The Literary Life

From the staff of BookSwim.com

Category: Website

MNN.com: “A ‘good’ reason to donate your books” by Robin Shreeves

Read the full article at MNN.com

Act Bolder challenges book lovers to donate five books to their local library.

I’ve told you before how much I love library book sales. I find a lot of treasures there, particularly on the cookbook table. These book sales get books in the hands of people who need them and love them for a fraction of the cost of new books, and libraries raise much-needed funds from the sales.

The majority of books that libraries sell at these sales don’t come from their shelves; they come from donations from people like you and me. As you can see from the photo above, I’ve got a box full of kids’ books waiting to be taken to the local library for the next sale that will be held in September.

Donating books and buying or borrowing used books are great ways to keep books from collecting dust on shelves and going unused. Another benefit is that keeping books circulating will reduce the amount of books that need to be created.

Right now, and for the next five days, if you donate five books to your local library, Act Bolder will give you a gift certificate for a free month at BookSwim. BookSwim is a Netflix-style book rental site. You order a book from the website. They ship it to you. When you’re done reading it, you ship it back to them in a pre-paid envelope. When it’s returned, BookSwim sends you the next book on your list. There are no time limits and no late fees.

I love the idea of BookSwim, but the lowest plan starts at $23.95 to take up to three books at a time out. You might not be sure if this works for you, but now you can give it a try. If you find in the first month that it wasn’t worth it, you’re not out any money. And, if you find it was worth it, you can continue with a paid membership. Plus, your local library will benefit.

Act Bolder is an organization that believes “It’s time for some good.” Businesses pose challenges on the website, and those who accept the challenge get a reward. The challenges are only posed for a certain amount of time. The current challenge expires in a little more than five days from now, and a new challenge will be up after that.

I’m going to take advantage of this offer. Anyone else?

Read the full article at MNN.com

Hartford Courant: “Do A Good Deed Get Rewarded at ActBolder.com” by Korky Vann

Read the article at Courant.com

Call it Groupon for do-gooders. A new website, ActBolder.com, teams up with businesses and suggests positive actions you can take to make the world a better place. Complete a task and you’ll receive a reward. Past challenges have included saying no to plastic bags at checkout and using your bike instead of your car. This week, donate five books to your local library and get a free month of book rentals at BookSwim.com

Read the article at Courant.com

Orlando Sentinel: “Donate to your public library; get a free month of ‘BookSwim.com’”

Read the article at OrlandoSentinel.com

Dear voracious readers and book hoarders, this “Need of the Week” is for you.

In case thinning the herd of used books in your stash and donating some to your local library isn’t reward enough on its own — though, really, you’ll feel so much better afterward — there’s an extra incentive this week. As you may know, the Orange County Public Library, like most public libraries, accepts donated books. While it may add a small fraction of the donated books to its collection, generally it gives the books to the “Friends of the Library” charitable organization, which sells the books in its bookstore on the third floor of the Main Library or in the various Orange County branches.

The Friends then donate the proceeds back to the library to support programs and services.

So from Monday (Aug. 16) through Sunday (Aug. 22), the Netflix-style book rental club BookSwim is challenging readers (and horders) of all ages to donate five books to their local library — and, in turn, they’ll get a free month of book rental service.

To register for the challenge, and to redeem your reward, you’ll need to sign up and accept this challenge at ActBolder.com, which is the business that is orchestrating the effort. (Don’t worry; it’s free.) Once you do that, you’ll receive an option to accept the reward linked to the particular challenge. Click “yes” and ActBolder.com will email you a coupon code to redeem the reward.

Yes, it’s a couple of extra hoops to jump through when you could just donate the books outright. On the other hand, it’s a nice little thank you — and you’ll get a chance to add to your literary repertoire without permanently cluttering up your bookshelf.

Why, it’s almost like checking books out of a library…

Read the article at OrlandoSentinel.com

DailyGrommet.com: “Already!?! Daily Grommet’s Ideas to Ease Back-to-School Pain”

Read the full article at DailyGrommet.com

We can’t believe it, either. It’s almost time…
To make your life a little easier this fall, check out our list of back to school shopping ideas. We hope you’ll find some you can use, and we’d love to hear what else is on your back to school list, too.

