Publishers at last week’s Future of the Book conference in Auckland are getting behind an initiative to create and market an ebook list of some of the best New Zealand titles.
Dubbed the 1000 Great New Zealand eBooks, the idea is to provide a focus for the industry’s own move to digitising books, to provide a platform for a joint marketing programme, and to generate public interest in e-reading.
One reason the latter is especially important is that a reader’s first experience with e-reading should be a good one. That means having really good ebooks to try rather than the usual bundle of free classics which aren’t necessarily the first choice for readers.
The initiative has come out of the Digital Publishing Forum, of which I’m director, and over the coming months we’ll be putting together not just this ebook list but some innovative ways to get the quality New Zealand ebooks in front of the public, both within New Zealand and internationally. Ideas we’re looking at are free samplers, inexpensive ebook rentals, subsciptions, and hopefully some bundling deals with e-reading device manufacturers. We’ll be talking to potential partners such as booksellers, libraries, media, device suppliers, distributors, and publishers over the coming months.
The first step for publishers is to submit the books that they will consider adding to the list, whether or not they are currently in ebook formats. The submission form can be downloaded from the Digital Publishing Forum site. Copyright Licensing Limited, the publishing industry’s rights agency and main funder of the Digital Publishing Forum, is coordinating the project on behalf of publishers. We’re working to a 31 August deadline for submissions.
Once we have a list of likely candidates, we’ll be able to work through the logistics of putting the list together and hosting it ready for distribution to the public in New Zealand and to international markets.
We hope that the 1000 Great New Zealand eBooks project will provide the industry with an excellent platform for generating interest in e-reading. It should bring some early revenue into the market and will get New Zealand publishers, booksellers and others into the digital realm as quickly and simply as possible.

7 responses so far ↓
1 Keith Mockett // Jul 1, 2009 at 12:40 pm
Hi Martin. Well done. Sounds like the conference was very productive. I will watch with interest how this develops. As a non-pbook publisher can I suggest to publishers that this presents a real opportunity with regard to backlist. It is often difficult to find copies of backlist titles and printing short-runs for declining demand must be expensive and inefficient (and wasteful). Surely eBooks are the way to go for such titles. It can give them a new lease of commercial life.
2 eBooks in New Zealand | TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home // Jul 3, 2009 at 3:08 am
[...] wish I could have attended this! From Martin Taylor’s blog: Publishers at last week’s Future of the Book conference in Auckland are getting behind an [...]
3 Amit Vohra // Jul 4, 2009 at 9:14 pm
Please allow me to introduce myself, my name is Amit Vohra and I am the VP Sales with Planman Technologies, a premier offshore service content conversion and publishing services provider.
We collaborate with publishers and content aggregators such as Greenwood Publishing, World Bank Publications and leading organizations like SPIE, JSTOR and OCLC to help them with conversion projects from print & electronic files into proprietary XML formats and different eBook formats such as ePub, mobipocket etc.
I was hoping that in your current role with this initiative (1000 great New Zealand eBooks project, there would be potential opportunities for us to collaborate together.
Please let me know if this is a possibility. Many thanks for your time and attention.
Best Regards
Amit
4 Looks like New Zealand already has its first 1000 ebooks // Aug 28, 2009 at 11:39 am
[...] is the same format that commercial New Zealand publishers are planning to use so it greatly expands the available market here. And there are some real classic gems. Here’s [...]
5 New Zealand gets its first 1000 ebooks - in EPUB | TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home // Aug 29, 2009 at 1:53 am
[...] is the same format that commercial New Zealand publishers are planning to use so it greatly expands the available market here. And there are some real classic gems. Digg us! [...]
6 Amazon’s global Kindle move is a game changer // Oct 8, 2009 at 11:06 am
[...] It’s our job now to make sure they’re reading local as well as international books. In this regard, the announcement this week that New Zealand copyright collective Copyright Licensing Limited (CLL) will lead the charge to get New Zealand books digitised and licensed to groups such as libraries, booksellers and others, couldn’t come soon enough. I’ll be part of that through the work we’ve been doing with the Digital Publishing Forum and the 1000 Great New Zealand Ebooks initiative. [...]
7 New Zealand’s 1000 Great NZ Ebooks take a big step forward // Oct 8, 2009 at 11:46 am
[...] is the announcement of a milestone in making the 1000 Great New Zealand ebooks project a reality in [...]
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