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Print on demand

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Printing business process
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An on-demand book printer at theInternet Archive headquarters inSan Francisco, California. Two large printers print the pages (left) and the cover (right) and feed them into the rest of the machine for collating and binding. Depending on the number of pages, printing may take 5 to 20 minutes.

Print on demand (POD) is aprinting technology and business process in which book copies (or other documents, packaging, or materials) are not printed until the company receives an order, allowing prints in single or small quantities. While other industries established thebuild-to-order business model, POD could only develop after the beginning ofdigital printing,[1] as it was not economical to print single copies using traditional printing technologies such asletterpress andoffset printing.

Many traditionalsmall presses have replaced their traditional printing equipment with POD equipment or contracted their printing to POD service providers. Manyacademic publishers, includinguniversity presses, use POD services to maintain largebacklists (lists of older publications); some use POD for all of their publications.[2] Larger publishers may use POD in special circumstances, such as reprinting older, out-of-print titles or for test marketing.[3]

Predecessors

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Before the introduction of digital printing technology, production of small numbers of publications had many limitations. Large print jobs were not a problem, but small numbers of printed pages were typically during the early 20th century produced using stencils and reproducing on amimeograph or similar machine.[4] These produced printed pages of inferior quality to a book, cheaply and reasonably fast. By about 1950,electrostatic copiers were available to make paper master plates for offset duplicating machines. From about 1960,copying onto plain paper became possible for photocopy machines to make multiple good-quality copies of amonochrome original.[4]

In 1966,Frederik Pohl discussed inGalaxy Science Fiction "a proposal for high-speed facsimile machines which would produce a book to your order, anywhere in the world". As the magazine's editor, he said that "it, or something like it, is surely the shape of the publishing business some time in the future".[5] As technology advanced, it became possible to store text in digital form – paper tape,punched cards readable bydigital computer, magneticmass storage, etc. – and to print on ateletypewriter,line printer or other computer printer, but the software and hardware to produce original good-quality printed colour text and graphics and to print small jobs fast and cheaply was unavailable.

Self-publishing authors

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POD creates a new category of publishing (or printing) company that offers services, usually for a fee, directly to authors who wish toself-publish. These services generally include printing and shipping each individual book ordered, handling royalties, and getting listings in online bookstores. The initial investment required for POD services is less than foroffset printing. Other services may also be available, including formatting, proofreading, and editing, but such companies typically do not spend money for marketing, unlike conventional publishers. Such companies are suitable for authors prepared to design and promote their work themselves, with minimal assistance and at minimal cost. POD publishing gives authors editorial independence, speed to market, ability to revise content, and greater financial return per copy thanroyalties paid by conventional publishers.[6]

Author's reversion rights

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In 1999, theTimes Literary Supplement carried an article entitled "A Very Short Run", in which author Andrew Malcolm argued that under the rights-reversion clauses of older, pre-PoD contracts, copyrights would legally revert to their authors if their books were printed on demand rather than re-lithographed, and he envisaged a test case being successfully fought on this aspect.[7] This claim was contradicted by an article entitled "Eternal Life?" in the Spring 2000 issue ofThe Author Magazine (the journal of the UK Society of Authors) by Cambridge University Press's Business Development Director Michael Holdsworth, who argued that printing on demand keeps books "permanently in print", thereby invalidating authors' reversion rights.[8]

See also

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Bibliography

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toPrint on demand.
  • 2007.5 Writer's Market, Robert Lee Brewer & Joanna Masterson. (2006)ISBN 1-58297-427-6
  • The Fine Print of Self-publishing: The Contracts & Services of 48 Major Self-publishing Companies, Mark Levine. (2006)ISBN 1-933538-56-2
  • Print on Demand Book Publishing, Morris Rosenthal (2004)ISBN 0-9723801-3-2

References

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  1. ^Kleper, Michael L. (2000).The Handbook of Digital Publishing. Vol. II. Prentice Hall PTR.ISBN 0-13-029371-7 – via Rochester Institute of Technology Prentice Hall. part of the Encyclopedia of Printing Technologies in 2 volumes.
  2. ^Scott Jaschik (31 July 2007)."New Model for University Presses"(electronic). insidehighered.com.Archived from the original on 12 August 2007. Retrieved14 August 2007.
  3. ^Snow, Danny (February 2001). "Print-on-Demand: The Best Bridge Between New Technologies and Established Markets". BookTech: The Magazine for Publishers.
  4. ^ab"Copying Machines".Archived from the original on 4 October 2013.
  5. ^Pohl, Frederik (April 1966)."Where the Jobs Go". Editorial.Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 4–6.
  6. ^Hviid, Morten; Izquierdo Sanchez, Sofia; Jacques, Sabine (11 November 2016)."From Publishers to Self-Publishing: The Disruptive Effects of Digitalisation on the Book Industry".SSRN. Rochester, NY.doi:10.2139/ssrn.2893237.S2CID 39557371.SSRN 2893237.
  7. ^Andrew Malcolm, 'A Very Short Run', Times Literary Supplement, 18 June 1999
  8. ^Michael Holdsworth, 'Eternal Life', The Author, Spring 2000
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