+ 1-888-787-5890  
   + 1-302-351-4405  
 
 
 
 

Essay/Term paper: Penguin books ltd

Essay, term paper, research paper:  Business

Free essays available online are good but they will not follow the guidelines of your particular writing assignment. If you need a custom term paper on Business: Penguin Books LTD, you can hire a professional writer here to write you a high quality authentic essay. While free essays can be traced by Turnitin (plagiarism detection program), our custom written essays will pass any plagiarism test. Our writing service will save you time and grade.


Swen Neumann Introduction to Modern Business
L.Thomas and R.Cawley 15/11/96

PENGUIN BOOKS LIMITED



The aim of this essay is to comment on how, over the last six years Penguin Books Limited has grown and managed external and internal changes.

Sixty one years ago, Allen Lane, the managing director of the Bodley Head, a British publishing company, revolutionised reading with the introduction of the first ten Penguin paperbacks. Today, over 600 million paperbacks are sold yearly. At a time when there was still little of entertainment, paperback books brought reading to the masses. Nowadays, paperback books bring reading to the world.
During the last six years (1990-1996) Penguin Books Limited was faced with many "environmentalist pressures," with a continuous change inside the company, and competitors trying to imitate its successful innovations on both sides of the Atlantic.
The major achievement in 1990 was the introduction of a new computer system into several parts of the Company. The Credit Control department was the first area and Stock Management, Invoicing Systems, Warehousing, Distribution and Sales Services followed. Now the whole of the Company"s systems are incorporated and networked.
During this period a new lists including the Twentieth Century Classics Series complementing the Penguin Classics, Arkana, the New Age list and Fantail, the mass-market children"s list were introduced.
Internal change that took place during that year was the closing down of the Penguin Bookshops (that expanded to include 12 shops during the last decade), leaving just one, the specialist Beatrix Potter "House of the Tailer of Gloucester", within the Group. This change took place due to the fact that the Company was conscious that it had to concentrate on the publishing rather than on the retail.
This decision brought a successful completion of a management buy-out of the shops. This action also compensated the loss that the Company faced in august 1991, when Pearson (an international enterprise quoted on the London Stock Exchange with major media interests including many well-known names apart from Penguin, such as Longman, Pitman, Addison Wesley, the Financial Times, Westminster Press, Mindscape, Thames TV and Madame Tussauds) announced pre-tax profits of Pounds 40.7m for the first half of 1991- a drop of 58 per cent on the same period of 1990. In this period books fell from a trading profit of Pounds 2.1m to a loss of Pounds 13.4m with Penguin losing Pounds 8m.
In the following two years no major changes have been recorded. Although, 1993 was generally a successful year for all Penguin group companies. Penguin UK had produced a strong programme including some major best sellers and agreed to a joint venture with the BBC for mass market paperbacks and film deals with two major Hollywood studios.
During 1993, Penguin accelerated its media involvement by publishing world-wide "The Viking Opera Guide" as a book and CD Rom.
In 1994, the publishing industry realised that certain amount of people do choose books on the basis of who publishes them rather than who writes them. The promotion became one of the marketing tricks used by the publishing industry (that other industries have already used for decades). First came promotions for individual authors and titles, in 1994 publishers took one step further by promoting the whole brand.
This move showed the change of publishers fighting for market share. "During the recession they increased margins by cutting costs, now they are desperate to build turnover," said P. Mountain, deputy editor of The Bookseller magazine.
In the next months it was seen how different publishers were competing in their own different ways. Penguin and Wordsworth Editions declared a price war selling paperback classics for Pounds 1 each. These "up-market" or "down-market" were the ways of selling literature.
In September 1994 Pearson brought a new change by announcing that publishing should be grouped by theme. As the result, entertainment- Ladybird Books, the children"s publisher was added to Penguin and became a subsidiary of the Penguin Group. As an outcome, Penguin"s world-wide business showed revenues of about Pounds 370m.

A major change took place in September 1995, when the official price-fixing of books collapsed after nearly a century.
Penguin Books announced its withdrawal from the net book agreement (NBA), which has restricted price competition since 1900. This took place due to the "environmentalist pressures." As Max N. Adam, a managing director of Penguin Books Limited , said: "We had to face reality. If books are going to compete against compact discs and videos, we"ve got to have a level playing field and be able to discount like they do."
Penguin also was celebrating its 60th anniversary in 1995 with a major trade advertising campaign. This campaign included a publication of 60 Penguin Sixties, small format paperbacks, at 60p each.
In the present year (1996), Penguin Company is still benefiting from repeat contracts for Penguin mini-paperbacks.
In January 1996 another major political change took place, not in favour for Penguin Company. A legislation was produced which revives copyright protection to an important group of writers. This legislation meant that publishers have to pay several million pounds to the estates of writers, who died between 1925 and 1945. The change in UK legislation (introduced as part of copyright laws across the European Union) was brought in in order to cover the works which were previously out of copyright.
Taking the European Union single market that is taking place into consideration, one should remember that "Nothing is "overseas" anymore," a statement by Kenichi Ohmae that clearly defines he



