Christian Retailing

Industry Forum July 2009: Let’s keep telling the old, old story Print Email
Written by By Vic Kennett, president and CEO, Kerusso   
Thursday, 18 June 2009 03:55 PM America/New_York

In tough times, we need to remember why we are in the Christian products industry

I grew up with almost no knowledge of God. I was raised by wonderful, loving parents, both shaped by their parents and the Great Depression.

My mom and dad were both hard working, friendly, honest, giving of themselves and their time. They did everything they knew to raise my brothers, sister and me to be “good” kids.

But there was no emphasis in our home on God or His Word. I was raised in a certain branch of the Christian faith (which shall remain nameless) where we attended church almost every Sunday. It was all steeped in ritual, and nothing that I saw or heard there ever really grabbed my heart or my mind.

So somehow, by the age of 10, I decided that I was an atheist. I remember thinking that God and the supposed miracles I had heard about could not be true; after all, science had “proven” that.

When the Gideons handed out copies of their little New Testaments to students at our school in the fifth grade, I took one—all the while with my one atheist friend glaring at me as if I were giving up the good fight.

Throughout my early teens, I would sometimes lay awake at night gripped with sadness about what death would be like. I would think about my parents’ inevitable fate and my own, and lie there in fear. You see, an atheist has no hope beyond this life.

But I never really thought about turning to the Bible for answers to my questions. The New Testament I had accepted (from the Gideons)—because everyone else was taking one and I did not want to stand out from the crowd—still lay unread somewhere in my room.

Then, one day in my 15th year, I was at a yard sale with Mom. I had never been much of a reader growing up, so it was out of character for me to be drawn to books of any kind—let alone a book with a title like The Late Great Planet Earth. But somehow it was different with this little paperback that had taken the world by storm.

I bought the book for a whole 25 cents and began to read. Author Hal Lindsey told of the many prophecies in the Old Testament that all had their fulfillment in the person of Jesus of Nazareth.

The evidence set forth in those pages brought me intelligently to the point of taking a step of faith. The statistical impossibility of all of those biblical prophecies being fulfilled in one person made a believer out of me.

I thought: “So if ‘prophecy’ is real, then a creator God who knows the end from the beginning is possible. Who else could make such predictions except an all-knowing God?”

As I finished that book, I let the author and the Holy Spirit lead me in saving prayer—confessing Jesus as my Lord and Savior and believing that God, the Creator of the universe who I had once denied, loved me and the world so much that He sent Jesus to die for us and didn’t leave Him in the grave, but raised Him from the dead.

I had been born again.

After that, I started reading the Bible—the same small New Testament I had tucked away when I was in the fifth grade. Later, I took the step of buying my first full-sized Bible from a local Christian bookstore.

Why do I tell you all this? To encourage you, because you are a part of the story—maybe not mine directly, but certainly one of the thousands like it that can be told in communities across the country. These stories are still being written because of people like you.

Undoubtedly the book I read, by Lindsey and Carole C. Carlson, which I found in a yard sale in 1978, was first purchased from a Christian retail store. Had there been no Christian bookstore, there would have been no book lying there at the yard sale calling out to me and … well, I think you see the progression here.

God’s amazing grace and His wonderful Word—first illuminated to me through that cast-off book—have changed me forever.

So I thank Him for all the Christian retailers and all the others who serve the Christian product industry—not just for the impact on my life, but for the countless others who have also been reached as a result.

I consider it a privilege, too, to have been able to play a part in writing some other people’s stories since becoming a Christian.

I may never write a book like The Late Great Planet Earth, but many people have read the Christian messages we’ve printed on more than 10 million shirts created at Kerusso.

Earlier this year, we published our 2009 Christian Apparel Faith & Motivational Research Report, which revealed that 98% of respondents said they wanted the message on their Christian T-shirts to be noticed by unbelievers—and 56.8% actually had an unbeliever ask them about the message on their garment.

Even more dramatically, we discovered in the study that 7.4% of unbelievers who engaged in a conversation with someone wearing a Christian T-shirt that had sparked an exchange between the two had made a decision to accept Jesus Christ as their Savior immediately.

Recently, I heard from a store owner in Colorado who told of two women shoppers looking at the Kerusso apparel items on display in the shop. The owner continued to build a relationship with the pair as they regularly visited the store, and after a few weeks, one of the two made a decision to accept Christ.

I was thrilled to hear that. I am sure that I am not alone in believing that, in these difficult economic times, it’s important that we remind ourselves why we got into the Christian products industry in the first place.

So, please, take some time and think back to all the stories and testimonies you’ve heard like mine. Use them to encourage yourself in the Lord, or share a story in which you have had a part with someone else who needs a boost. Remind yourself and your colleagues that you and they are truly making a difference for eternity.

What we are doing has an impact in the lives of many today and in the next life. All of us who are involved in the Christian products world are part of the fulfillment of Romans 10:13-15 (NIV): “For, everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent? As it is written, ‘How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news!’ ”

Let’s renew our commitment to this work, because—standing together—we are making an eternal difference.

All of us who are involved in the Christian products world are part of the fulfillment of Romans 10:13-15.

 

 
‘Real Help for Your Business’ Print Email
Written by Christine D. Johnson   
Thursday, 18 June 2009 01:42 PM America/New_York

Events at Denver show aim to help retailers thrive in tough times

With the theme “Real Help for Your Business,” CBA’s 60th annual summer convention will be held in Denver, July 12-15, shortened by one day this year. The 2009 slim-and-trim International Christian Retail Show (ICRS), at the Colorado Convention Center, will keep attendees extra busy as they look for bargains, take in training and enjoy networking with their fellow retailers in the Christian products business.

