Thanks to the 27 book professionals who attended the BIGNY familiarization trip to Gladfelter and Maple Press in Pennsylvania. Here are some photos from the overnight trip:
BIGNY News/Trends
Book Industry Guild of NY (BIGNY) news,industry trends, event speaker bios. Tim Hoey/BIGNY Media Contact
Monday, May 23, 2016
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
BIGNY "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave" Event -- A Brief Report
From left to right: Panel moderator Karen Romano, Linda Palladino, Janet McCarthy Grimm, Barbara Marcus |
Thomson-Shore Director of Business Development Karen Romano moderated the discussion, held at Random
House’s midtown New York office. The panel trio included Barbara Marcus, President and Publisher, Random House Children’s Books; Janet McCarthy Grimm, Vice President, Lindenmeyr Paper; and Linda Palladino, Vice President and Director of Production, Random House Children’s Production.
Each panelist took a unique
path to achieve career success. Grimm’s initial years as a sales representative
found her advancing into increasingly responsible positions despite being in a
largely “old school” male industry. Marcus embraced a number of editorial
challenges that demonstrated her high-level skills, business commitment, and strategic
insight. Palladino shifted from law school to publishing and never looked back.
The panelists unanimously
suggested that women new to the publishing or paper/printing industries find
in-house mentors. Their experienced guidance is invaluable to grasping the
essential knowledge of their business. It’s also extremely
difficult to find equally rich sources of advice outside of their respective
industries.. They also underlined the value of mentorship, and noted that those
receiving it should “give back” to the “following wave” that will enter
publishing, paper manufacturing, and printing.
The three executive women also strongly encouraged the
“following wave” to take chances during their careers. Some of the panelists’
most exciting opportunities evolved from their conviction that risk-taking and
self-belief were vital to their career advancement and job satisfaction. Barbara
Marcus emphasized that point during a discussion of her reasoning for embracing
her current role at Random House Children’s Books.
Friday, April 8, 2016
BIGNY "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave" event: More About Linda Palladino
Linda Palladino |
Here's a brief professional biography of Linda Palladino, one of the three panelists who will join the Book Industry Guild of New York's (BIGNY) April 12, 2016 panel discussion "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave."
Linda Palladino has spent her career working in production for the children’s books divisions of several New York publishers. She began at Scholastic Inc., where she was Production Manager for its five children’s magazines, book clubs and their then newly-formed trade book division. She went on to work at two start-ups, Warner Juvenile Books and North-South Books, where she developed the infrastructure and built full service production departments. During her tenure at William Morrow she led the children’s Production Department, creating internal and external digital workflow systems to streamline all aspects of production, resulting in cost savings, greater quality control and more efficient delivery. Prior to joining Random House she was Director of Corporate Purchasing for Holtzbrinck Publisher where she was responsible for Corporate Purchasing for five companies which now comprise Macmillan Publishing.
Linda Palladino has spent her career working in production for the children’s books divisions of several New York publishers. She began at Scholastic Inc., where she was Production Manager for its five children’s magazines, book clubs and their then newly-formed trade book division. She went on to work at two start-ups, Warner Juvenile Books and North-South Books, where she developed the infrastructure and built full service production departments. During her tenure at William Morrow she led the children’s Production Department, creating internal and external digital workflow systems to streamline all aspects of production, resulting in cost savings, greater quality control and more efficient delivery. Prior to joining Random House she was Director of Corporate Purchasing for Holtzbrinck Publisher where she was responsible for Corporate Purchasing for five companies which now comprise Macmillan Publishing.
In 2003 she became director of Production for Random House Children’s Books, the world’s largest children’s trade publisher, and was promoted to
V.P., Director of Production in 2008. Linda and her team are responsible for
producing books for the division’s line of premier authors, illustrators, brands
and licensed characters. She works closely with her department to position
Random House Children’s Books as a company that sets the standard in
innovative, environmental and sound business practices.
Linda is
past President of the Bookbinders’ Guild of New York, now known as the Book Industry Guild of New York (BIGNY). Linda has participated in
and served on various industry educational seminars and committees including
Women in Production, which awarded her the Luminaire Award. She currently
serves on the Goddard Riverside NY Publishing Executive Committee.
Thursday, April 7, 2016
BIGNY "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave": More About Barbara Marcus
Barbara Marcus |
Here's a brief professional biography of Barbara Marcus, one of the three panelists who will join the Book Industry Guild of New York's (BIGNY) April 12, 2016 panel discussion "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave."
Barbara Marcus is President and Publisher of Random House Children’s Books, where she is responsible for overseeing all of its publishing and business activities. Random House Children’s Books publishes many of the world’s bestselling and most highly acclaimed authors and illustrators for young people today, including Dr. Seuss, Carl Hiaasen, Christopher Paolini, Sophie Kinsella, Philip Pullman, Leo Lionni, James Dashner, Brandon Sanderson, Louis Sachar, Richard Scarry, and Markus Zusak, and is home to many of the most recognizable series licenses and characters in the world, such as Barbie, the Berenstain Bears, Disney, Little Golden Books, Nickelodeon, Pat theBunny, Junie B. Jones, and Magic Tree House.
