Posts Tagged ‘failure’

Are you as prepared for success as you are for failure?

Johanna Skibsrud

Johanna Skibsrud, author of The Sentimentalists, in a photo from the Toronto Star

Recently, a young writer won Canada’s richest literary prize. Johanna Skibsrud won the 2010 Giller Prize for her novel The Sentimentalists.

She gave a moving acceptance speech, thanking her late father for information, and then started to prepare to rejoin her mother on a vacation in the Middle East. A great story! But  … that’s where the trouble started.

Skibsrud’s novel, like her previous volume of poetry, was published by Gaspereau Press, a small publisher based in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley. Gaspereau describes itself as part of: “a unique but traditional publishing model that brings printing and publishing together under one roof [whose] publishing program stresses the importance of quality across the entire process, from editorial and design to the manufacturing stage.”

In realistic terms, that meant that The Sentimentalists could be produced at a maximum rate of 1,000 copies per week. That was fine for the roughly 800 copies it had sold since its release. This was not going to work for a Giller winner. For example, last year’s winner The Bishop’s Man sold about 75,000 copies. Even if you halved that number, Gaspereau was facing a bit of a problem. They had demand that was far outstripping supply. It could take the better part of a year to produce enough to meet the immediate demand, and this is the time of year — as Christmas shopping ramps up — when the vast majority of books are sold.

Immediately after the Giller Prize was announced, arts journalists started to focus on the supply issue. The president of Canadian book megastore chain Indigo told the National Post “We’re working hard with Gaspereau to try and get some supply into the marketplace … We want to order thousands of copies. Whenever they come to market, I think they’ll sell [but] I think the sales velocity opportunity is over the next six weeks in a material way.”
In the same article, Gaspereau’s co-owner said Indigo wasn’t “a core client for us. They are someone we deal with because they are a factor in the industry, not because they’re good customers. I don’t want to complicate their lives, but I’m not going to change who we are and how we do business.”

So let me lay out the issues that faced Gaspereau as I see them:

  • They have a principled commitment to quality production
  • They have a book in demand far beyond what they can supply (Amazon is selling ONE copy for nearly $900!)
  • That demand is partially time limited
  • Printing by someone else will likely reduce the quality of the physical book
  • Printing by someone else will generate additional revenue for the business
  • Printing by someone else will generate additional revenue for the author

Today, it appears that Gaspereau has found a solution. They’ve sold trade paperback rights to another publisher, Douglas & McIntyre. This means that their editions will still be the beautiful objects they are, but that many more people will be able to buy paper versions. There will be 30,000 copies available in about a week, and if they need more, they can do another 20,000 pretty easily. Douglas & McIntyre will also make e-reader editions available for all the popular e-readers. Previously, you could only buy it for Indigo’s proprietary Kobo e-reader. There’s a certain irony in a book published by a craftsmanlike press being primarily available for e-readers, I think.

All that is good news, and I wish Gaspereau and Ms. Skibsrud much more success in the future.

But the story of The Sentimentalists made me think. On one level, I admire Andrew Steeves and Gary Dunfeld of Gaspereau Press for their dedication. But I’m led to believe that most of the time, when a book is shortlisted for a Giller Prize, the publisher prepares for a possible win by making printing arrangements.

So perhaps what the folks at Gaspereau did was to neglect to prepare for success. It’s easy to think about failure. It’s easy to disaster plan (even though we often don’t do it!). But do we prepare and plan for success in the same way? I think it’s worth thinking about.

Technorati blog claiming contest is on!

Hi blogsters! Remember when Technorati used to be relevant? Me too.

Of course, they likely don’t know about this blog, because it still isn’t in their directory despite me having followed their procedures in MID-NOVEMBER. Now that’s the real-time web, eh kids?

So I’ve decided to make a contest. Leave a comment with your best guess as to what date they’ll approve my blog (Never is not a valid option; “when hell freezes over” isn’t either) and finish the review process they began 90 days ago, and the person who gets closest to the actual date will get a coffee and a pastry date with me (or without me, if you prefer)  if they’re in the Ottawa area, or I’ll paypal you enough to buy yourself a coffee and a donut.

Multiple correct answers will result in a random draw for the prize.

Good luck!

Bob LeDrew,
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