Wednesday, 23 December 2009
Best wishes for Christmas and New Year 2010: Join the CILIP "Big Conversation"
If you are looking for a new year resolution what about joining the CILIP "Big Conversation" and broadening the debate.
Input from the broader Information / Knowledge sector will be important. I am sure that debate needs to include those not currently CILIP members for whatever reason as well as colleagues who may not be UK / London based.
See full text of the CILIP "Big Conversation" invitation at:
http://www.cilip.org.uk/about-us/people/president/Pages/big-conversation.aspx
Monday, 23 November 2009
Seminar : Marketing Your Service
Marketing Your Service
Nicola Franklin, Sue Hill Recruitment
Tuesday 8 December 2009
11.00 - 12.00
To attend send a request to clkelly@algoodbody.ie
Please note: you must be a member of the BIALL Solos list to attend. To enquire about membership contact biall-solos-request@mailtalk.ac.uk
Friday, 23 October 2009
EU Parliament discussess Copyright in the Knowledge Economy
Monday, 19 October 2009
Local Acts from Justis
Justis have entered into a joint venture with OPSI to increase the accessibility of local acts. The plan is to digitize all local acts in the UK and upload them on to Justis.
They are considering including them in an enhanced statutes package. They say that anecdotal evidence suggests that this would be very well received.
I wonder whether we'd rather have an enhanced statutes package, or a one-off subscription? Also, what the cost would be?
Monday, 21 September 2009
Seminar: Training and Development for Solos and Small Teams
Members of the BIALL Solos mailing list are invited to attend a seminar on Training and Development for Solos and Small Teams.
Training and Development for Solos and Small Teams
Penny Simmonds, Head of Training and Development at CILIP
Tuesday 29 September 2009
11.00 - 12.00
The seminar will take place via conference call on Tuesday 29 September 2009 at 11am.
Attendance is free but places are limited to 30 and will be allocated on a first come first served basis.
Please email clkelly@algoodbody.ie to express your interest in attending.
The full session (both Penny's presentation and the following discussion) will be recorded and made available to the full mail list after the event.
Please note: you must be a member of the BIALL Solos list to attend. To enquire about membership contact biall-solos-request@mailtalk.ac.uk .
Wednesday, 19 August 2009
News International sites charging for content!
http://www.binarylaw.co.uk/index.php/2009/08/18/never-mind-the-content-feel-the-packaging/
Never mind the content, feel the packaging
So, Rupert Murdoch has declared that News International sites will all start charging for content by next summer. What he actually said was he was satisfied that News International could produce “significant revenues from the sale of digital delivery of newspaper content”, that “we intend to charge for all our news websites” and “make our content better and differentiate it from other people”.
He hasn’t got where he is by announcing his plans in advance and I don’t think this announcement is an exception. It signals an intention but says nothing about the plans. He talks broadly - as most commentators also do - of “content”, when he fully understands the substantial differences between news, comment, reviews, features, serialised fiction, crosswords, recipes, agony aunt columns, … And what does “charge for a website” mean? He knows that clumsy, broad paywalls are a non-starter.
For any pay-to-view charging system to succeed it’s going to have to be sophisticated in its pricing and completely painless for the user. The overwhelming consensus is that no-one’s going to pay for news which is abundant elsewhere and not sufficiently differentiable. Some argue that comment and analysis have sufficient value, but the only proven cases are for business-critical content (Wall Street Journal and Financial Times). The only one sure way you’re going to get people to pay to view is to provide content that is either unique or otherwise unavailable for free elsewhere.
But there’s another way to differentiate your content - to create value - and that’s in the packaging.
Back in 2001 News International introduced charges for its crossword on Times Online, with a £10 annual fee; that’s now not just crosswords online but the Crossword Club, giving access to more than 9,000 puzzles and a host of member benefits - for £4.95 a month or £12.95 a year. That may be generating small beer for the Times, but it is based on just a tiny fraction of the the Times’ content. There are plenty more examples like this where news sites are already generating revenue from their content - but most commentators seem completely blind to them.
There’s no end to the number of packages, large and small, that news publishers could dream up, serving particular niches, and most will have a far higher perceived value than the simple online delivery of their base content.
By Nick Holmes, 18 August 2009Filed Under Publishing, Business
Monday, 27 July 2009
Hammicks launches MyiLibrary
It claims that the service allows users to build their own ebook collection by purchasing the ebooks they want, one book at a time. There is no minimum purchase so that users can gradually build an ebook collection. The service is available over the Internet and all the ebooks contain the same information as the print books.
Hammicks claim that:
- all ebooks are available from home and work
- there is full text searching across all purchased titles
- 175,000 titles in the collection
- single and multi user access models are available
- there is an administration interface which allows monitoring of ebook usage
- major legal publishers have signed up to put their titles on MyiLibrary, with more books being added every day.