CWG Press: a small publisher with big ideas

Our mission is to promote excellence and freedom. Our selection of books is based solely on quality, not on mass-market appeal or the authors’ points of view. Our aim is to provide an opportunity for important and diverse ideas to compete in the public forum.

Browser Issues
Undecided
There have been reports of problems viewing this site with Internet Explorer. It works with Firefox and Opera, and my other site based on Joomla! software does not exhibit the same problems. I'll get to it when I can but this is not my most active project at the moment.
 
Chuck
Tips | Sales | Home
Main Menu
Home
The Mission
Blog
News
Links
Contact Us
Search
CWG FAQs
Tips
Administrator
Gallery
Some Friends
Join the Blue Ribbon Online Free Speech Campaign
Lunarpages.com Web Hosting
http://stores.ebay.com/YOUR-BOOK-MUSIC-AND-VIDEO-SOURCE
Blogs
How Not to Sell Books #2 PDF Print E-mail
Last Modified: Friday, Apr 06/2007 18:54
Written by Paul Barnett/John Grant   

In fact, this article is about how not to sell music, but everything in it could be applied equally to the book trade.

Spinning Into Oblivion

DESPITE the major record labels’ best efforts to kill it, the single, according to recent reports, is back. Sort of.

You’ll still have a hard time finding vinyl 45s or their modern counterpart, CD singles, in record stores. For that matter, you’ll have a tough time finding record stores. Today’s single is an individual track downloaded online from legal sites like iTunes or eMusic, or the multiple illegal sites that cater to less scrupulous music lovers. The album, or collection of songs — the de facto way to buy pop music for the last 40 years — is suddenly looking old-fashioned. And the record store itself is going the way of the shoehorn. ...

The sad thing is that CDs and downloads could have coexisted peacefully and profitably. The current state of affairs is largely the result of shortsightedness and boneheadedness by the major record labels and the Recording Industry Association of America, who managed to achieve the opposite of everything they wanted in trying to keep the music business prospering. The association is like a gardener who tried to rid his lawn of weeds and wound up killing the trees instead.

In full (quite a long article) at: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/05/opinion/05sachsnunziato.html?th&emc=th

 


Add Comments
 
< Prev   Next >