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The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Home » Trends » Page 12

Trends

Zondervan and Thomas Nelson Fiction Merge

By Steve Laubeon October 1, 2012
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by Steve Laube

You may have read about some of the reorganization that has begun after the sale of Thomas Nelson to Harper Collins, which already owned Zondervan. This past week there was a new development that touches the fiction publishing programs. Instead of two separate entities, there will be one fiction division moving forward. Zondervan’s editorial team of Sue Brower and Becky Philpott now report to Daisy Hutton who has been the new head of Thomas Nelson fiction since May. Therefore, in acquisitions, there will be a centralized clearing house for all new projects no matter who is acquiring them. As time goes by each brand name, “Zondervan Fiction” or “Thomas Nelson Fiction,” will develop their own distinctives. But for now, nothing changes.

The Zondervan YA and middle grade acquisition editors will remain under the Zonderkidz division and not move over under Thomas Nelson.

Fiction marketing will be overseen by Katie Bond who was in charge of Nelson Fiction marketing. This will create some dedicated synergy between the new releases, similar in some ways to the synergies we see in the Bethany House and Revell offerings. One catalog, two brands. We have been promised that they are committed to providing marketing support according to their already approved levels, and each brand plans take advantage of the increased synergies and combined efforts. Let’s hope that these efforts will result in better market penetration and greater visibility for each release. I am confident that this transition will be relatively seamless and that no Zondervan or Nelson author should worry. Marketing and Publicity is as much an art as it is a science. With the marketplace constantly shifting it is good that there will be a dedicated fiction team to implement new ideas, especially since fiction sells differently than non-fiction.

The sales division is still being reorganized. Top management is set to oversee both divisions under the roof of the HarperCollins Christian Publishing Division. But exactly how this will shake out down to individual territories, responsibilities, and key accounts is being discussed. Remember, much of this reorganization is less than a week old, so having definitive answers of that scale is not realistic.

The merger of two powerful fiction imprints is not foreign in our industry. Nine and a half years ago (2003) Baker Books, which already had Revell fiction, bought Bethany House. One of the benefits to the merger was that Bethany House authors saw an increase in sales because the Baker side of the equation had new avenues for sales. And Revell fiction saw an increase due to the evident market success of Bethany House’s fiction line. Today, all these years later, each division is distinct and has their own editorial oversight. Each have their strong authors and happily co-exist.

When Waterbrook bought Multnomah in 2006 again there were two distinct fiction divisions led by two strong editors. In that case, after a few years, it was decided to reduce the number of overall titles published and ultimately Multnomah fiction faded, to a certain extent. This was a strategic overall publishing plan and was not a reflection on the quality of the books or the acquisitions editor. In my opinion it was as much a function of market realities (the fiction  divisions were merged in November 2008…at the height of the economic downturn).

Back to the Nelson/Zondervan fiction combo. The bottom line is that, for now, it will be business as usual. Authors will “feel” very little change other than those with new books will likely have a new face talking to them about marketing. And veteran authors will tell you that having a new face in marketing has been par for the course across the industry. Fortunately Daisy Hutton, the head of the Nelson fiction division is a great communicator and she has pledged to keep us agents in the loop regarding changes and transitions. I feel like we have a open door to discuss any bumps in the road so that ultimately our authors will be well served…and that the marketplace will find and read some wonderful new fiction in the coming months.

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Category: Book Business, Steve, TrendsTag: Thomas Nelson, Trends, Zondervan

In Search of Ideas

By Karen Ballon July 25, 2012
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Authors, I’m guessing you’ve heard this question over and over: “Where do you get your ideas?” I know I’ve heard it more times than I can count. Now, if you’re like most writers I know, ideas for possible stories come fast and furious—most of the time. But what to do when you feel as though the idea well has run dusty and dry?

Well! Let me share a few standards that I, and other authors I know, …

Read moreIn Search of Ideas
Category: Creativity, Karen, Trends, Writing CraftTag: Creativity, Ideas

Ebook-Originals, the Next Step in Traditional Publishing Strategy

By Steve Laubeon July 19, 2012
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Guest Post by Sue Brower

Our guest today is Sue Brower. She is Executive Editor at Zondervan in charge of fiction and thinks she has the best job in the world…she gets paid to read all day!  Zondervan is currently looking for completed manuscripts to fill the Zondervan First fiction eBook platform.  The ideal stories will primarily have romance-driven plots and vivid, realistic characters.  We …

Read moreEbook-Originals, the Next Step in Traditional Publishing Strategy
Category: Book Business, Book Proposals, Defense of Traditional Publishing, E-Books, Get Published, TrendsTag: ebooks, publishing, Strategy

It’s Official – Thomas Nelson is Now Owned by HarperCollins

By Steve Laubeon July 11, 2012
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The sale of Thomas Nelson is now official.