By Elise Smith


…..Netflix-style Book Rental
Don’t want to lay out big bucks for the syllabus list? Tired of long wait lists for the hottest best-sellers at the library? BookSwim gets it right: for a flat monthly rate pick the books you need for home delivery and keep them as long as you need them. (Memberships start at $19.98 / month) Find out more about BookSwim online book rental here………

Read the full article at DailyGrommet.com

Audrey Magazine: “TGIFree Fridays: BookSwim” by Anna M. Park


I wrote about BookSwim a few weeks back, the Netflix for books. I have to say, I am a huge fan.

With BookSwim, I’ve checked out the new Twilight graphic novel by Stephenie Meyer and artist Young Kim. (It’s something I really wanted to see, but wouldn’t have bought.) My husband’s gotten a chance to read the dishy Game Change, the scandalous tell-all written by insiders during the 2008 presidential election. And I just started Angelology, a DaVinci Code-esque thriller-romance about an “angelologist” and the real-life angels living among people. (Again, I wouldn’t have bought it, but it makes for a good poolside read.)

Whether you’re a lover of books or just don’t have any more room for all the books you wanna read (but not necessarily own), BookSwim is perfect. You create your list online (just like Netflix). You order by priority (just like Netflix). You get the books by mail (just like Netflix). You return them in the included postage paid envelope (just like Netflix). No mess, no fuss. It’s so easy, seriously, everyone should adopt this business model. (Cocktails by mail anyone?)

And now BookSwim is giving one lucky Audrey reader a free three-month trial. Finally catch up on Chang-rae Lee’s latest book The Surrendered (it is sooo good, trust me). Or indulge in Jennifer Weiner’s latest chick lit read. Or get some fun reads for your little ones. All guilt- and clutter-free. It’s like a Border’s in your mailbox. I’m telling, you will be hooked.

Just comment below by August 4th, 11:59 pm, and you may win! (Sorry, you must have a U.S. mailing address to win.)

NorthWest Cable News: “Twilight teen trends, TV and toddlers, rent a book” by Shaniqua Manning

See the video and read the article at NNCN.com

No more library fines

Well here’s a novel idea that’ll get your kids to drop the remote and save you a trip to the library. Bookswim.com is like Netflix for books. The website charges a monthly fee starting at $24 to rent three to 11 books at a time. Keep the book as long as you like. When you’re done return it in a prepaid envelope and you’ll get another book from your reading list mailed back to you. That will save you a trip to the library and help you avoid those pesky overdue fines……..Something to check out to help your kids beat summer boredom.

See the video and read the article at NNCN.com

Examiner.com: “Renting books is a convenient and cost-effective alternative” by Laura Frazin Steele

Have you ever considered renting a book in the same way that you would rent a DVD? Book rentals are an interesting alternative to buying and owning books or borrowing them from the library.

Buying books on a regular basis can be expensive, and people with full bookshelves often give their books away after reading them. Renting a book can be more cost effective than buying it, and when you’re done with the book, you merely send it back. From an ecological perspective, renting books is also nice way of sharing printed media and saving paper.

Renting books also provides an alternative to borrowing books at public and school libraries. Sadly, public libraries nationwide, including Los Angeles, have faced shortened hours due to severe budget cuts. Equally distressing are projected cuts to school libraries across the nation.

BookSwim is a company that will conveniently deliver bestselling books to your door. BookSwim allows you to read books at your own pace without a due date. When you are finished with the book, you send it back to BookSwim in a pre-paid mailer. BookSwim offers different pricing plans depending on the number of books you want to read in a given month. Click here to browse the wide category of books offered by BookSwim…….

Publishing Perspectives: “BookSwim.com Aims for Sweet Spot of American Readers”

BookSwim.com Aims for Sweet Spot of American Readers

• BookSwim’s proprietary data shows that 80% of it’s users are library users and high income suburban women who read between 40 and 50 books per year — and buy as many as 30.

• An analysis of reading habits reveals that BookSwim’s subscribers don’t tend to read in isolated silos. Instead, readers are just as likely to sample numerous types of books rather than merely stick to their personal preference.

By Edward Nawotka

NEWARK, NJ: BookSwim.com, the three year-old book rental company that is known to many as the “Netflix of books,” has over the past six months compiled statistical data that offers a glimpse into the reading habits of a swath of two important subsets American readers: high-income suburban women and library users.

