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	<title>Digging into WordPress &#187; printing</title>
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		<title>What We Learned Publishing Digging Into WordPress</title>
		<link>http://digwp.com/2011/03/what-we-learned-publishing-digging-into-wordpress/</link>
		<comments>http://digwp.com/2011/03/what-we-learned-publishing-digging-into-wordpress/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Mar 2011 18:30:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chris Coyier</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Site News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DIY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[printing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://digwp.com/?p=1955</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Digging into WordPress is an entirely self-published book. It&#8217;s not that way because we just arbitrarily decided that self publishing was hip and that was what we were going to do. In fact, the plan early on was the opposite. Step one, we thought, was to write the book. So we did that. Then step [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://digwp.com/book/">Digging into WordPress</a> is an entirely <strong>self-published book</strong>. It&#8217;s not that way because we just arbitrarily decided that self publishing was hip and that was what we were going to do. In fact, the plan early on was the opposite. Step one, we thought, was to write the book. So we did that. Then step two became <em>find publisher to publish it</em>, so <a href="http://css-tricks.com/looking-for-a-publisher/">we asked around</a>. We talked to five (or so) tech book publishers.</p>
<p>We learned in these talks with publishers that our Step One (write the book), is almost never Step One. Step One is actually get in contact with publishers and work with them from the beginning, from building out the Table of Contents outwards. We quickly learned that in working with any publisher, you gotta play by their rules. They have a process, that process works for them and the authors that choose to work with them. We were very green to this whole process, but we agreed that we didn&#8217;t want to work in the confines of someone else&#8217;s process. Call us stubborn, but we wanted to do whatever the heck we wanted with this book. And we had the tools to do it. Self publishing it was.</p>
<p><em>Here are some things we learned.</em><span id="more-1955"></span></p>
<h3>100% vs. 10%</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-scales.jpg" alt="" style="float:left;margin:5px 15px 5px 0;" /> Going through a publisher, we might have earned 10% of the sales of the books. Self publishing we earn 100% of the sales of the books. Going through a publisher means many of the costs are covered, like printing costs. Self publishing means paying those costs ourselves. Going through a publisher means they will help promote the book, and the book will be available in major book retail stores. Self publishing means all promotional work needs to be done by us and the book will only be available for purchase online. </p>
<p>These comparisons were the hardest to consider. Even today, since we have very little to compare against, we don&#8217;t know which route would have been more successful. However, I have a strong feeling that self publishing was the right move and ultimately made the project more successful. I also believe that this was only the case because Jeff and I had large enough built-in audiences to give the book some momentum. If we didn&#8217;t have that, I feel going through a publisher would have been a better choice.</p>
<p>Since the 100% vs. 10% was pretty close to a toss up (we did plenty of scratch-pad math) we decided that since we could do everything our own way by self publishing, we would go that route. Not to mention it would be fun and we would learn a lot doing it. </p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> If you are confident you have a great book and have enough of an existing audience to give it some sales momentum, self publishing is the way to go.</p>
<h3>Should We Print At All?</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-print.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> With the proliferation of digital book reading devices, it was a possibility to not make a paper version of the book at all. This would have been much easier from a distribution perspective. We also would have prevented any potential loss in case the book was a flop, since there would have been very little upfront cost other than our time and a few fonts we bought. And think of all the advantages to a digital book: searchable, copy-and-pasteable, easy to keep your place, links that are actually live and clickable, etc.</p>
<p>We decided that we were going to print (in addition to selling the PDF alone) for two strong reasons. 1) There are going to be some potential buyers that would only be interested in the print version and 2) It would be fun to have a real tangible product from our efforts.</p>
