Hi all -<br><br>Greetings from Winter Camp 09. :) We had a discussion with a subgroup of those of us FLOSS Manuals folks at Winter Camp on Tuesday, and I wanted to share these ideas (and potential actions) with the list. We'd love to hear your feedback on these ideas and help us take the outreach efforts in new directions. The ones marked with a Q: are specific questions we'd like feedback on.<br>
<br>Thanks,<br>Anne<br><br>Public Relations, Marketing, and Distribution ideas for FLOSS Manuals - Books and Website<br><br>Amazon and Other Bookstores with ISBN<br>One way to distribute books beyond Lulu is to obtain an ISBN number so that they will submit it through the Amazon (for the OLPC book, we did it through Lulu at a cost of about $100 plus the price of purchasing review copies to ensure the printing meets Lulu's guidelines. We purchased an ISBN through Lulu's "Published by you" program, which required US-based contact information. Plus, we had to change the layout dimensions in Objavi to get the dimensions that are acceptable to Lulu for self-publishing.<br>
<br>Amazon/ISBN actions:<br>Q: Can OBJAVI default to a printout that is acceptable to Lulu, or should we stay with our original output dimensions and the maintainer who makes the final print-ready PDF substitutes in the CSS that works for Lulu's published by you requirements?<br>
Q: Do we need someone to outline the process for getting wider book distribution? Here's an outline of what I think has to happen: ISBN obtained, cover created, get Lulu account access, upload the PDF, purchase a proof copy, approve the proof copy, then submit for approval (by Lulu if that is the processor in this case.) Currently much of this happens between Adam and the maintainer, is there a way to streamline or automate any of this? <br>
Action: Need to determine which books should get ISBN numbers and be sold through Amazon and other distributors.<br>Action: Need a new cover for the OLPC Laptop Users Guide that matches these new dimensions (with the ISBN on it).<br>
Action: Need to find out if there's another (cheaper) method of obtaining an ISBN and distributing books to other resellers.<br><br>Lulu <br>Lulu does have tools to help you promote your book, but they consist of either free buttons to have on your website, which we already have through the FLOSS Manuals sidebar book store. The rest of the "promotions" they list cost upwards of $100, and involve things like editing your draft-ready press releases, but it doesn't say if you have to buy a list to send it to.<br>
Action: Investigate the rest of Lulu's promotion offerings and see if any are a match (Anne's quick glanceover did not seem to see a match for FM's needs.)<br><br>Sidebar Book store<br>What can we do to encourage more uptake of the book store? We could run our own program like Amazon Associates does, but we may also in the mean time want to get more books on Amazon so that people can become Amazon associates and make a few percent off the sales that come directly from linkthroughs on their site or blog. <br>
Action: How can we find out who has the bookstore widget on their site now? That might help us see where patterns of uptake have happened. <br><br>PR and Media List <br>We currently have a PR list that contains people that Adam, Anne, and Zita (and others) have personally emailed, asking if they want to be on our PR list. We could purchase a more focused PR list. Or we could have a second list started that is media people only, with very targeted magazines that focus on open source - such as Linux Journal. <br>
Also we would like to request reviews of books - perhaps by sending copies of the book to bloggers and so on. I personally have reviewed two books in the last 2 years on my blog and on Amazon and I'm just a blogger who likes to get free books. I think that sending books to bloggers would get us coverage. <br>
<br>Action: Linux Journal would be a great place to get a review of the upcoming FSF Book Sprint on The Command Line. Be on the lookout for other journals or magazines that contain book reviews and see if we can match up with our book catalog at FM. When you know of one, email <span class="gI"><a href="mailto:pr@lists.flossmanuals.net">pr@lists.flossmanuals.net</a></span>.<br>
<br>Q: Should we create a Press Kit? What would it contain? Ideas: latest press releases, contact information.<br>Action: Go to PR wire site and find out more on pricing of PR lists specific to our audiences.<br><br>In person events<br>
Take copies of books with you to any conference you go to and either carry enough to sell or point them to the link on Lulu. <br><br>We could make a flyer or "booth kit" that conference attendees could take with them - hand out stickers, buttons, whatnot, plus a flyer (or book mark?)showing our book store catalog. <br>
<br>Some conferences offer non-profits free booth space. Anne contacted both SXSW Interactive and Maker Faire about booth space, but it was prohibitively costly. (no return on investment that we could see immediately) Be on the lookout for conferences that you attend in any given timeframe and see if a (free) booth is an option.<br>
<br>FM Ambassador Kit<br>An FM Ambassador would be people who could help increase uptake of FM content, or increase authorship. <br>Q: If we were to build a kit for people to go talk about FM, what would it contain? The book about FM, the book about Book Sprints, what else would be useful? The screencast? <br>
<br>Per book promotion ideas:<br><br>OLPC Laptop Users Guide book<br>Get the book on Amazon. (A couple of actions have to occur before we do this but they are easily completed.)<br>Also, there are two web sites that sell related products such as <a href="http://ilovemyxo.com" target="_blank">ilovemyxo.com</a> and <a href="http://xoexplosion.com" target="_blank">xoexplosion.com</a>, both site's owners are hosting the book for sale by linking to the Lulu site. <br>
<br>Sugar Users Guide book<br>This is an idea that other books may want to use. SugarLabs' wiki connects directly to FLOSS Manuals' site and there is a lot of work around translating the guide that comes through from SugarLabs folks saying "FM is our official doc site" - the same happens with Inkscape. <br>
Anne is presenting at Cosn next week in Austin and will promote the book through her talk, although she can't get copies in time to give them away at the conference. <br><br>Inkscape book<br>They are also connecting their end-users directly to FM for documentation.<br>
<br>Censorship book<br>Get the net neutrality petition list and see if there are people on there who would be interested in the book? <br>Identify and then send a copy of the book to key bloggers - who are they?<br>Who are civil rights activists who we should ask to help promote the book? <br>
<br>Firefox book<br>Link to Lulu sale site on the Mozilla site? <br><br>FSF book on The Command Line<br>FSF will promote this book - what else does FM need to do? <br><br>Related ideas<br>What about pure electronic distribution? What can we do to increase uptake? <br>
<br>Generate excitement around the book Sprints - big-time publishers only get about a 3-week window to generate buzz anyway, how can we harness the buzz generated around a Sprint to help promote the book?<br><br>This effort isn't merely about printed books and book sales - it's also about increasing traffic to the FM site. Ensure the user/reader experience keeps them coming back. Ideas included Twittering when a book chapter is finished in FM during a sprint, integrating the FM chat with an IRC channel so that visitors to the site can see current conversations. Also the Talk part of each chapter can be used more. <br>
<br>Q: Should we always give away the base manual, as organized by the maintainer, but charge extra for remixes? It is a value-add that no one else really offers that we could charge for. <br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Anne Gentle<br>
email: <a href="mailto:annegentle@justwriteclick.com" target="_blank">annegentle@justwriteclick.com</a><br>blog: <a href="http://www.justwriteclick.com" target="_blank">www.justwriteclick.com</a><br>