The Readers

“Eighty percent of our users are female, soccer mom types, with a high income and socioeconomic strata, who frequent non-profit events, read 40 to 50 books per year, and buy as many as 30,” says Nick Ruffilo R, BookSwim’s CIO and CTO. They come primarily from suburban neighborhoods “and like having the convenience of having books delivered to their door,” says Ruffilo, or they’re from communities where library services have been cut or they are finding long waiting lists for hot bestsellers that they’re anxious to read.

It is, in short, BookSwim’s group of readers represent a true “sweet spot” for publishers.

The company, which remains privately held and funded, would not reveal the total number of subscribers to the site, but CEO/CFO Jevan Padiyar did say that the company has had “significant year to year growth since its inception.”

The Data

BookSwim’s researched revealed that voracious readers don’t always stay within their comfort zone.

“What we did was look at reader trends amongst category-based readers,” says Ruffilo. “For example we looked at romance readers and calculated the percentage of those readers that also rented books in other categories. The percentages are reflected in the chart. Many books fall into 2+ categories (you can have sci-fi romance, mystery romance, mystery sci-fi, etc, which is how you can have a readers with multiple preference). A reader was considered a genre reader when 60+ % of the books they read fell within a given high-level category.”

Among the surprises in the data was the news that those most catholic in their tastes appear to be comics and graphic novel readers, who read broadly across the spectrum, with fully 87.5% reading sci-fi and fantasy novels — the highest degree of crossover on the chart, and another 72.02% also reading children’s books.

Romance readers, proved avid fans of mysteries as well, with 86.72% clocking in the occasional who-done-it, but less than half included science fiction and fantasy, non-fiction, or childrens books into their mix.

Mystery/thrillers were by far the most popular genre for crossover readers — a statistic that likely reflects the ephemeral “use once” character of the genre, which might attract such readers to BookSwim’s type of service which doesn’t commit them to owning the book.

“The core of our business is in bestsellers, not backlist,” noted Jeevan Padiyar, BookSwim’s CEO/CFO, “so yes, the numbers reflect that, but it’s also a good way for the industry to note that high volume readers tend to be very eclectic in their taste.”

Inventory Control and E-book Subscription Models

The company itself operates in such a way that it limits its own ordering to just-in-time purchases and deliveries, a process that is aided by the fact that customers maintain a queue of titles they are waiting for, thus allowing BookSwim to accurately assess demand. When titles that are most in demand lose desirability, such as when they fall off the bestseller lists, BookSwim then sells any excess inventory onto the secondary market.

The ideal form of inventory control would be to eliminate the need to ship physical books out altogether and to merely “rent” readers a digital edition. On this point Padiyar is circumspect, admitting that the company is developing an e-book strategy and has had numerous conversations with publishers about how this might work. But, he admits, “its still not a workable model.”

Subscription models are increasingly popular among publishers, but they tend to work best in niches. Small-scale indie publishers, like Open Letter Press which focuses on translation or military history publishers like Osprey, operate successful subscription services, though in reality, these operate much the same way the old book club model did, with individuals self-selecting/identifying themselves with a particular type of book.

Exporting the subscription model into the e-book world offers a chance to break this model open, since readers have a risk-free method of consuming bestselling titles on-demand. It has been done, to varying degrees of success, in the library market already. Taking it commercial is the next logical step, but one that has become more and not less complicated by the introduction in the past year of the agency model, as well as numerous new formats and devices.

Still, says Padiyar, though “e-books for many represent a kind of holy grail, BookSwim is primarily about convenience and saving money over time,” adding “Whether that remains in the form of physical books or digital ones, we intend to offer our customers superior value for money — no matter what kind of book they read or how they want to read it.”

Bookswim’s Top 20 Rented Titles (July 8 )

#1 – The Search
#2 – The Island: A Novel
#3 – The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
#4 – The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest
#5 – Still Missing
#6 – Sizzling Sixteen (Stephanie Plum)
#7 – Undead and Unfinished (Queen Betsy, Book 9)
#8 – The Girl Who Played with Fire
#9 – Sh*t My Dad Says
#10 – The Help
#11 – Private
#12 – The Passage
#13 – Broken: A Novel (Grant County)
#14 – Sliding Into Home
#15 – One Day (Vintage Contemporaries Original)
#16 – The Overton Window
#17 – 61 Hours: A Reacher Novel (Jack Reacher Novels)
#18 – The 9th Judgment (The Women’s Murder Club)
#19 – Best Friends Forever: A Novel
#20 – Medium Raw: A Bloody Valentine to the World of Food and the People Who Cook

BookSwim.com Aims for Sweet Spot of American Readers

SunshineRewards: “Win a BookSwim.com Membership at Sunshine Rewards”

Enter at SunshineRewards.com

We’re always excited when we introduce a new merchant at Sunshine Rewards but even more exciting when we can do it with a contest! SR has partnered with our newest merchant, BookSwim.com, to give you a chance to win a membership for yourself AND a friend!

