_Co.LABS_ (http://www.fastcolabs.com/) 
Editor: _Chris  Dannen_ (http://www.fastcolabs.com/user/chris-dannen) 
News Hacker: _Gabe  Stein_ (http://www.fastcolabs.com/user/gabe-stein) 
August 30,  2013
 
 
 
 
E-Books Could Be The  Future Of Social Media
In the future, e-books will act just like social networks. We’ll use them 
on  our phones, share and comment right inside e-reader apps, and publishers 
will  use our data to help them make better marketing decisions. If you 
think digital  reading is exploding now, just wait.
 
 
By: _Michael Grothaus_ (http://www.fastcolabs.com/user/michael-grothaus)  
 
 



 
“I’ll give up my printed books when you pry the last one from my cold, 
dead  hands.” 
That’s what I tell people when they ask me what kind of e-reader I have. As 
a  technology journalist, author, and novelist, they expect me to own the 
latest _Kindle_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=Kindle&tag=fastcomp08-20)
  or be an iBooks aficionado, and 
most seem  genuinely shocked when I tell them I like my books on paper. 
The reasons I give for preferring paper books are probably no different 
than  what others have said: It’s the smell, the feel, and the way books become 
 decorative items on your shelf when you are done absorbing all the 
wonderful  words they contain. 
But as a technology journalist, I also know that one day I will be dragged  
into the digital book future whether I like it or not--or be left behind 
with no  new stories to read. That’s why I decided to sit down with Henrik 
Berggren, CEO  of a small but growing app called Readmill that seems to have 
its pulse on the  future of reading. 
Talking with him, I discovered that compared to what Readmill is planning,  
today’s e-books might as well be dusty scrolls of parchment. In the future, 
 e-books are going to explode beyond just containing stories, becoming 
niche  social networks where we discuss our favorite passages with other 
readers 
and  even authors and publishers buy our data to make more informed 
decisions. So  hold on tight, book lovers. Reading as we know it will soon 
change, 
forever. 
Each Book Will Be Its Own  Social Network
I start my conversation with Berggren, a man who is staking his future on  
creating the great reading app, by telling him I’m not a fan of any of  today
’s e-readers, like Kindle or iBooks on iOS devices, or any type of  
e-reading software in general. You’d think this would make him nervous, even  
hostile. 
Instead, he smiles and agrees with me. 
“The reason why I and my  cofounder David Kjelkerud started Readmill  back 
in 2011 is because we thought that a lot of the people who were building  
these reading platforms were doing it in the wrong way,” he explains. “When 
we  started, there were basically iBooks and Kindle that were leading the 
game. Both  of them were building their own vertical. But their vertically 
integrated  systems were lacking a lot of things.” 
Both Apple and Amazon were designing e-book readers by copying the  
2,500-year-old idea of books as self-contained collections of words, completely 
 
missing how readers share and discuss content online today. While most 
e-readers  allow you to share passages or links to the book you are reading, 
and 
sites like  Goodreads let you share what you’ve read, their implementations 
treat the book  and the discussions around them as separate collections. 
Worse, these apps force  users to venture into the distracting world of the 
open 
Internet when they want  to share, making it hard to stay focused on 
reading. 
This didn’t sit well with Berggren, so he came up with an ingenious 
solution:  Make each and every book its own self-contained social network.
 
“We thought that there was a huge potential in taking what Goodreads had 
done  on social on the web for books, but doing that for a mobile integrated 
reading  experience,” says Berggren. “So instead of having to read your book 
and then  think, ‘Okay, now I have to go to Goodreads, find it there, add 
it to my  profile, and write my review,’ we just wanted to let you share and 
review from  inside of the book.” 
The result is stunning. Berggren and his team designed the Readmill app so  
that words--and only words--are the focus point of every page. But if you 
find a  passage you like or a sentence that irks you, you can highlight it on 
the page  and then comment on it right from within the book. Other Readmill 
users reading  the same book will then see these comments and can choose 
add their own  thoughts. This starts a discussion--indeed, a bona fide social 
network--within  the book, without ever having to leave it. The social 
network-in-a-book format  also allows authors to take part in discussions with 
their readers, right inside  the margins of their own book--something Berggren 
has found both readers and  authors love. And of course, if a reader doesn’
t want to see other people’s  comments, they can just disable them and stick 
to the words at hand. 
“The problem with companies like Apple and Amazon is that they are  
retailers,” says Berggren. “They are not a reading service, and there is a big  
difference. It’s the difference between the kind of focus you have and what 
kind  of experience you want to bring to your users. We have detached 
ourselves from  the selling of the book to be able to focus on the social 
experience 
one hundred  percent.”
 
