- Lulu (company)
Infobox Company
name = Lulu
type = Private
genre =Publishing
foundation = 2003
founder =Bob Young
location_city =Morrisville, North Carolina
location_country =United States
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intl =Lulu is a printing company with its headquarters at
Morrisville, North Carolina . In addition to printing it also offers online-order fulfillment . The brand name is derived from the concept of a "lulu" as an old-fashioned term for a remarkable person, object, or idea. The company'sCEO isRed Hat co-founderBob Young .Authors who publish/print works through Lulu retain the
copyright s to such works. Optional services offered by the company includeISBN assignment, and distribution of books to retailers requesting specific titles (returns are not accepted, which limits distribution to physical bookstores). Electronic distribution is also available.Overview
According to its founder Lulu Press Inc. is an experimental
self-publishing company . {url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/03/technology/03lulu.html.}] Lulu's ordering-and-publishing system isautomate d and open. Interaction with authors is done exclusively through theInternet . If the author elects to place items on Lulu's website "market place", anyone with access to the Internet and who is registered with Lulu may make and pay for orders. There is an additional process and fee for material distributed beyond the website to outlets such as Amazon and Barnes and Noble.Lulu's focus is on conventional
book s, which can be printed in various sizes, in paperback or hardback, and in black-and-white or glossy full-color; however they also publishmagazine s,calendars , andprint publication s. Lulu publishesdigital media as well, including music CDs, DVDvideos , andringtone s. Media type options are available to authors — for example, an author uploading a novel can select a type of binding,layout style, and even among predefinedcover art if desired, and can set the amount ofauthor margin desired. An author canupload a file in.pdf format (or can choose to have Lulu convert it), and candownload and view the uploaded or converted file. cite journal | last = Fenton | first = Howard | year = 2007 | title = Self-Publish or Perish? The Implications of Digital Book Production | journal = Seybold Report: Analyzing Publishing Technologies | issue = 5 | volume = 7 | pages = 7–10 ] cite news | last = Fawcett | first = Anne | date =January 7 ,2008 | title = Save face with a pet project | work =Sydney Morning Herald | url = http://www.theage.com.au/news/how-tos/vanity-pet-publishing-wont-beak-the-bank/2008/01/06/1199554469105.html | accessdate = 2008-04-20 ]Authors are guided by menus and instructions on the website as they upload files. Material is submitted in digital form for hard publication. Uploaded items that are not distributed beyond Lulu are immediately available for order. However distributed items require the author to first order a draft and to approve it. In either case uploaded files will be published verbatim and unedited within the limits of the technology to do so. A live, online chat-service is usually available to help customers navigate the instructions posted on the website. The author is not assigned a contact person such as an editor. Lulu provides no phone support. Mail and phone contact information is conspicuously absent from their website. This approach reduces support and editing costs and thus provides access to publishing to those who would otherwise not be willing or able to afford a vanity press or find an accommodating conventional publisher.
Potential customers must first create an account with a user name and password before ordering or paying for any item. Lulu keeps no
inventory , instead orders are placed in a queue at a contracted print-on-demand printer [Books in Lulu's "Distribution" program are produced by Lightningsource, others by Colorcentric.cite web | url = http://www.lulu.com/static/pr/09_20_04.php | title = Lulu Partners With Xerox For On Demand Publishing | work = Lulu | accessdate = 2008-04-20 | date =September 20 ,2004 ] [ cite web | url = http://www.enriquedans.com/2007/01/lulucom-en-universiaknowledge.html | title = Lulu.com en UniversiaKnowledge | accessdate = 2008-04-20 | work = El Blog de Enrique Dans | date =January 15 ,2007 ] [cite web | url = http://www.lulu.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=83496 | title = Vendors and Suppliers | work = Lulu forums | last = Ellen | first = Joan | date =December 15 ,2007 | accessdate = 2008-04-20 ] , in a system referred to as "POD." Printing takes approximately one to two weeks, after which the finished product is shipped. There can be small variations in published material when the job is moved from one contract printer to anotherWhen a book or project for distribution beyond Lulu's website is first entered, or when it is revised, the author is required to purchase a draft copy and then approve it. The draft copy goes through the regular order process with approximately one or two weeks delay for printing followed by shipping time. The author may approve the draft by checking a box on the 'project page' for the book, or the author may enter a revision. After entering a revision a new draft copy must be ordered according to the regular order process. This is true whether the revision is one letter, the whole text, or even just the price. This procedure is repeated until a final draft is approved. According to the Lulu website, shipping of the final project (upon order) occurs approximately another six to eight weeks after the final draft is approved, online, by the author. Thus, a book with one revision and one week for shipping, without including any time for the review, may take up to 14 weeks time or more as per the website guidelines.
The retail price for the published item is determined based on printing costs, the
author's margin set by the author, and the fee charged by the distributor for distributed items. Printing costs for books are correlated to the page count, paper size, binding type, and color or black-and-white print. The author's margin is partitioned into 80% for the author and 20% for Lulu. It follows that Lulu claims nocommission if the work is offeredroyalty -free. cite news | last = Lovell | first = Jeremy | date =December 26 ,2006 | title = A Lulu of an idea | work =Toronto Star ] cite journal | last = Haugland | first = Ann | year = 2006 | title = Opening the Gates: Print On-Demand Publishing as Cultural Production | journal = Publishing Research Quarterly | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 3–16 | doi = 10.1007/s12109-006-0019-z ] It is unclear if Lulu makes money from the printing and distribution portions. As a specific example, a 8 1/2 by 11 conventional black and white 432 page paperback book with $4 author margin shows up on Amazon for $35.95. For distributed items a change in price caused by adjustment of the author's margin is considered as a revision, so after such a change the author must purchase another copy of the book and approve it, as for content revisions.While Lulu doesn't charge for uploading material, a number of other fee-related services are offered, including
ISBN -assignment, cover design, general marketing, and making publications available through Amazon and other online retailers. Lulu also maintains an online store, "Lulu Marketplace," which offers publications for sale on their website at no up-front charge to the author, collects payments, and tracks royalties.Lulu offers three different levels of distribution services: "Lulu Marketplace," "Published By You," and "Published By Lulu (formerly known as "Global Distribution")." Depending on the level of distribution, Lulu may or may not require
exclusive rights . [ cite web | url = http://www.lulu.com/help/index.php?fSymbol=distro_service&fLangCode=EN | title = What Distribution Services does Lulu offer? | work = Lulu | accessdate = 2008-04-20 ]Licensing
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