It only took six weeks for our Summer Publishing Institute (SPI) students to become industry experts, to change career paths, to expand their networks—just six weeks to transform from “SPI Students” to “SPI Alumni.” As we say “see you later” (never goodbye!) to our 2016 Class, we wanted to give them a chance to reflect on everything they learned this summer and pass their newfound wisdom on to the next generation. Read on to hear their from-the-heart advice:
Summer Publishing Institute
Selling and Creating Books: An Inside Look
A private, early morning visit to the Barnes & Noble flagship store in Union Square. Sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with top editors busy flinging around ideas for new books at a “development meeting” at Alloy Entertainment. For NYU’s Summer Publishing Institute students, getting out on the town recently was great. They were invited to see how the book industry works in various venues all over the city. Here are reports on two student visits:
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Getting Real: the Making of a Nonfiction Imprint
One thing we are learning quickly here at the NYU Summer Publishing Institute (SPI) is the importance of diving in. In our magazine and book projects—and in our careers!—we’ve had to continually just go for it.
A little advice from Chris Guilfoyle, SVP and Group Publisher, Meredith Corporation, sticks in my mind. She spoke at the end of the magazine session of SPI and shared secrets of how to be great in our future publishing jobs. She stressed how important it’ll be for us to take initiative and figure out how we can help. Among other tips, she said, “Do more than your job description,” and “Proficiency is more than just learning.” When in doubt, figure it out.
We have now successfully completed the magazine session of SPI and are assigned to specific groups of ten students to create hypothetical book imprints in the book session. When we first met together in our groups,we knew it was up to us, just as Guilfoyle said. We received some instructions about what we had to create—a book imprint and three potential titles, including a lead title. Okay, but the how of doing that, at least initially, and the what of the content, were up to us.
Our group was assigned to create a hypothetical nonfiction imprint. (Other groups were assigned to categories such as illustrated books/graphic novels, children’s, entertainment, mystery/true crime and more). In our group, we started out with a lot of ideas scattered across a wide range of politics, news, history, and memoir. As we began talking, a few specific ideas stood out.
One of our strongest ideas was a memoir by a popular comedienne. Judging from recent bestsellers by her famous contemporaries, we knew the memoir would sell really well; we also liked the things the comedienne had to say about self-love and self-acceptance. We liked her strong voice, and her interest in speaking to people who may not always be considered a primary audience… in other words, those at times under represented. We also identified a compilation of personal essays and an exploratory look at the phenomenon behind Trump’s ascension as top ideas to present for review.
Next, we knew we needed a point of view—a coherent message and feel for all of our books. One of the book session speakers, Charles Ardai, Founder and Publisher of Hard Case Crime, emphasized the importance of having a unique and consistent vision.“All our books have a very specific DNA. When you pick up one of our books, you know it’s a Hard Case Crimes book” he said. So what was our imprint about and how would our books telegraph that specific message to readers?
We started to see a common thread: voices. All of the concepts we were most passionate about involved strong, unique voices with something to say. We decided our imprint should feature diverse voices that may not always have safe and broad forums.
Our executive editor, Hannah Neuman, said it best in our initial pitch to the program directors on day one: “We want to feature really distinct voices. Our authors say: ‘This is my story and this is how I see the world.’”
That first pitch meeting went better than we expected. Two of our book concepts were approved, and we just had to do a little more work on our imprint title. The program directors suggested that our proposed imprint name didn’t really communicate the human element we were so passionate about. Our early Trump idea also didn’t make it through the pitch meeting. The program directors helped us see that it wouldn’t sell really well long-term.
With that advice, we did some digging and found cool options of unknown powerhouse women in history. Alas, as much as we loved “A Tank Named Fighting Girlfriend,” the program directors pointed out that a biography about a Russian woman in WWII—regardless of what she named her tank—might not garner the sales and exposure we need as a new imprint.
Back to the drawing board we went, this time with the advice to go broad. We needed to find something people were talking about, something currently relevant. We brainstormed and researched some more and pitched an investigative look into a US crime trade not often talked about. Heavy stuff, but certainly broad, relevant, and giving a voice to the voiceless. The program directors agreed that this had potential, and with that we started digging deeper into our subjects and creating our imprint—now aptly named to invoke voices.