<p>We can now absolutely confirm that there is an audience that is only interested in print books. We have printed the book four times with three updates (another in the works), and whenever we sell out between printings we get plenty of email asking us when the print version will be available again. These same people aren&#8217;t just blowing smoke, they very often follow through on buying the book when it&#8217;s back in stock. </p>
<p>We made one more decision about selling print books: if you buy the print book you get the digital copy for &#8220;free.&#8221; Free in quotes, because of course money is changing hands, but there would be no price adjustment for it&#8217;s inclusion. It&#8217;s tempting to sell a book that comes both ways in three configurations: print book only, digital book only, and combo. The combo being the most expensive. I feel strongly that pricing the combo higher than the print-book-only is a douche move. It costs exactly nothing to send out a digital copy of a book. </p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Printing books is still worth it. Sell digital copies too. Digital should be free with print.</p>
<h3>Unique Printing Choices</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-spiral.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> Because the printing choices were ours to make, we could do some cool things. First, we picked an unusual paper size, landscape, because we wanted big fat margins in which to insert notes and things in the book&#8217;s design. Second, we chose to spiral-bind the book instead of a traditional book bind. This would almost certainly never be allowed in a book headed to a bookstore, as there is no spine to identify it when placed normally on a bookshelf. Third, we made the book color-throughout. Only one publisher was receptive at all to this idea when we brought it up and they may have just been humoring us.</p>
<p>We haven&#8217;t gotten much feedback on the size or shape, although I personally feel I wouldn&#8217;t go as wide again, it&#8217;s a little unwieldily while open (would be very hard to read on a plane). People do really like the spiral bind though. It&#8217;s nice that gamble paid off.</p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Self publishing means print design freedom. Unique print design is good marketing.</p>
<h3>Pricing</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-price.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> Pricing the PDF was a bit tough. It&#8217;s hard to price something where there are no physical production or delivery costs. For the PDF, our cost involves time spent working on the book and stuff like PayPal fees, E-junkie fees, software, fonts, domains, advertising, and other odds and ends. After looking at our expenses, we priced the PDF by coming in just a little cheaper than a <a href="http://rockablepress.com/books/rockstar-wordpress-designer/">comparable PDF</a>. Rockstar WordPress Designer is priced at $29 and our PDF is $27. We thought this sounded like a fair price. It&#8217;s not giving it away and it&#8217;s not overly expensive compared to other tech books.</p>
<p>Now we had a basis for figuring out the print copy prices. The per-book printing quote was quite high as expected. We had a lot working against us. We wanted full color. The page count was fairly high (averaging 400 pages). Our quantity was low (the more you print, the cheaper they are each). We wanted to sell out. Going too high on quantity with no experience means money tied up or lost in print sales.</p>
<p>The number we ultimately came up with was $67. It felt better than breaking the $70 level (although in later editions we had to come up to that). It still felt high, but still, some tech books are <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Signature-Programming-Techniques-Solutions-through/dp/1590595254/ref=sr_1_6_title_0_main?s=books&#038;ie=UTF8&#038;qid=1293998419&#038;sr=1-6">just damn expensive</a>. At this price point we made slightly less profit than selling a PDF, but comparable.</p>
<p>We simply had to come to terms with these pricing realities. The book was going to be expensive. It was, we decreed, only for the most serious of buyers.  And hey, everyone still gets all the great stuff other expensive tech books likely don&#8217;t give you: full color, &#8220;free&#8221; PDF, exclusive themes, lifetime updates, spiral bind, not to mention general quality.</p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Price based on your costs, the competition, and feeling. Above all, price to make money.</p>
<h3>Caught Up in Discount Codes</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-codes.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> Every time we do any kind of promotion or sale, we see a rise in sales. I don&#8217;t think there is any doubt that discount promotions work. A common way to do that is to provide coupon/discount codes. We sell the book through E-Junkie which is a distribution/affiliate service that provides that functionality. </p>