What is BookSwim? It’s often called “Netflix” for books but that’s completely do it justice. BookSwim is a membership based service that allows you to rent books for as long as you want. You simply choose the monthly plan that works best for you and then visit their site to start queuing up your books. They will then send the books to you from your list. Take as long as you want to read them and after you return them, they will send you more. It’s a perfect solution for people who love to read but are tired of paying $10-30 per book. Unlike the library, you won’t be on wait lists for months just to get new releases. And now on with the contest!

The prize: A 2-month membership to BookSwim.com for both you AND your nominee (plan will be the 3 books at a time plan given as a $50 gift card).

To enter:

1) Leave a comment below telling us who you know that deserves a BookSwim membership and why (one entry).

2) Twitter about the contest and leave a comment below with your Tweet (one entry).

3) Post this contest on Facebook and leave a comment below with what you posted (one entry).

4) Blog about this contest and leave your link to the post below (two entries).

Entries must be received by midnight Eastern on July 6, 2010. Open to U.S. residents 18 and older only.

Don’t want to wait for the contest to get a membership? Save even more with BookSwim.com with BookSwim.com coupons and cash back at Sunshine Rewards. Watch our video below to learn even more about BookSwim might be for you.

Enter at SunshineRewards.com

Austin Statesman: “Bring bookstore to your door”

Read the full article at Statesman.com

Instead of loitering at a bookshop all afternoon, try an alternative way to preview books that pique your interest. Known as the Netflix of books, BookSwim (www.bookswim.com) provides the opportunity to have rental reads delivered straight to your home. The extensive library offers books ranging in genre from Home & Garden and Entertainment to popular reads from The New York Times Best-Seller list. Simply browse, rent and return when finished. Planning a summer redecoration project? BookSwim is now offering a DIY-This-Summer promo to inspire excitement for new homeowners, fixer uppers and design enthusiasts. Enter code HOMEREADS to receive a discounted membership of three months for the price of two. Offer good for any rate plan; expires Sept. 6.

Read the full article at Statesman.com

Rutgers University: “Fun in the Sun”

Read the full article at Rutgers.edu

Business Basics

As co-founder of BookSwim.com, Shamoon Siddiqui RBS’08 says that he gained a solid foundation in business through the Rutgers Business School MBA program. He is especially grateful for one particular class that proved very useful in founding a company. Before taking Financial Accounting, Siddiqui says he did not know how to read financial statements nor did he realize the importance of certain numbers on balance sheets and cash-flow statements, both of which are of vital importance to starting a business. His favorite memory of his time at Rutgers was when he and BookSwim.com co-founder George Burke competed in and won the Rutgers Business Plan competition. The $20,000 prize enabled the duo to move forward on making BookSwim.com a reality. The contest also gave Siddiqui the opportunity to connect with other entrepreneurs. And even though he enjoyed his job at the time, Siddiqui says that the opportunities and ideas he was exposed to in the MBA program motivated him to act on his dreams and start his own company. His advice for aspiring entrepreneurs? “Just do it.”

Read the full article at Rutgers.edu

Audrey Magazine: “Get In the Pool: BookSwim et al”

Read the full article at AudreyMagazine.com

It’s summertime and that means some serious summer reading. I’ve been obsessed with Jean Kwok’s Girl in Translation, Toni Morrison’s A Mercy, and Chang-Rae Lee’s The Surrendered. (Read our book review and interview with Lee in our Summer issue.) But I also want to check out some guilty pleasure reading like The Carrie Diaries and the new Twilight graphic novel illustrated by Korean artist Young Kim. Oh, what to do.

Thankfully, some really ingenious people have picked up on the success of Netflix to bring you all the books you could want to your doorstep. It’s like having a Border’s at your fingertips.

Get Jean Kwok’s “Girl in Translation” delivered to your door, courtesy of BookSwim.

BookSwim

I remember the days when I used to run to my local Blockbuster to get my video return in on time. Never again. Honestly, I don’t know how we as a society survived thus far without the Internet, computers and Netflix.

