book2book

  booktrade.info

Search Booktrade.info:  


Monday 13th February

Book2book Home Book Trade News Trade Announcements Bestseller Lists About Booktrade.info

Record Numbers Turn Out For IPG Conference

Posted at 10:02AM Thursday 18 Mar 2010

The Independent Publishers Guild's Annual Conference will host a record number of delegates this weekend — proof that despite the difficult economic climate independents are not just surviving but thriving.

Some 225 delegates are booked to attend the three-day Conference—an increase of more than 10% on 2009's total and the highest turnout in the 48-year history of the annual event. Membership of the guild is also currently at an all-time high.

Delegates at the Conference will have a busy weekend of practical, business-focused content to get their teeth into. Digital issues will be high on the agenda, with Friday sessions lined up on XML, digital contracts and e-book strategies. Saturday's keynote speech comes from Bill Thompson, one of the country's leading experts on new media, while 'Beyond the Book' sessions from Six to Start's Dan Hon and Bloomsbury Academic's Jonathan Glasspool will help delegates to sharpen their digital thinking.

Other Conference highlights include a 'Question Time with the Retailers' slot, this year welcoming Dominic Myers, who became the new managing director of Waterstone's early this year, as well as Amazon's Gordon Willoughby, Blackwell's Andrew Hutchings and Foyles' Sam Husain. A 'Burning Issues' panel will consider some of the industry's most pressing concerns, while there will be insights into sales trends from Nielsen BookScan, advice on working with libraries from CILIP chief executive Bob McKee, and 'How To' sessions offering top tips for working with retailers. The Saturday night of the Conference will host the Gala Dinner for the fourth annual Independent Publishing Awards, run by the IPG in association with The Bookseller and the London Book Fair.

IPG Executive Director Bridget Shine says: "We are delighted that our Conference will welcome both record numbers of delegates and an outstanding list of high profile speakers. It shows that independent publishing is in great shape and is highly valued by retailers—and that IPG members appreciate this opportunity to meet and talk now more than ever."

Comments

No comments yet

Post a comment

Sorry, you need to be logged in to your Booktrade.info user account in order to post a comment - please log in and try again, or if you don't have an account sign up now - it's free! Once you're logged in you can choose how - or if - you want to be identified with your posting.




Get book trade news by email

Daily book trade headlines and breaking publishing news by email - just £3 a month. Click on the Subscribe button below to sign up now

Find out more


Search the news archive:
 







More Book Trade News

Cairo International Book Fair Awards
english.ahram.org.eg

General Egyptian Book Organisation wins majority of Cairo International Book Fair awards

Eason Plans 150 Job Cuts To Achieve €5m Saving
www.irishtimes.com

Eason has reached agreement with staff on a cost reduction programme that will involve about 150 voluntary redundancies

Working at a Big-Six (US) Publishing House
www.digitalbookworld.com

Culture, Pay, Advancement and Getting In

Hay-on-Wye gears up for an uncivil war
www.telegraph.co.uk

Plans for a supermarket are dividing residents – and splitting families – in the idyllic literary town

Ben Okri 'disappointment' at editor who claims re-wrote his work
www.telegraph.co.uk

Ben Okri, the Booker Prize winning author, has accused his editor of "exaggerating his own importance" after he claimed to have rewritten some of the writer's work

In Amanda Knox Tale, A Delicate Bet For Publishers
www.nytimes.com

Her personal charm aside, however, Ms. Knox's story is complex, disturbing and still hotly debated

Account Sign-In

Most Popular Stories

  1. First-Ever Academy Awards (Book) Contest
  2. Critic Says Irish President's Poems Are A 'Crime Against Literature'
  3. British Children Are Culture Starved
  4. Dublin History Book Costs The Republic's Government £800 For Each Copy Sold
  5. Why Penguin Terminated Its Contract With Overdrive
  6. A reader-first approach to writing and self-publishing
  7. New Independent Publisher Based In Newcastle Upon Tyne
  8. James Joyce Children's Book Sparks Feud
  9. Occupy Wall Street Claims The City Ruined Its Library
  10. Judging Books By Their Covers: USA vs UK