<p>We made one-off discount codes for certain folks in certain scenarios. We made discount codes for other blogs when they wanted to do a review or giveaway for the book. We made discount codes for our own site. We made discount codes to be included in bundles. Sometimes Jeff would just sit back there and make up imaginary discount codes and then delete them for no reason.</p>
<p>This is what I would suggest to anyone selling a product where discount codes are involved. Pick your lowest level of discount code. Say 5%. Give away a unique discount code of this level to anyone who asks, be it a single person, organization, website, whatever. Set them to never expire. The information you get from how used these codes are is worth the 5%. If you ever make a code that is for more than that lowest level, make sure it expires and the person you give it to knows that so if they publicize it that information is present with it. </p>
<p>With a strategy like this, you can generously give away codes without having to think too hard about it or worry about them being abused in any way. </p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> People will find and use the crap out of your discount codes, make sure to have a strategy.</p>
<h3>Editing Woes</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-errata.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> The very first edition of this book was rife with errors. Only a few technical errors, but plenty of spelling, grammar, and formatting issues. Isn&#8217;t that what the editing process is for? It sure is. We didn&#8217;t skip that part either, it&#8217;s just that we didn&#8217;t take it seriously enough. We relied on friends, family, and ourselves to read through the book, catch errors, and provide notes. We are hugely grateful for their help, because without it, that first edition would have been much worse. </p>
<p>After the release, emails started coming in pointing out problems. These emails were responded to as promptly and nicely as possible. People that take the time to report problems are excellent customers and responding to their emails with the utmost respect will hopefully keep them that way. Thanks to all of the editing help we received from many generous people, the next update produced a much higher quality, more accurate book.</p>
<p>At first, we tried responding to errata emails as they rolled in &ndash; checking and fixing errors sort of on the spot. With everything else going on, we soon decided to automate and simplify the errata process as much as possible. Our errata system is now threefold: 1) setup an official <em>Errata &amp; Changelog</em> page to help streamline communique, 2) tag incoming errata email as such, and 3) check &amp; fix all errata at the same time, during book updates. This system helps to save time by keeping things streamlined, efficient, and thorough.</p>
<p>After putting up the <a href="http://digwp.com/book/errata/">Errata submission page</a>, we <a href="http://digwp.com/2009/11/find-typos-other-mistakes/">encouraged people to use it</a>. Later, when the print book came out, we gave folks that did the most work in finding errors free copies. </p>
<p>With each update, the accuracy of the book continues to improve. At first, we were inundated with editing woes, but I think we reacted well to the the situation and ended up with a solid book that continues to evolve. Looking back, we probably should have been more thorough with the initial editing process.</p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Pay for a real editor.</p>
<h3>Customer Support</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-support.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb"  /> When you sell a thing, you are pretty much required to do customer support. I can tell you I didn&#8217;t have any idea what we were getting into in this regard. People don&#8217;t get download emails. People wonder about shipping status. People wonder what the charge is on their credit card. People find a discount code after purchasing. We get a pretty darn healthy load of email. As we all know, email = work. You have to manage it well otherwise answering email turns into the only thing you do. </p>
<p>To handle email activity, we created a single and shared email address. We use the free Google Apps. We both have access to it and share in the responsibility of answering those emails. We label things and mark things for each other as needed. This system works exceptionally well for us.</p>
<p>One sometimes-not-so-obvious thing to help manage customer support is to find ways of streamlining the process. Take advantage of any tips or techniques that help you save time when dealing with your customers. Eliminate needless steps and bottlenecks. Do anything you can do to help the customer <em>more</em> while working <em>less</em>.</p>