Well, now there’s BookSwim, the Netflix for books. Which is completely genius because while I cherish the written word and love my old-fashioned books, I simply don’t have room in my apartment to house every single book I’ve ever read. I’m a bit of a snob that way. I only want the really good, quality books displayed on my bookcase.

And yet, I do like an easy, lighthearted read. That’s why BookSwim is perfect for people like me (and apparently Pakistani American co-founder Shamoon Siddiqui as well). I can fly through The Carrie Diaries or skim Eat, Pray, Love before it hits theaters. Ideal if you’re a James Patterson or Nora Roberts junkie (one could go broke buying up every single one of these prolific author’s new books). And when you’re done, pop it into the envelope they give you and wait for your next shipment. It ships directly to your mailbox and you can keep the books for as long as you want. No shipping fees, no late fees.

“The Carrie Diaries” available at BookSwim.

Now granted, they’re not as fast as Netflix (a hard cover book is a lot more unwieldy than a DVD), especially because you are generally encouraged to return two books at a time, but if you like to take time with your books, the three-at-a-time plan works perfectly. Read a couple, return, and wait for your next shipment as you read your third.

Wanna try it out? Enter code READINGINSTYLE at checkout and receive one month free on a three month subscription (plans start from $23.95). Good through August 31, 2010.

Read the full article at AudreyMagazine.com

Mashable: “HOW TO: Rent Anything Online” by Sarah Kessler

Read the full article at Mashable.com

As dumpster diving and extreme anti-consumerism edge their way into the mainstream, more and more renting seems like an easier way to “go green” while cutting costs.

While not everything should be rented, (toothbrushes, underwear, I can go on) most things can be, and it shouldn’t come as a surprise that you can borrow just about anything without having to leave your home, or office, or coffee shop – basically anywhere you use your computer. Log on to these sites and let the wonder of temporary ownership begin.

People have been renting books since as early as fourth century BCE, but only recently have they been able get their lit fix without logging off the Internet or succumbing to the annoyance of a due date.

There are a number of “Netflix for books” businesses that allow bookworms to read and return books at their own pace. Book Swim prices its plans depending on the number of books taken out at one time (a “devout reader,” with 11 books rented at a time, pays about $60 per month)……….

Read the full article at Mashable.com

Forbes.com: “Book Publishers Can Learn from Film and Music” by Chip O’Brien

Read BookSwim’s Director of Member Service CHIP O’BRIEN at Forbes.com

What is happening to the future of books? Consider this: Amazon sold more Kindle books than paper books on Christmas Day in 2009, despite decisions by publishers like Harper Collins (Palin’s Going Rogue) and Simon & Schuster (King’s Under the Dome) to delay the release of eBooks long past the release of their hardcover counterparts. It seems the popularity of eBooks is growing much faster than publishers’ willingness to embrace them.

But e-publishing doesn’t have to bring an end to traditional paper books, or spin its wheels trying to translate the paper book model into a far different space. Instead of trying to understand eBooks within the space of the old paper-and-binding universe, we should examine the media that survived the first wave of the distribution revolution: movies and music.

Taking cues from the music and film industries, here are five things book publishers should offer:

Combo Deals: Bundle purchases of paper books and eBooks. According to science fiction novelist Eric Flint, releasing a free online copy of his novel Mother of Demons raised the book’s sell-through rate by 11%. While it can’t be shown that his subsequent novel, 1632, definitively benefited from being available for free as an eBook from its publishing date onward, its own 88% sell-through rate doesn’t seem to have been harmed. Many print novels, especially series volumes, currently include a “sneak peek” chapter of a forthcoming book at the end. Instead, why not offer a free download code for a large online excerpt of another title, or even a complimentary eBook in its entirety? It would be an easy way to add value to a paper book purchase, and a great way to promote other titles.

More Flexibility: With the rising popularity of book-swapping sites like Book Mooch and of online book-rental clubs like BookSwim, readers are finding flexible ways to get and keep (or return, as it were) books. Meanwhile, eBook file formats seem almost deliberately restrictive: Nook books can be read only on Nooks and PCs, Kindle books only on Kindles. The music industry long ago gave up on DRM. Offering eBook files that can display on all eReader devices would be a friendlier option for the consumer, allowing the same book to be read on a Nook, a Sony eReader, or any PDF-reading program on a computer.

