tangled Past

Keisa Sharpe and I have been professionally woven since 1996. We were part of the startup ABC affiliate in Birmingham, and worked together for nearly eight years. I left for the Red Cross, and three years later she joined me in the regional office, where we served five states with communications counsel. When those field offices were in danger of being wiped out in layoffs, I tipped Keisa off to a position with Alabama Power, and landed another one there for myself. We’ve been here together for two-and-a-half years, and it’s been a blast working with her. However well we got along, Keisa always kept some parts of her life very close.

Early in 2009, there was a problem, and I didn’t know about it for a long time. I just knew she was missing work. It was much later that I found out about The Accident. [Read more...]

Words of Mouth

dental tools

I got my teeth cleaned today.

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Don’t worry, I won’t gross you out. There was no evidence of any major dental issues. I did have a little bit more plaque than normal, which I attribute to a change in toothpaste to a gel that doesn’t leave me feeling fresh. Also, there were a couple of spots where I had some abrasion, but nothing too serious. No additional pits or pains, and I’ll be back in six months for some annual x-rays.

Still, that was probably more detail than you wanted.

I talked with Lisa, my long-time hygienist. We were joking about the fact that the Alice In Chains song coming across the Muzak was out before some of the staff could even write their names – and that the songs now on Oldies formats are better than the crap they call music these days… [Read more...]

Access: Birmingham

ticket

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Times are tough for newspaper publishers, who are trying to sell their relevance to subscribers and potential advertisers. The temptation to drop standards is ratcheting up, and once standards are lower it’s hard to recover that blow to reputation. [Read more...]

Blogs, Books, and Immortality

book

(The audio is still here, I have moved it to the bottom.)

Several people are prodding me to write a book. I probably have several in me that I don’t yet know are there – along with the ones I know are there but I’ve been too lazy to extrude.

  • The business book, based on a presentation I created
  • The murder mystery based on events that might have happened
  • The book about communications

Fortunately, I’ve had enough going on in my life to keep me busy, or at least give me the excuse not to crack down and just do it. But is that the only reason? Or is there something more fundamental going on with regards to what we consider a book? And will it matter? [Read more...]

Fluid Platforms and Singing Whales

humpback-whales

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There will be a theme for the next week or so. Disruption and Adjustment.

Before last week I had never heard of Ryu Murakami, but he’s at the center of an interesting case that may amplify the tremors of technology.

From Robert McCrum in the Guardian:

Earlier this month, in a manoeuvre I predict will soon be seen as a watershed, the admired contemporary Japanese writer Ryu Murakami announced that he was publishing his new book, A Singing Whale, in partnership with Apple, as an iPad download, turning his back on his regular Japanese publisher, Kodansha. The book will also include video content set to music composed by Oscar-winning Ryuichi Sakamoto.

So is there now a way to break a contract by shifting platforms? [Read more...]

The Last Business Book You’ll Ever Need

bookcover

A friend of mine was lamenting that he wanted to write another business book, but couldn’t think of anything new to say.

So I beat him to the punch.

Major Publishing Announcement

Sometime soon, Ike Pigott will release “The Last Business Book You Will Ever Need – a Primer for Self-reliance in the Digital Age of Digitalness.”

Chapter 1: GO READ THE *OLD* STUFF ON YOUR SHELF! There are insights there you missed when you were skimming, trying to impress people.

Chapter 2: GO TO THE ——- LIBRARY! There are pretty good books there, too.

Chapter 3: GO OUTSIDE AND GET SOME FRESH AIR, YOU PASTY LUMP OF GOO! Books? Really? You think the answers are in BOOKS?

Chapter 4: SUBSCRIBE TO MY NEWSLETTER. It’s only $25 a year, and you can pony that up, since you’re not buying any more books.

The cover needs a little work, but we can outsource that. I think I read about that somewhere…

Digital Divides

This is one of the many ideas that has been rattling around in my head. Actually, it is three of them, each worthy of individual attention, yet together revealing a larger truth. And it starts with something Horrible.

Sing-a-long Smorgasbord

Writer/director/producer Joss Whedon had some time to kill during the recent writers’ strike, so he gathered his brothers and a few close friends with legit acting resumes and put together a little show. (Like the kids in the neighborhood hanging up curtains for a homemade talent show, but with a bigger budget and better gear.) The result was an experiment in internet distribution called “Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog.” The action-adventure comedy-musical was split into three parts, each segment being released on the web for free during premiere week in July. All you needed was internet access and you could watch it for free.