Prior to joining Random House in 2012, Marcus
was Advisor to Open Road Integrated Media in the area of children’s digital
publishing and general strategy. She also served as Strategic Innovations
Advisor to Penguin Books USA, focusing on new ventures and publishing
opportunities.
Before that, Ms. Marcus served as President,
Scholastic Children’s Book Publishing and Distribution, where she was
responsible for all children’s consumer book publishing and distribution in the
United States, through school-based book clubs, school-based and direct-to-home
continuity programs, school-based book fairs and the retail channel for over 20
years. During her tenure, she led the expansion of the business from
approximately 50 million dollars to over 1 billion dollars in annual
revenue. After acquiring J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone for publication in the United States in 1998, she
also led the publishing effort for six of the seven Harry Potter
titles.
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
BIGNY "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave": More About Janet McCarthy Grimm
Here's a brief professional biography of Janet McCarthy Grimm, one of the three panelists who will join the Book Industry Guild of New York's (BIGNY) April 12, 2016 panel discussion "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave."
Ms. Grimm, a Lindenmeyr Book Publishing Papers vice president, began her career in the production department of Houghton Mifflin Publishing Company in Boston. She also worked at Courier Corporation in Lowell, MA, as a buyer for the Directories and Forms Division. Janet joined Lindenmeyr in its New York office as a sales representative in 1984. She became Marketing Manager in 1987 and was promoted to her current position as Vice President in 1989. Ms. Grimm is a past president of the Bookbinders' Guild of New York, and has served the graphic arts industry through the Book Manufacturers' Institute, Women in Production, and The Paper Club of New York. She now serves on the Boards of Directors of the Book Industry Guild of New York (BIGNY), Poets and Writers, and the Book Industry Study Group. She is also a member of the Book Industry Environmental Council and will talk about paper to anyone who will listen!
Ms. Grimm, a Lindenmeyr Book Publishing Papers vice president, began her career in the production department of Houghton Mifflin Publishing Company in Boston. She also worked at Courier Corporation in Lowell, MA, as a buyer for the Directories and Forms Division. Janet joined Lindenmeyr in its New York office as a sales representative in 1984. She became Marketing Manager in 1987 and was promoted to her current position as Vice President in 1989. Ms. Grimm is a past president of the Bookbinders' Guild of New York, and has served the graphic arts industry through the Book Manufacturers' Institute, Women in Production, and The Paper Club of New York. She now serves on the Boards of Directors of the Book Industry Guild of New York (BIGNY), Poets and Writers, and the Book Industry Study Group. She is also a member of the Book Industry Environmental Council and will talk about paper to anyone who will listen!
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
BIGNY "Groundbreaking Women: The Second Wave": More About Karen Romano
Karen Romano |
Ms. Romano began her career on the El-Hi side of the business and has since held various production and management positions at Praeger Publishers, McGraw-Hill, Macmillan and finally Simon & Schuster, where she served as V.P. and Director of the Adult Trade Production & Manufacturing group for over 15 years.
She has since brought her skills to the other side of the desk, and is now Director of Business Development for Emerging Markets for Thomson-Shore, a company that she refers to as the perfect intersection of art and science. Karen has served on the AAP Commission for Textbook Specifications, the AAP Paper Issues Working Group, and has been a speaker and panel participant at the BMI, the Digital Print Conference, Pub Tech, the Unicorn Writer’s Conference and various BIGNY events. She has also served as a judge for Literary Marketplace and New York Book Shows. In 2009 she was voted one of the “Top 50 Women in Publishing” by Book Business Magazine.
Thursday, March 3, 2016
Transition to Digital -- A Brief BIGNY Dialogue with Elsevier's Cynthia Clark
Cynthia Clark |
BIGNY: Can you give some examples of re-purposing content in order to monetize it?
Clark: Enriching articles with semantic tagging allows for the collection of articles into discrete topic-based groupings that can cut across journals. These collections can be monetized as a separate digital subscription product. Or they can enrich the value of an existing journal.
BIGNY: How has data from your digital products affected new book or product creation?
Clark: We have seen the opportunity to pull together various products and integrate those to enrich the researcher’s experience: providing an interactive panel for each article that incorporates this information and provides related article and book content, citation information, grant and funding information, etc.
BIGNY: How has the digital workflow changed people’s jobs? (For example, do designers have to code? Do teams work more closely?)
Clark: There is greater collaboration among different product groups so those services can be leveraged to create new products or enhance existing ones. For example, we have over the past few years brought in experts in informatics and taxonomies to ensure that our proprietary taxonomy continues to grow and evolve to keep pace with changes in science, technology and medicine. And because we have included this semantic tagging across our platforms, we naturally see more cooperation and creative problem solving.
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