Byte Reading
Hmm? Where's the paper? Welcome to e-literature.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/1999/october/18352.html
Many self-published authors promote their books on the Web, but
Gary Sutton has taken the process one step further, paving the way
for self-publishers everywhere. Forgoing brick-and-mortar venues,
Sutton is offering his novel, Cyber.scam 2000, exclusively
on the Web. Readers can access the novel, which centers on a
conspiracy to take over the Internet in order to rule the world,
through Hard Shell Word Factory (http://www.hardshell.com) to read it
on their PCs, or download it onto a Softbook Reader (http://www.softbook.com), a portable
e-book with a built-in modem. An ink-and-paper format is available
from Amazon.com. "It's very reasonable [if you want] to
get feedback and [cater] to an Internet market," Sutton
says.
"Authors are, for the first time now, getting attention for
stuff they publish on the Web," says Steven Zeitchik, an
editor at Publisher's Weekly. "They're
[currently] interested in getting a print publisher, and whether
that will change and books will be exclusively published online
depends on whether downloadable books and e-book devices will take
off." And with healthy competition among e-book manufacturers
driving down prices, finding a virtual audience for your virtual
book may not seem so futuristic.
What's good for the soul is good for the
entrepreneur.
By Laura Tiffany
August Turak was 21 years old when the spirituality bug bit him,
leading him to quit college to study with a Zen master. Although he
went on to finish college and has since founded four software
publishing companies, spirituality is still foremost in his mind.
"I consider myself a spiritual person who happens to own a
business--not a businessperson who does spiritual things,"
says Turak, founder of Houston-based Elsinore Technologies Inc. and
Raleigh, North Carolina-based Flynt Technologies, TeamVizor Inc.
and Raleigh Group International.
Turak, 47, spends every Christmas, Easter and summer vacation at
the Mepkin Abbey in South Carolina as a monastic guest--living,
working and praying with 25 Cistercian monks. Although he jokes his
employees fear he won't return from one of his trips, Turak
says his business wouldn't be as successful if he didn't
go.
He finds his inspiration in the monks (average age: 65), who run
several successful businesses and maintain a 7,000-acre farm.
"What I take away [from my visits] is marvel and awe of what
these quiet men accomplish by having an attitude of `Ask not what
the community can do for me, but what I can do for the
community,'" Turak says. "They don't teach this
kind of behavior, attitude and values in business school. I'm
doing what some guys do by going to Harvard Business School for a
few weeks every year to bone up on econometrics. I think most of
them would be far better off going to a monastery and learning the
kind of values that allow them to find, meet and hold on to the
right people."
If you've ever wanted to pick the brains of the world's
top entrepreneurs, you're in luck: Amacom's new series does
just that. In Business the Bill Gates Way, Business the Jack
Welch Way, Business the Rupert Murdoch Way and
Business the Richard Branson Way, authors Des Dearlove (who
wrote Branson and Gates) and Stuart Crainer (who
wrote Murdoch and Welch) share each
entrepreneur's story along with tips on how to follow in their
enterprising footsteps. Although the books are primarily made up of
second-source anecdotes with few direct quotes from the actual
entrepreneurs, they are well-researched and presented in a quick,
read-between-meetings style.
Contact Sources
Publishers Weekly, 249 W. 17th St., New York, NY 10011,
szeitchik@cahners.com
Raleigh Group International,aturak@ralgi.com, http://www.ralgi.com
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