Product Expansion: The eBook format can break down the traditional linearity of a book; why not use that to the book’s advantage? Like a VHS tape, paper books give access only to the finished product in a single linear sequence. As with DVDs, versatile ebook technology would allow content-producers to “layer” content that would be impossible to include in a paper book, from author commentaries with a display/hide option to extras like deleted chapters or characters that didn’t make the final revision. Links to blurbs of background information could be embedded in the text, so the interested reader perusing The Da Vinci Code could click a link to see a picture of the Louvre museum or a snapshot of “The Last Supper.” Publishers might even consider including free user-submitted content like fan commentary and analysis—material with little-to-no cost that still enriches the basic text.

Some may object to the idea of book “extras” in the same way Spielberg refuses to record audio commentaries for his films: because it might distract attention from the work itself. Would these changes take away from the mystical self-completeness of a book? Perhaps, but it may be time for the book to lose its one-way conversational flow. When you increase the interactivity of a book, you increase its ability to engage an Internet-age audience.

Friendlier Reading For Short Attention Spans: When a would-be reader complains that he or she doesn’t have time to read, it’s more likely that they’re simply missing a continuous block of free time to plow through several chapters at once. It may be worthwhile for publishers to take inspiration from such sites as DailyLit, which breaks novels into 1,000-word chunks and emails those excerpts on a customizable schedule. We may not have time to read 500 pages today, but we could certainly read two pages a day for a few weeks. Many of today’s classic novels, from A Farewell to Arms to Great Expectations, were originally published in serial form—what if, like a band releasing several EPs instead of a single long album, publishers released books in segments?

Social Experience: Reading has traditionally been a solitary activity, which may explain the growing appeal of blog-reporting over traditional newspapers: through comments and follow-up posts, the text talks back. But armed with wireless connections, eReaders can finally create a seamless social reading experience. They might include the option to connect with other readers currently working through the same section of the book, allowing for a kind of impromptu disposable book club. Another possibility is to “Wiki-fy” every text: Allow readers to add comments throughout the book, while others vote on the relevance and helpfulness of those comments.

Finally, a note on what not to do. Netflix recently reached an agreement with Warner Bros. to delay rentals of the studio’s movies until four weeks after their retail release. This bears an uncanny parallel to publishers’ delay of eBooks to preserve hardcover retail sales. In both industries, though, scrabbling frantically for retail sales will fail when the consumers know they can rent (or, dare I say, pirate) the product elsewhere—and the appearance of bullying consumers into buying at hardcover prices is highly unlikely to give readers a sense of compassion for beleaguered publishers.

This is the exact wrong time in history to fret about the imminent death of reading—eReaders have the power to transform books into far richer, far more interactive experiences than ever before. Instead of deriding the eBook as a profit-killer, why not unite our old ideas of reading alone in quiet rooms with the vast potential created by new technology? Let’s re-imagine what books can become.

Read BookSwim’s Director of Member Service CHIP O’BRIEN at Forbes.com

“BookSwim Plays ‘Telephone’ at BEA” by Karen Holt

Read the article at PublishingPerspectives.com

If someone hands you a spiral-bound notebook during BEA and asks you to begin writing where they left off, consider it your chance to become a published author.

If you’re already a published author, that’s okay, too. The notebooks are part of an innovative (and surprisingly spontaneous) marketing campaign by BookSwim, the company that bills itself as the “Netflix of books.”

Here’s the idea: The notebooks are being given to five well-connected people in the industry with the mandate to write for as long as they want in a certain genre and then pass the book on to another person who will keep the book going. When BEA ends on Thursday, the notebooks will be collected and the contents published on BookSwim’s website, www.BookSwim.com. The chosen genres are romance, mystery, sci-fi and children’s. A fifth book will be all about BEA.

CEO/CFO Jeevan Padiyar sees the project as a non-pushy way to get BEA attendees talking about BookSwim. “There’s a glut of people saying, ‘Can I sell you this? Can I sell you this?’ We didn’t want to be that way.”

It’s also an example of what a truly “nimble” company looks like. Nick Ruffilo, BookSwim’s CIO and CTO, thought up the idea Monday evening. “It’s really a message to the publishing industry to say, ‘you can take small risks, don’t be afraid,’” Ruffilo said. In this case, small means $30 plus tax — the price of the five notebooks he bought at Staples Monday evening.

Read the article at PublishingPerspectives.com