Thursday, December 24, 2009

Giving Credit where it is Due

I learned much at the hands of my former boss, Lynn Goldberg, a legendary woman in publishing who was far more than a boss to me – she was part mother/part mentor/part friend. A key lesson she imparted during the decade I spent working for her was the gracious way to give credit where it was due. She was unparalleled at this – with personal notes, public recognition, and lots of other clever ways.

So, as I sit here on the eve of the holidays receiving emails about our holiday gift – a card featuring us all playing scrabble with a portable scrabble game – I feel compelled to give the credit for this clever idea where it is due. To be honest, trying to come up with a holiday card or gift that somehow relates to the publishing industry gets tough. Once you have exhausted the obvious bookmarks, book bags, or even bookends, the idea well gets a little dry.

So this year, when the holiday card time rolled around I was a little stumped. Then, someone on staff reminded me of some shots we had from a standard company shoot. We had never used them as most featured us standing around trying to look like we’re not being photographed. Then, Dennis’s wife, Susie, reached over at the end of the photo session which we were more than ready to end, dumped a scrabble game on the floor and urged us all to sit down and put the company’s name on the board. These candid shots were the only good ones taken that day. And playing with words did seem a good idea for a company that promotes book.

Then, as I sat mulling one night what we could send to accompany the card, my middle child, 14 year old Corey, look a glance and said, “Oh, you should put in those scrabble games that you can take in the car.” Of course, this was FAR better than anything at all I could think of. A scrabble dictionary I had wondered? Corey mulled. “Well, that’s okay, I guess, but what good is the dictionary for Scrabble if you don’t have the game?”

There you have it – anyone who got the game from us and loved it, we’re thrilled. But the clever idea was alas, not really ours. Kudos to Susie Welch and Corey Henricks. We’re mulling whether they would consider sharing the title of Chief Creative Officers of the company.

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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

800-CEO-READ 2009 Business Book Awards

Today 800-CEO-READ announced the winners of their 2009 Business Book Awards, which highlights its top business book of the year along with winners and nominees in a number of categories including Leadership, Current Interest and Finance & Economics. TOO BIG TO FAIL by Andrew Ross Sorkin (Viking) won Business Book of the Year and we're thrilled that six of our clients are also on the list!

Personal Development WINNER! – Power of 2 by Rodd Wagner & Gale Muller (Gallup Press)

Leadership nominee – Strengths Based Leadership by Barrie Conchie & Tom Rath (Gallup Press)

Marketing & Advertising nominee – "I Love You More Than My Dog" by Jeanne Bliss (Portfolio)

Entrepreneurship & Small Business nominee - Duck and (Re)Cover by Steven S. Little (Wiley)

Biographies & Narratives nominee - How to Castrate a Bull by Dave Hitz with Pat Walsh (Jossey-Bass)

Innovation & Creativity nominee - In Pursuit of Elegance by Matthew B. May (Broadway Business)

Congratulations to all of the winners and nominees!

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Sunday, December 13, 2009

Book success even sweeter in tough times

The publishing and media worlds have had a tough year. With magazines folding, newspapers dying or going digital and staff cuts plaguing nearly every industry, it feels there has been little to celebrate.

But while we watch our industry undergoing what is clearly a game-changing shift pushed by technological and digital innovation, watching an old fashioned book, the kind that lives between two covers, remains a big thrill.

This week, Jeanne Bliss has enjoyed a double victory with her book "I Love You More Than My Dog" Five Decisions that Drive Extreme Customer Loyalty in Good Times and bad. (Portfolio, hardcover, October, 2009)

It has become a BusinessWeek bestseller http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/09_49/b4158068815587.htm?campaign_id=rss_null

And Inc magazine has named it a notable book of 2009. http://www.inc.com/ss/best-books-business-owners-2009#14

Our hats off to Jeanne!

And for the record, the seismic shift and the rise of the digital book are both trends that I feel bring with them tremendous opportunity. More on that here later. After we've popped the champagne corks to celebrate with Jeanne.

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