Now we are 9 days away from presenting our hypothetical nonfiction imprint to a panel of industry experts. We are learning about the constant refining and zeroing-in required in the creation of a book imprint. With more and more insights each day, we are excited to see where we go—both in our imprint and in our future careers.
by Jill Hacking
Brand Awareness: Two Magazines, Two Views
“Printegration” equals the integration of print and digital. That was just one thing we learned on our visits to leading magazine media and technology companies as part of the NYU Summer Publishing Institute last week. And guess what else we learned? You can give away a magazine and make more than selling it!
On visits to GQ (land of printegration), Time Out New York (free is the way of the future), Refinery29, Bloomberg Media, AOL/Huffington Post, and Rachael Ray Every Day, we were exposed to top brands with unique viewpoints and selling points. Here’s an inside look at two of our visits.
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NYU Media Talk of the Town: Long Live Long Form
NYU’s Kimmel Center was buzzing with excitement. The 2016 Summer Publishing Institute class mingled with M.S. in Publishing: Digital and Print Media students, faculty, and publishing industry insiders while watching the sun set over Washington Square Park and anticipating a talk on the new ways print media is being reborn. The latest installment in the NYU Media Talk series, NextGen Editors: What’s New, Different, and Daring, began with an introduction from moderator Michael Calderone, Senior Media Reporter for The Huffington Post. “When I first graduated from NYU, I had one job at a newspaper, where I wrote one column,” Calderone explained, emphasizing how simple things seemed when he was a student himself. “No one can get by doing that now.”
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NYU Summer Publishing Institute Week One: Be Your Brand
As I stood on the terrace of the new Time Inc. headquarters overlooking the Hudson, surrounded by potential future employers (Time Inc. staffers) and coworkers (my 99 fellow students), all of whom I needed to impress, I had to ask myself: “Who am I?” That question was not only on my mind at this Time Inc. reception for NYU Summer Publishing Institute (SPI) students, but really, since the start of the program last week.
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Ask Our Alumni: Reflections from SPI 2015 Graduates
Every year at this time, the Summer Publishing Institute inboxes are flooded with emails from prospective students asking about course work, schedules, housing, networking, life in New York and so much more. We understand! Attending SPI is a dream come true for many of our students—one that gets increasingly stressful the more you think about moving to New York, making friends, and landing that first real job in publishing.
Instead of telling you about it, we decided to let the Class of 2015 speak their minds and answer your questions. After all, they were asking the same things just last summer!
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NYU’s Summer Publishing Institute Alumni: The Inside Story
So many of you interested in NYU’s Summer Publishing Institute ask us what happens after the six weeks are over. Do you get a job? What’s that like? How did SPI prepare you for the real world? What’s the real world, anyway? We figured the best way to respond was through the reflections of three recent SPI grads who are now, yes, gainfully employed in publishing.
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Magic Explained: Children’s Publishing at Simon & Schuster
“Children’s books change lives,” said Justin Chanda, Vice President and Publisher of Simon & Schuster’s children’s trade imprints, including Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, and Margaret K. McElderry Books. (He is also the publisher of the company’s new science fiction and fantasy imprint, Saga Press.) As Chanda spoke, about 20 NYU Summer Publishing Institute students listened intently, excited to be on an industry visit and learn more about children’s publishing. They gazed at the framed covers of Simon & Schuster’s many award-winning books, including those awarded the coveted Caldecott and Newbery Awards. “The beauty of what we do here,” Chanda continued, “is to give people their first experience with books.” [Read more…] about Magic Explained: Children’s Publishing at Simon & Schuster
Summer Publishing Institute: The Book Session Begins
The next chapter in the NYU Summer Publishing Institute program—the book session—opened with a keynote address from Michael Pietsch, Chief Executive Officer of Hachette Book Group USA. With over 35 years in the industry, Pietsch progressed from what he called a “supple-elbowed” intern needed to operate the newly-acquired Xerox machine at David R. Godine to editor to publisher to a CEO who, remarkably, still sets aside time to edit books by James Patterson, Stacy Schiff, and Donna Tartt’s Pulitzer Prize-winning best-seller, The Goldfinch. [Read more…] about Summer Publishing Institute: The Book Session Begins