From the press release:
“Thomas Nelson will continue to operate as an independent company with its unique editorial focus on inspirational and Christian content. Details, such as how Thomas Nelson will benefit from HarperCollins global print and digital platform, will be forthcoming.”

And if you were not aware, Zondervan Publisher is also owned by …

Read moreIt’s Official – Thomas Nelson is Now Owned by HarperCollins
Category: Book Business, Get Published, Steve, TrendsTag: Sale, Thomas Nelson

Goodbye to Traditional Publishing?

By Steve Laubeon May 14, 2012
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by Steve Laube

Recently Ann Voss Peterson wrote of her decision to never sign another contract with Harlequin. One major statistic from the article is that she sold 170,000 copies of a book but earned only $20,000.

Multiple clients sent me Peterson’s “Harlequin Fail” article and wanted my opinion. My first thought is that this was typical “the publisher is ripping me off” fodder. But …

Read moreGoodbye to Traditional Publishing?
Category: Book Business, Contracts, Defense of Traditional Publishing, E-Books, Steve, TrendsTag: Contracts, royalties, Traditional Publishing

It’s A Brave New World

By Karen Ballon March 14, 2012
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I’ve been in publishing for lo, these many years (over 30), so you’d think the work would be pretty much second nature for me. No so! In fact, just this last week I did something completely new!

I edited a book, in four days, using Skype and Dropbox.

The amazing thing about this isn’t that the author and I got the book done so quickly, but that it was SO MUCH FUN! We parked on Skype for …

Read moreIt’s A Brave New World
Category: Book Business, Get Published, Karen, TrendsTag: dropbox, Editing, skype, Technology, Trends, Writing Craft

News You Can Use – Feb. 21, 2012

By Steve Laubeon February 21, 2012
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My Favorite Article of the Week - Please read it and make your agent happy.

What Publishers Can Learn From the Airlines- Andy Le Peau of IVP renders a very clever take on what publishing could look like if they would only emulate other industry practices.

Amanda Knox Signs a $4 Million Book Deal - Sigh...Think about it for a second. In 2005 a relatively unknown senator from Illinois got $1.9 …

Read moreNews You Can Use – Feb. 21, 2012
Category: Book Business, Grammar, News You Can Use, Trends, Writing CraftTag: Agents, Book Deals, Copyright, Dystopian, Google+, Grammar, News, Pinterest, Publishing News, Social Media, YA Novels

Modern Speech

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon February 9, 2012
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A couple weeks ago we discussed local flavor in expressions. It got me to thinking that I grew up in an era where no one thought anything of saying, "He should be shot," or "My father is going to kill me," for minor infractions. One of my friends noted that if a teenager said that today about her father, someone would call Social Services. After the Columbine tragedy that left so many dead or …

Read moreModern Speech
Category: Craft, Language, Tamela, Trends, Writing CraftTag: Craft, Grammar, inclusive language, Writing Craft

Fresh Formulas

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon February 2, 2012
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Some have a hard time appreciating the talent involved in writing genre fiction. By genre fiction, I mean novels that fall into a defined category such as contemporary romance, historical romance, romantic suspense, or cozy mystery. Many of these novels are published by mass market publishers (like Harlequin) and fit in lines they have formed for the sole purpose of selling the genre.

These are …

Read moreFresh Formulas
Category: Agency, Branding, Craft, Creativity, Genre, Get Published, Romance, Tamela, Trends, Writing CraftTag: Book Business, Craft, Genre, Ideas, Proposals, Romance, Tamela, Writing Craft

Clarification on Sale of Heartsong to Harlequin

By Steve Laubeon January 30, 2012
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New information has surfaced regarding the sale of Heartsong to Harlequin.

In my post on Friday I made the assumption that the sale included all the backlist and the currently contracted titles. This was reflected in point #5 in the post.

That is not the case. Harlequin did not buy the backlist or the currently contracted titles. Those will remain the property of Barbour Publishing. Thus …

Read moreClarification on Sale of Heartsong to Harlequin
Category: Agency, Book Business, Get Published, Romance, Steve, TrendsTag: Agents, Book Business, Editors, Publishing News, Trends, Writing Craft
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