Whedon’s catch? The videos would be pulled at the end of that week, and available for paid download at iTunes for just two bucks each, or four bucks for the set of three. In doing so, he made the show a must-see event for the millions of his most discriminating fans. He created scarcity, and made tens of millions of dollars doing it. The videos are still available for free viewing on Hulu — with limited commercial interruption.

Upshot? During a disruption of the regular distribution system, Whedon found a way to bypass future disruptions, and has proven that a talent with sufficient audience and savvy can go over the top of the traditional gatekeepers (even if he stuck to a traditional format, 44 minutes or so for the whole thing sure would fit nicely in a one-hour commercial television slot…)

Fast Finale

I’ve written before about an amazing series, Avatar: the Last Airbender. Forget Spongebob, Avatar is responsible for the highest ratings in Nickelodeon’s long history. It’s a totally kid-friendly show with epic scope, great writing and characterization, and enough plot twists and smarts to keep the adults engaged.(We just hope that M. Night Shyamalan doesn’t botch the live-action adaptation.)

Avatar was meant to run three seasons, and the last one just concluded a couple of weeks ago. The first ten episodes ended at a half-season cliffhanger, and the remaining 11 half-hours came in an unprecedented barrage. Instead of milking its rightest-rated series ever, the entire second half of the season rolled out in a single week. The finale was a two-hour event on a Saturday night, of all things.

None of the news release materials in advance explained the strategy. Maybe there was a “leak” of the series overseas, where it was scheduled to air and piracy might become an issue. Not sure I’ll ever figure it out, but it sure generated a lot of buzz for the release of the DVDs coming in September.After all, in the land of the Avatar, “bending” is the art of shaping elements to your will.

Dead Trees Still Live

In both of the previous examples, you might be tempted to take away the lesson that new media is tossing old media out on its keister. And you’d be wrong.

M” and “L” are both friends of mine. I’ve known L for close to 10 years now, a brother of mine in Kung Fu. M is his significant other, and like many smart and engaging couples in their late 20s it was time for them to move. M is a grad student at UAB, L works in an office just a few blocks away, yet they rent an apartment 20 miles to the south through the second-worst commute metro Birmingham has to offer. They were looking for someplace much closer, and they had been tracking a number of perfect situations on Craigslist. Yet they always seemed to find themselves WAY down on the list.

A friend suggested they go another route: classified ads. That’s right. Pick up a newspaper and scan the real estate listings. Believe it or not, they do still exist. Columnist Bob Cringely recently wrote about his wife’s education on becoming a licensed agent, and how she was learning about a big shift coming:

The local paper seems chock-full of real estate ads. But according to her teachers down at the MLS university, those listings are simply vestigial, like little toes we all have but probably don’t need for balance or, indeed, for anything at all. Real estate brokers put ads in local newspapers because their customers expect them to do so, not because they actually help sell houses.

I’m sure there are exceptions to this rule, but if 80 percent of all houses for sale in the U.S. are eventually sold NOT because of any newspaper listing, tradition or professional pride aside, at some point we can expect real estate newspaper advertising to eventually disappear. Chock up more bad karma for the newspaper industry, where this fact has to have been long known, and which is apparently in even worse trouble than we thought.

Is Craigslist more afforable? Yes.

Is Craigslist more convenient? Yes.

Is Craigslist more environmentally friendly? Yes.

Is there still a significant population that has no idea who Craig is, and why he leaves his list around all those tubes on the internets? Absolutely.

Imbalance is your friend

M and L have already moved closed to town and to a great place, and the landlords were mighty grateful to even show it. Such was the assumption that Dead Tree Ads would yield nothing but inkstains and fishwrap. So many people had piled onto the Craiglist and MLS bandwagon, there was a huge imbalance in the marketplace. Those with places to rent were following through with what they know. The Digital Revolution will eventually claim us all, churning information so quickly and freely that we’ll be very close to knowing the real value of things. Free markets tend to point us in that direction.

Yet there will still be imbalances in information. Insider trading is a form of imbalance which is illegal because it allows those with special knowledge to abuse it.� What M and L did was not only legal but smart. No matter how pervasive and predictably smooth a market appears to be on the surface, there will always be those bubbles of information that don’t fit within the known model. Those who stand the best chance of striking it rich are the ones who can parse the patterns and see where the market opportunities are — even if that means looking back instead of stubbornly pressing forward.