<p>One specific way that we have improved response time involves using email templates for common inquiries. For example, we now have quick, copy/paste templates to respond quickly to requests for invoices, passwords, account updates, book updates, and so on. So when a customer asks, &#8220;can haz update?&#8221; &ndash; the answer is a speedy, &#8220;click, click, here, click.&#8221; Everybody is happy.</p>
<p>Another example of improving the customer experience is switching from a paid, third-party distribution program to our own home-grown system. Paying for PDF updates/distribution worked well at first, but the cost for sending out each new update is pretty high, so we eventually decided to move that part of the process to our own site. Now, instead of paying a hefty fee to send out update email links, we just upload the new version to the <a href="http://digwp.com/2010/11/new-updates-downloads-system/" title="Read about the new system">Members/Download Area</a> and let people grab current versions of the book and themes at their convenience.</p>
<p>And when it comes to shipping physical goods, using a shipping service that provides tracking is a <strong>must</strong>. Nothing beats the feeling of being able to tell worried customers the <em>exact</em> location of their merchandise.</p>
<p>Another one that is easy to forget: customer support is a great opportunity to make someone happy. They might not come to you that way, but if you help them out in a big way and fast, they can leave the experience an evangelist for you. </p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Share the load. React to what you get. Make customer support work for you.</p>
<h3>Affiliate Program Ups and Downs</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-affiliates.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> E-Junkie provides an affiliate program for products you sell through them, which you can opt in to. This was a selling point, as when done properly, an affiliate program is a win-win for you as the seller and affiliates. We decided we&#8217;d give 50% of all PDF sales to the affiliate, which we thought would garner big interest in the program. And why not? There is a good chance the affiliate is reaching people that we could never reach on our own. And since the PDF costs less to produce or deliver, we&#8217;re still making money. When the print book came out, we adjusted the percentage so that the affiliate would earn the same ~$13 no matter which option someone chose, the print book or PDF. </p>
<p>One problem with our affiliate program is the way the links work. For the tracking to be done properly, the links that affiliates use go to <em>e-junkie.com</em> first, then are redirected to our website. That means that we get no SEO benefit from the links. If we took all the money that we paid out from the affiliate program and did things like send out more free books to &#8220;influential&#8221; folks perhaps we would have gotten more &#8220;natural&#8221; links and better SEO.  Would we have made as many sales? Who knows.</p>
<p>A much larger problem is abuse. In the last few months some very nasty affiliate program based fraud has popped up.  This is how it works: a bad guy has a bunch of stolen credit card information. They sign up for our affiliate program (which has no way to hold new affiliates until approved, they are just automatically approved). They click on their own links. They use fake information and the stolen credit card information to buy a PDF book from us. This earns that affiliate account the 50%. At the end of the month, unsuspecting affiliate program operators pay out all affiliates without cross referencing anything. </p>
<p>We are onto the scam now, but I&#8217;m not proud to say we paid out a number of months to these scumbags. Ultimately we have had to close the program until we can get time to switch a better system.</p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway</strong>: If you are aware of the risks and potential downsides and have a way to fight them, affiliate programs can be great.</p>
<h3>Homegrown Shipping</h3>
<p>Another thing to throw on the pile of self-publishing responsibilities is a shipping system. For every print book ordered you need to:</p>
<ol>
<li>Make sure you have a book (inventory control)</li>
<li>Box it up nicely so it protects the book well but don&#8217;t overdo the size and weight</li>
<li>Create a shipping label</li>
<li>Fill out international paperwork if necessary</li>
<li>Apply a return address</li>
<li>Take to shipping facility</li>
<li>Pay for shipping</li>
<li>Get tracking information to those who need/want it</li>
</ol>
<p>As well as&#8230;</p>
<ol start=9>
<li>Help customers with shipping issues</li>
<li>Don&#8217;t screw up and miss any</li>
</ol>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-shipping.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> This is a <strong>huge</strong> undertaking. Luckily we&#8217;ve had the help of both of our families in this endeavor. I think we can safely say more time has been put into this than the creation of the book itself. </p>