borderless condition of current business approach. This brings up the international dimension of Penguin - a dimension which is continually growing in importance. Overseas Penguin has four major companies - Penguin USA, Penguin Canada, Penguin Australia and Penguin New Zealand. Each of these companies does its own publishing but is monitored by each other"s publication programmes.
There are also several smaller marketing companies which carry stock and consignment on behalf of the Group. These companies include Penguin South Africa, Penguin Italia, Penguin Netherlands, Penguin Germany, etc. They do not currently have their own publishing programmes but import from the group companies. Due to the socio-cultural differences Penguin India, for example, operate differently as there are import restrictions in operation and the solution is for Penguin India to do a large amount of its own publishing. There are also resident representatives in Hong Kong and Singapore.
On the whole, one may conclude that Penguin has grown, with the help of acquisitions, for example, from a loss- making business with revenues of Pounds 37m to one which in 1995 had world-wide revenues of Pounds 360m and profits of Pounds 34m, and remains one of the world"s largest book publishing groups.
The result of Lane being involved in a move towards democratisation has shown that today, hundreds of thousands of books are available to millions of readers at a low price, and the market seems to be growing daily, selling into more countries than any other publisher, and providing a good example of how a company is dealing with change and success by continuing the traditions of Sir Allen Lane.


Rawsthorn, Alice. "Books cartel collapses." The Financial Times, 27 Sep. 1995, p.18.
Stoner, James. "Management"(sixth edition). Prentice Hall 1995.

















BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. Snoddy, Raymond. "Pearson profits." The Financial Times, 13 Aug. 1991, p.15.
2. Snoddy, Raymond. "Pearson rises..." The Financial Times, 03 Sep. 1994, p.9.
3. Snoddy, Raymond. "Pearson shares fall." The Financial Times, 21 Sep. 1994, p.26.
4. Snoddy, Raymond. "Pearson buys stake in book distributor." The Financial Times, 27 Apr. 1995,
p. 26.
5. Marsh, Peter. "Publishers face copyright disputes."The Financial Times, 03 Jan. 1996, p. 5.
6. Fishwick, Francis. "Profits left on the shelf." The Financial Times, 18 Jun. 1996, p. 14.
7. Snoddy, Raymond. "Mayer stands down at Penguin." The Financial Times, 21 Jun. 1996, p. 9.
8. Rawstorn, Alice. "Hollywood head to lead Penguin." The Financial Times, 06 Aug. 1996, p. 16.
9. Schreuders, Peter. "The book of paperbacks." London: Virgin, 1981.
10. "Fame - financial analysis made easy"(update 88.a-October 1996); CD Rom.


 

Other sample model essays:

People or Profits? In Almeda County, a private hospital turned away a woman in labor because the hospital's computer showed that she didn't have insurance. Hours later, her baby was born dead in ...
Poverty is a lack of goods and services necessary to maintain a minimal adequate standard of living. The definition of the term adequate varies, however, with the gener...
Business / Printing
The printing business is rather hard to get into because of the high prices of the equipment and the need to have a large floor room for all the machinery. Also there is usually stiff competition...
Met North Energy Corporation 4 Year Net Profit Projections The current budget figures for the four year period 1996 - 1999 show a steady decrease in profits eventually resulting in a...
"Code of Professional Ethics by American Institute of Certified Public Accountants." Code of Professional Ethics by American Institute of Certified Public A...
Radio and Television Advertising We are constantly surrounded by advertising. From bus stop benches to televsion commericals. Everywhere we lookd something is being advcertised. Two of the ...
RAINFOREST CAFE, INC. OUTLINE TO RAINFOREST CAFE RESEARCH REPORT CORPORATE BACKGROUND History Formation Rainforest Cafe, Inc. was incorporated in Minnesota on February 3, 1994 to own an...
Over the past decade, there has been rapid long-term economic growth for East Asian countries. These newly industrialising countries are experiencing growth rates in GDP per head at around 6% to ...
PROBLEM STATEMENT : In order for McDonald"s to reach its goal of "par excellence", it must use the full meaning and definition of marketing. Marketing is giving the target market what they want, ...
11. Evaluate the pros and cons of rent control and rent stabilization in NYC. Rent control is the government imposition of price ceilings on rent for apartments in certain areas of a city. The g...
Experience with Dream Essay - Reliable and great customer service. Quality of work - High quality of work.
, ,
Dream Essay - Very reliable and great customer service. Encourage other to try their service. Writer 91463 - Provided a well written Annotated Bibliography with great deal of detail per th
, ,
it is always perfect
, ,
The experience with Dream Essay is stress free. Service is excellent and forms various forms of communication all help with customer service. Dream Essay is customer oriented. Writer 17663
, ,
Only competent & proven writers
Original writing — no plagiarism
Our papers are never resold or reused, period
Satisfaction guarantee — free unlimited revisions
Client-friendly money back guarantee
Total confidentiality & privacy
Guaranteed deadlines
Live Chat & 24/7 customer support
All academic and professional subjects
All difficulty levels
12pt Times New Roman font, double spaced, 1 inch margins
The fastest turnaround in the industry
Fully documented research — free bibliography guaranteed
Fax (additional info): 866-332-0244
Fax (additional info): 866-308-7123
Live Chat Support
Need order related assistance?—Click here to submit a inquiry
© Dreamessays.com. All Rights Reserved.
Dreamessays.com is the property of MEDIATECH LTD