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Speed Networking: Fast Facts!

April 5, 2012 by vmckeon

(back l-r) Neil De Young, Jaime de Pablos, Stephen Acunto, Jr, Karina Mikhli, Lavinel Savu, Laura De Silva, Angela Bole; (front l-r) Kastoory Kazi, blogger Rebecca Hytowitz, Mark Steffen, Liz Peterson

Ever wondered how to build a personal brand? (Hint: remove your home address from your résumé and add your LinkedIn URL instead.) How about best practices for social media? (Engage and interact with your audience instead of just pushing content!) These were just some of the topics and comments tossed around at the first-ever “Speed Networking” event hosted by the newly-constituted NYU Publishing Alumni Committee last week at NYU’s Torch Club. Committee co-chairs Laura De Silva and Jaime de Pablos and their devoted event committee members have been working on this for months—and their efforts showed. The committee invited seasoned and senior publishing alumni to serve as “speed facilitators” at each of five tables. Each facilitator was assigned a specific theme to discuss. Committee members were also assigned to each table to help with the discussion. [Read more…] about Speed Networking: Fast Facts!

Filed Under: M.S. in Publishing: Digital & Print Media Tagged With: ABC News, Angela Bole, BISG, blog, blogging, blogs, Book Industry Study Group, careers, copyright, digital media, eBook, editorial trends, Erin Semple, F+W Media, Facebook, Hachette Book Group, Hachette Digital Inc, Hunger Games, InStyle, Jaime de Pablos, JK Rowling, Judith Jackson, Karina Mikhli, Kastoory Kazi, Kindle, Laura De Silva, Lavinel Savu, LinkedIn, Liz Peterson, Mark Steffen, marketing, Neil De Young, NYU Publishing Alumni Committee, NYU SCPS, On Demand Books, personal branding, Pinterest, piracy, Pomp & Circumstance, Pottermore, Random House, Rebecca Hytowitz, rights, social media, speed networking, Stephen Acunto Jr, The Forum Newsgroup, The Week, Twitter, Vintage Espanol

Books, Blogs, and Literary Mags, Oh My!

November 23, 2011 by vmckeon

Students in the M.S. in Publishing program not only spend a great deal of time on media websites and reading blogs, but they also create them! We recently asked our students to tell us about their publishing-related online hobbies and businesses. Below, we have selected three examples to spotlight: [Read more…] about Books, Blogs, and Literary Mags, Oh My!

Filed Under: M.S. in Publishing: Digital & Print Media Tagged With: Amazon, Android, apps, blog, Blogger, bloggers, blogging, book reviews, brand, branding, business cards, Chime.in, CSS, Delicio.us, Digg, eBooks, Facebook, FictionBrigade, flash fiction, Foursquare, Goodreads, Google, Google Analytics, Google Plus, hashtags, HTML, iOS, Kickstarter, LinkedIn, literary magazine, literary reviews, marketing, monetizing, MySpace, Open Road, Open Road Integrated Media, Oxford University Press, PatelEditorial, Pinterest, proofreading, Reddit, Simon & Schuster, StumbleUpon, The Book Smugglers, Twitter, WhoHub, Wordpress, Workman Publishing, YouTube

“Ten Things You Might Do to Get a Job” (And More!)

July 2, 2011 by vmckeon

AAP's Tom Allen addressing SPI students

“You may well have signed up for this summer institute because you want to edit fiction or nonfiction,” Tom Allen, President and CEO of the Association of American Publishers (AAP), told the students in his keynote address at the beginning of the book session of the NYU-SCPS Summer Publishing Institute (SPI). “But in a few weeks, you’ll learn what that [editing] entails,” Allen counseled, and then added:

“You’ll also gain insight into the breath of jobs in this industry in finance, production, rights, marketing, to name a few, that directly affect the success of books. In publishing, it takes a village. It really takes a village. I urge you to be open to the many—what I think will be unexpected—opportunities that you come across that will offer you a fulfilling career within the community of literate, engaged, and interesting people.”

After this brief appeal, Allen then launched into a discussion of the effects of the digitization of books on the publishing industry. When more than half of the SPI attendees told Allen they read on digital devices, it would have been remiss for him not to focus a majority of his talk on this topic.  Still, I wondered, if digital was so important, why would he have urged us to stay open-minded to all the opportunities that the publishing industry affords? As I listened to the panel discussion that followed on the future of book publishing, I had a far better understanding of what Allen meant.  [Read more…] about “Ten Things You Might Do to Get a Job” (And More!)

Filed Under: Summer Publishing Institute Tagged With: AAP, Association of American Publishers, Avon, blogging, Bob Miller, CSS, Dominique Raccah, HarperCollins, HTML, InDesign, Julie Bosman, Julie Grau, Liate Stehlik, Morrow, New York Times, Poets & Writers Magazine, Random House, Sourcebooks, Spiegel & Grau, Tom Allen, Twitter, Workman Publishing

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