<p>The first few rounds of books we shipped via Media Mail. We were told this was the most cost effective possible way which seemed about right since each book came in I think under five bucks to anywhere in the United States. There were two problems with Media Mail: you can&#8217;t make those type of labels online and you also can&#8217;t get tracking information on them. We thought the good price was the most important thing, since the book was already so expensive. </p>
<p>As we should have known, price isn&#8217;t everything. Turns out choosing a different shipping option where we can create labels online and provide tracking information is far more valuable both for us and to customers. So that&#8217;s what we do now.</p>
<p>International shipping is another big issue. It&#8217;s just dang expensive to ship a book as a one-off overseas via any major shipping service. Our book, now priced at $70, is often over $100 when international shipping is applied. Also, we&#8217;ve had more issues of books not arriving (and some fraud) with international orders. At some points we&#8217;ve shut off international shipping. But now that we&#8217;ve got tracking (and insurance) going, it&#8217;s nice to be able to have it opened up, since there is certainly some demand for it. I also think, with the book already being so expensive, if you can afford that you can afford the shipping.</p>
<p>And what about profit? We don&#8217;t make anything from shipping. We have it adjusted just so in E-Junkie so that what we charge for shipping is pretty close to what we end up spending. It&#8217;s adjusted so that it&#8217;s ever so slightly higher so we don&#8217;t end up losing money, but like I said, it&#8217;s pretty close. I like that. It feels honest. I would feel shady if we tried to eek more profit out of a tack-on cost. </p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Shipping is one of the biggest time investments you&#8217;ll make self publishing a print book. Ship with tracking information, everybody wants it.</p>
<h3>Little ideas that worked out great</h3>
<p><strong>Short URLs</strong> &ndash; Using a good <a href="http://www.harleyquine.com/code/short-url-plugin/" title="WordPress Plugin">Short URL plugin</a> allowed us to use a short URL for all of the links in the book. This helps to keep book links consistent, easy to typeset, plus it also provides useful clickthrough information. Another bonus is that if the link on the other end went dead, we can redirect it somewhere else that&#8217;s actually useful instead of the user ending up somewhere useless.</p>
<p><strong>Book Index</strong> &ndash; Something that may save you time is skipping the book Index. We originally invested in some indexing software and put a bunch of time into building an index in the back of the book. As we continued to do updates, sometimes those updates would shift the page numbers around, which made keeping up the index ridiculously difficult. We ditched it. Nobody cared.</p>
<p><strong>Google Docs</strong> &ndash; It may not need mentioning, but Google Docs is another <em>extremely</em> useful collaboration tool that we used while writing the different chapters and putting things together. Rather than volley a swarm of emails back and forth, we set up a Google Docs account and later a Dropbox folder for transferring layout/design files. Taking advantage of these types of tools and services is a great way to collaborate on projects.</p>
<p><strong>Book Website</strong> &ndash; More than a &#8220;little&#8221; idea but worth mentioning somewhere in this post is the book&rsquo;s companion website, <a href="http://digwp.com/">DigWP.com</a>. Having some sort of online presence is must for <em>any</em> project, so for the book, we decided that a WordPress blog would be an awesome thing to do. We already post tons of WordPress stuff at our other sites, so having a dedicated place to keep it all focused turned out to be a great way to build context and add value to the book.</p>
<p><strong>Free Themes</strong> &ndash; People love free stuff. We love building WordPress themes. Turns out that giving away free WordPress themes at our <a href="http://themeclubhouse.digwp.com/" title="DigWP.com Theme Clubhouse">Theme Clubhouse</a> is another great way to add value to the book. We also have a growing collection of exclusive themes just for customers.</p>
<h3>Stop, Thief!</h3>
<p><img src="/wp-content/blog-images/whatwelearned-thief.jpg" alt="" class="learned-thumb" /> As we&#8217;ve all learned from the music industry, trying to prevent sharing and theft of digital files is nearly impossible. From the get-go we knew that. We did toy around with some theft-discouragement ideas though. E-Junkie has a PDF stamping feature where a downloaded copy would have the persons transaction ID on it, so if a file got lose on a sharing network we could look up who it was. Turns out that feature in E-Junkie doesn&#8217;t work very well (takes too long to generate the stamped PDF and the link is broken if people move through checkout at an average/fast pace). And besides, what would we do if we found someone who did that? Send them a mean email?</p>
