Flat World Founder Eric Frank Interview

August 24, 2010
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Following yesterday’s news that use of Flat World’s openly-licensed college textbooks will double for the Fall 2010 academic year, today EbookNewser caught up with Flat World CEO/Founder Eric Frank.  Frank weighs in on changes in the textbook industry and changes in how students will use textbooks in the future.  Flat World’s model may be somewhat ahead of the rights and royalties curve, but their approach is laying the groundwork for a new textbook paradigm.  An excerpt is below:

EBN: What’s going on in the text book publishing industry?

Frank: The industry is in turmoil. We’re in the midst of a national textbook affordability crisis…author royalties began dwindling, as they get paid a percentage of new books sold. So, in a rational effort to preserve revenue in the face of falling unit sales, publishers began to raise prices faster – books are over $1,000/yr. for students and many have surpassed $200 each. Publishers also bundled books with things like CDs to try and generate a unique ISBN at the bookstore and confuse the student looking online for an alternative. And publishers started bringing out new editions faster to flush the market of low-cost substitutes for at least one semester.

EBN: How does your business model work?

Frank: Our model starts by sticking with what works from the traditional industry – publishing expert-authored, high-quality, peer-reviewed textbooks that faculty want to use in their courses. Then, we flip the old model on its head. We license our books under a Creative Commons open license, in effect transferring control (legally) to adopting faculty to modify the textbook to better suit their own teaching goals.

EBN: What is an open textbook?

Frank: As the Internet became an increasingly important tool for the creation, distribution, and consumption of content, legal scholars believed that it was time to reform copyright law and create a middle ground between “all rights reserved” and “no rights reserved.” One can think of this middle ground as “some rights reserved.” The copyright holder publishes the book under a “some rights reserved” license. The family of Creative Commons licenses is the most commonly selected option for this purpose.  Generally, the rights are transferred to the user using the “4 R’s”: the right to reuse; the right to redistribute; the right to revise; and the right to remix.

EBN: Are students adopting eReaders at school?

Frank: It’s too early to say how popular eReaders will be with students for reading their textbooks. Our belief is that their popularity will continue to grow over time, though less slowly than some pundits seem to predict. In five years, we still think there will be more sales of print books than any other format, with steady migration to digital formats. We think that a smart publisher today needs to be platform agnostic. The way that consumers read will only get more fragmented, not less.

EBN: How will textbooks grow over the next few years?

Frank: We’ll see a broader use of technology innovations like built-in self-assessment tools that provide performance data to help students learn better, help professors become more effective instructors, and help authors develop better texts. One of the more exciting parts of our business is building a social learning platform so that students can collaborate and share information with other students cross-campus and around the world. One of the coolest things about publishing open textbooks that people can modify and improve is that we are unlocking human potential for innovation. We think some of the greatest innovations in textbooks will come from our users (not from publishers) because we’ve given them that opportunity.

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