 
E-book  Analytics Will Inform Marketing, Formatting, And Even Writing
Because Berggren decided to focus on helping people read books instead of 
buy  them, Readmill doesn’t operate its own e-book store. Instead, it makes 
it easy  for users to import their e-books from other sources, including ePub 
files,  PDFs, and DRM’d Adobe books (Amazon Kindle and Apple iBook files 
aren’t  compatible because they lock their digital books to specific 
platforms). The app  itself is free, so the company makes money by selling 
anonymized 
data it  collects about its users' consumption habits to publishers. 
“Authors and publishers get access to a dashboard where they can see the  
engagement matrix of a specific book and see how many people that start 
reading  the book actually finish it, how long it takes, if they recommended it 
to  friends, and how much they shared throughout that experience,” explains  
Berggren. 
According to Berggren, modern publishers miss a lot of marketing  
opportunities for their authors because they don’t know where or when to target 
 
their marketing efforts. For example, most U.K. publishers tell him that they  
only hold book readings and signings in London, because they get delayed 
sales  statistics in each country and don’t know where else to go until it’s 
too late.  London’s always the safe bet. 
“That is just for me a huge flaw in how we track and analyze how and where  
people actually spend time reading books and where those readers are and 
how  engaged they are,” Berggren argues. “What if it turns out that this 
author has a  highly engaged group of readers in Edinburgh or Liverpool or some 
other place  throughout the U.K., not to mention the U.S. obviously, which 
is a very, very  big country? So there are lots of those kind of things where 
data can really  have input in how to bring authors closer to their readers.
” 
Berggren makes a good point, but as a journalist, I know that focusing so  
intently on analytics often influences what articles publishers cover, or 
even  how they cover them. That begs the question: If a publisher can see a 
lot of  readers are pausing at a certain chapter in a book, or even rushing 
through it,  couldn’t they use this data to dictate the author’s writing 
style or pace in his  next book? In which case, wouldn’t the reader’s past 
habits dictate the creation  of the author’s next work? 
“I think it will to some extent,” Berggren says, not beating around the 
bush,  “and I think in some cases that is really good. Some good-use cases 
would be in  nonfiction where it could reveal areas in a book that can be 
explained better,  or that people don't really understand, or they lose 
interest 
because it gets  too complex, too fast.” 
Nonfiction is one thing, but as a lover of stories, this makes me uneasy.  
After all, would a masterpiece like The Master and Margarita have been  
written if analytics data were telling the publisher parts of it were a little  
slow? 
“Obviously fiction is a different story,” Berggren adds, perhaps sensing 
my  apprehension. “You can paint a very dystopian future where publishers 
say, ‘Oh,  people are just skipping this chapter. You can't write like this 
anymore.’  However, I think that’s unlikely to happen. But I do think learning 
about how  people consume books and what they like and don't like is a key 
to making  publishing a better industry.” 
We Will Read On Our Phones
To understand other applications of the data he collects from Readmill, I 
ask  Berggren about the surprising results of an experiment he presented to 
the _Media  Evolution_ (http://mediaevolution.se/theconference/#!/)  
conference in Malmö, Sweden earlier this month. By collecting data  from 
various 
versions of the Readmill app and other sources, Berggren found that  the most 
popular type of e-reader is not a dedicated device like the Kindle, or  a 
tablet like the _iPad_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=iPad&tag=fastcomp08-20)
 . It’s the smartphone. 
Berggren says he never believed that single-purpose devices like the 
original  Kindle would become widespread, a prediction that seems to be playing 
out. But  he did believe that multi-purpose tablets like the iPad would become 
most  people’s primary e-reading devices, not phones. According to Readmill’
s data,  however, phones are not only the most popular e-reading device, 
they’re the best  at keeping readers engaged, too. 
“It is not only that they are spending more time reading the books because  
the screen is smaller. Even taking into account screen size, smartphone 
users  read more often, they finish more books in general, they start more 
books, they  share more quotes, and they write more comments,” says Berggren. “
This paints a  very clear picture that the people that are most engaged with 
their books are  the people who read on their phones.” 
As a paper book lover, all I can think is, “Come on, phones? Phones?  Like 
a Kindle or an iPad weren’t bad enough.” So I ask what would account for  
the increased reading on smartphones. Is it just because they are easy to 
pull  out of our pocket when we are on a train or waiting for a meeting to 
begin?  Berggren says he still has more data to sift through, but for the 
moment, that’s  his guess. 
“We have so many distractions throughout a day nowadays with everything 
that  is going on,” he says, “so I think a good way of keeping in the loop 
with the  story that you are reading or keeping interested in the nonfiction 
book that you  are reading is having it with you all the time and grabbing all 
of those  micro-moments that we have to continue reading that story. I 
think that keeps  you highly engaged and will definitely make it easier for you 
to finish the book  because you have more time to read it and more 
opportunities to sit down and  read it.” 
I’m not entirely sure Berggren knows how much I’m doubting that phones can 
 possibly be a decent reading experience as the interview wraps, but before 
it  ends, he hits one more nail into the coffin of print books. 
“At the end of the day, I really think that convenience is the winner,” he 
 says. “I really think that the best e-reader is the e-reader that you have 
with  you all the time--and that e-reader is the phone for a lot of people 
in the  world.” 
This is the same idea that runs throughout the Readmill app. In today’s 
busy  world, reading, reflecting on, and sharing the written word need to be as 
 convenient as possible if we’re going to read at all. The smartphone can 
be  incredibly distracting, but if you design the right reading experience 
for it,  you can embrace reading virtually anywhere and at any moment. 
On my way home on the packed train that evening, the ride is long and there’
s  a delay on the tracks. After 10 minutes, I’ve already read the evening’
s free  newspaper from cover to cover, and there’s still no sign of movement 
from the  train. So I take out my _iPhone_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=iPhone&tag=fastcomp08-20)
  and 
open up a copy of The Master and  Margarita. And as I’m whisked off to the 
incredible world of a  long-forgotten Russia, suddenly being stuck on the 
tracks isn’t that bad. Maybe  the future of reading isn’t so scary after all.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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