<p>The PDF has been posted for download on sites of all kinds. We&#8217;ve done some fighting against those sites. We&#8217;ve won some. We&#8217;ve lost some. Nothing to lose any hair over. Plenty of honest people bought the book and continue to do so. </p>
<p>We have one really excellent fighting technique and that&#8217;s the fact that we offer free updates to the book and its support materials to legitimate purchases. Thieves obviously don&#8217;t get this courtesy. And the more times we do it, the harder it is to find the most current version online to steal. </p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Theft happens. Better to spend time on the positive tasks of creating than the negative tasks of fighting. There are more creative ways to encourage purchases.</p>
<h3>Working with a Co-Author</h3>
<p>Holy crap we&#8217;ve covered a lot of ground haven&#8217;t we? Has it struck you how much work all this has been? Thankfully there are two of us working on this. I&#8217;m 100% certain that the book is better than twice as good because there were two of us. We sold more than twice as many as either of us alone could have sold. We&#8217;ve only gone half as crazy as we would have otherwise. </p>
<p class="takeaway"><strong>Takeaway:</strong> Co-authors rock.</p>
<h3>That&#8217;s all, folks</h3>
<p>If you have any other specific questions about self publishing, let us know in the comments.</p>
<hr />
<p><small>© 2011 <a href="http://digwp.com">Digging into WordPress</a> | <a href="http://digwp.com/2011/03/what-we-learned-publishing-digging-into-wordpress/">Permalink</a> | <a href="http://digwp.com/2011/03/what-we-learned-publishing-digging-into-wordpress/#comments">33 comments</a> | Add to <a href="http://del.icio.us/post?url=http://digwp.com/2011/03/what-we-learned-publishing-digging-into-wordpress/&title=What We Learned Publishing Digging Into WordPress">del.icio.us</a> | Post tags: <a href="http://digwp.com/tag/book/" rel="tag">book</a>, <a href="http://digwp.com/tag/diy/" rel="tag">DIY</a>, <a href="http://digwp.com/tag/printing/" rel="tag">printing</a><br/></small></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>DiW v3.0 Book News</title>
		<link>http://digwp.com/2010/07/v3-book-news/</link>
		<comments>http://digwp.com/2010/07/v3-book-news/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jul 2010 22:00:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeff Starr</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Site News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[printing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://digwp.com/?p=2620</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We have been working diligently on updating Digging into WordPress and finding the best print-on-demand solution. Thanks to your suggestions and ideas for book printing, there were many options to check out. After sizing things up, we&#8217;re pleased to announce the following: Digging into WordPress version 3.0 will be released near the end of August [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We have been working diligently on updating Digging into WordPress and finding the best print-on-demand solution. Thanks to your <a href="http://digwp.com/2010/06/what-no-printed-copies/#comments" title="What? No Printed Copies?">suggestions and ideas for book printing</a>, there were <em>many</em> options to check out. After sizing things up, we&rsquo;re pleased to announce the following:</p>
<ul>
<li>Digging into WordPress version 3.0 will be released near the end of August</li>
<li>Printed editions of <abbr title="Digging into WordPress">DiW</abbr> will be available in September</li>
</ul>
<p>We&rsquo;re still working out the specifics regarding cost, shipping, and so forth, but the book will be updated soon and printed books are back on the menu. So that&rsquo;s the plan at this point &ndash; no hard promises but rather <em>strong goals</em> for <abbr title="Digging into WordPress">DiW</abbr> v3.0. </p>
<p><span id="more-2620"></span></p>
<p>As always, <a href="http://feeds2.feedburner.com/DiggingIntoWordpress" title="Grab the Feed!">stay tuned</a> for more news!</p>
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<p><small>© 2010 <a href="http://digwp.com">Digging into WordPress</a> | <a href="http://digwp.com/2010/07/v3-book-news/">Permalink</a> | <a href="http://digwp.com/2010/07/v3-book-news/#comments">24 comments</a> | Add to <a href="http://del.icio.us/post?url=http://digwp.com/2010/07/v3-book-news/&title=DiW v3.0 Book News">del.icio.us</a> | Post tags: <a href="http://digwp.com/tag/book/" rel="tag">book</a>, <a href="http://digwp.com/tag/printing/" rel="tag">printing</a><br/></small></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What? No Printed Copies?</title>
		<link>http://digwp.com/2010/06/what-no-printed-copies/</link>
		<comments>http://digwp.com/2010/06/what-no-printed-copies/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jun 2010 16:08:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeff Starr</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Site News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[3.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[printing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://digwp.com/?p=2335</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What&#8217;s up with no more printed copies? We completely sold out of printed books a few weeks ago. We&#8217;re currently looking into print-on-demand solutions to make more of the printed copies available to those who want them. The problem is that the book is over 400 pages and full color. And POD is pretty much [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What&#8217;s up with no more printed copies? We completely sold out of printed books a few weeks ago. We&#8217;re currently looking into print-on-demand solutions to make more of the printed copies available to those who want them. The problem is that the book is over 400 pages and full color. And <acronym title="Print On Demand">POD</acronym> is pretty much pay-per-use type of thing, so the book would be even more expensive to print than before. So again, we&rsquo;re currently looking into solutions for this, and want to ask if anyone knows of a decent, reasonably priced <acronym title="Print On Demand">POD</acronym> service. &ldquo;Reasonably priced&rdquo; because quality is important.</p>
<p><span id="more-2335"></span></p>
<p>Not going to mention who we&rsquo;ve already looked at for this because we want to keep things open at this point and hear what you have to say. Of course, there are also other ways to cut costs:</p>
<ul>
<li>Print content in black &amp; white</li>
<li>Eliminate pages by rewriting or removing stuff</li>
<li>Print many copies up front and go for bulk discount</li>
</ul>
<p>But we also have the <acronym title="Portable Document Format">PDF</acronym>, so do we keep that the same or create two different versions of the book? What&rsquo;s the best path forward? We continue to update the book and have plans to do so again this Summer for <acronym title="WordPress">WP</acronym> 3.0, so that may rule out bulk printing. We were planning on going through and updating some of the core content, so maybe consolidating pages is a (partial) solution? What would the book look like printed in b&amp;w/grayscale?</p>
<p>Any ideas while we continue to look into this, please shout &lsquo;em out. Thanks&nbsp;:)</p>
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		<title>Quick Book Notes</title>
		<link>http://digwp.com/2010/05/quick-book-notes/</link>
		<comments>http://digwp.com/2010/05/quick-book-notes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 May 2010 20:19:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chris Coyier</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Site News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[3.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[printing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://digwp.com/?p=2091</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WordPress 3.0 should be out before we know it. We will be updating the book of course, but we aren&#8217;t promising any particular timeframe for that. Probably &#8220;late summerish&#8221;. We just want to make sure we do a good job and revisit the entire book and update what is needed as well as write about [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<ul>
<li>WordPress 3.0 should be out before we know it. We will be updating the book of course, but we aren&#8217;t promising any particular timeframe for that. Probably &#8220;late summerish&#8221;. We just want to make sure we do a good job and revisit the entire book and update what is needed as well as write about all the 3.0-specific stuff at the end.</li>
<li>We have about 50ish books left in this last run. After that, we&#8217;ll be stopping the sale of print books. Maybe not forever, maybe forever, we aren&#8217;t sure yet (PDF&#8217;s will always be available). We&#8217;re going to look into some print on demand services to help us streamline the process should we go back to print. If you for sure want a print copy, act now, this may be the last chance. </li>
<li>We have also turned off international shipping. In our manual shipping process, international orders have been problematic. It takes 4 weeks at a minimum, sometimes double that. It is insanely expensive, sometimes making the total book cost $100. There have been problems of the books getting stopped by certain governments. There has been plenty of unhappy folks along the way which results in enough refunds that we&#8217;ve essentially lost money on international orders. If we go with a print-on-demand service or an outside shipping service which ships international, that would be great, but again no promises there.</li>
</ul>
<p>Thanks to everyone who has purchased a copy! Its done amazingly well and we are grateful for that. Soon we&#8217;ll be sharing a sort of &#8220;what we learned&#8221; post that will hopefully be of interest to any other potential authors out there.</p>
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