“The show will provide real help for dealing with real issues in these real hard times,” said CBA President Bill Anderson. “We want to help retailers understand and deal with the realities of our current economic climate, but recognize that they are not going it alone. The road may be rough, but it is not a dead-end street.”

Seventy-five exhibitors have engaged with CBA to help get more retailers to the show. Expressing their partnership with retailers and CBA in a new way, “these exhibitors are engaging in a collaborative campaign to bring real help for retailers’ businesses through show-exclusive specials that can help retailers save more than $11,000 through their regular course of doing business at the show,” Anderson said.

There are 259 vendors exhibiting this year. “Most every supplier who was at ICRS 2008 will be exhibiting in Denver at ICRS 2009,” Anderson reported. “Unfortunately some companies have gone out of business this past year, but we also have 38 new companies exhibiting.”

Although attendance is expected to be down because of the economic climate, Anderson noted that what’s more important is “how valuable the show is to retailers who do attend and the companies who do choose to exhibit there.”

The new Town Center will be the hub of all activity on the show floor—the place to find show information, tools to help retailers save money, new products, cross-merchandising idea centers, the free Cyber Cafe, a lounge and food service.

The Town Center is the place to be to celebrate CBA’s 60th anniversary, Monday, 1:30-2 p.m. Attendees are invited to enjoy a piece of cake at the event, sponsored by several suppliers who want to recognize the advancement and dedication seen in the industry in the last 60 years.

CBA is providing the usual services as well—the Ship Home Room, open during floor hours to send home promotional items and catalogs; complimentary convention center/hotel shuttles for transportation to and from the convention center and designated show hotels; and luggage check in the convention center for show attendees.

Among the new aspects to the 2009 show are category-related tours. “Product Intelligence Tours are designed to help retailers grow specific categories in their store, in partnership with sponsoring exhibitors,” said Bill Anderson, president of CBA. “Each tour will explore the latest consumer research and trends as it relates to a particular category of product, and how to increase traffic and sales in this category with the most recent products and merchandising tools available.”

The new “Debut Avenue” will be helpful to retailers planning to look for new sources of supply. It’s “a brand new way of connecting retailers with new suppliers—in a completely new environment,” Anderson said.

Attendees can also look forward to a new Sunday afternoon session on consumer intelligence, Indie Time, for independent stores, and the Heart of the Author luncheon with Karen Kingsbury.

 

SATURDAY, JULY 11

A significant pre-show event, the two-hour Christy Awards reception will start at 7 p.m. at the Denver Marriott City Center. Scaled back this year, the 10th annual event will be presented at a dessert reception rather than the usual banquet affair. Best-selling author Richard Foster will keynote the event, presenting an address titled “The Spiritual Formation of the Writer.”

The Christy Awards honors excellence in Christian fiction, and is open to the public. Reservations are available for $30 by contacting Donna Kehoe at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or online at www.christyawards.com.

 

SUNDAY, JULY 12

The first day of the show, the registration desk will be open 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Retail buyers will receive vouchers at registration, and the first 2,000 who redeem them will receive Buyer’s Bags filled with goodies and coupons.

The Sunday morning service, Worship Now: An Opening Worship Celebration, running 10-11:30 a.m., sees Anne Graham Lotz (Zondervan) back this year by popular demand. Artist and songwriter Matt Maher (Essential Records/Provident-Integrity Distribution) will lead attendees in worship to start the week, and Warren Wiersbe (David C. Cook), author and Bible expositor, will also address the audience. Worship leader and minister Norman Hutchins (IR Music Group/Central South Distribution) will contribute to the musical offerings as well.

The offering at Worship Now will provide scholarships for members of ChristianTrade Association International (CTAI) to attend training events and conventions in various parts of the world. For those who have pre-registered, the CTAI International Vision Celebration with author and global evangelist Reinhard Bonnke will focus entirely on international attendees. Scheduled for noon-3 p.m, this is an opportunity to meet attendees from around the world and learn more about what God is doing in other nations.

At 3 p.m., the 90-minute General Session: Consumer Intelligence with Ed Stetzer (B&H Publishing Group) begins. This new Sunday afternoon General Session will provide information on industry trends, research and best practices. Kelly Gallagher of R.R. Bowker will present the latest in consumer research relevant to the Christian retail market. Stacy Mitchell, author of Big-Box Swindle: The True Cost of Mega-Retailers and the Fight for America’s Independent Businesses (Beacon Press), will address the state of America’s independent businesses and the advantage Christian retailers have in overcoming even the fiercest price cuts from competitors.

Bookstore Manager users will convene for their annual meeting, 4-5:30 p.m. in the convention center’s room 405 with Randy Voorhees demonstrating the latest features of RMS software and discussing pertinent store issues.

Also at 4-5:30 p.m., the Denver Marriott City Center plays host to the Standard Publishing Sneak Peek Product Party and Grand Prize Giveaway, which showcases new products for the company’s re-launch into the children’s trade market. Retailers can also get a peek into VBS 2010, meet Standard authors and check out new adult resources.

Pacesetter returns to Sunday evening, 6-7:30 p.m., with author Josh McDowell (Regal Books) and author and former NFL coach Joe Gibbs (Tyndale House Publishers) offering a timely message on living with hope for the future. GRAMMY-nominated worship band SonicFlood (Resonate Records/Word Distribution) will perform songs from the group’s newest album, A Heart Like Yours.

Pacesetter will also include the presentation of the CBA Spirit of Excellence Awards, a celebration of the industry’s best and most innovative practices.

“This is not only an exciting time of celebration, but a marvelous opportunity to learn ‘what works’—so retailers can take home practical ideas already proven successful in other Christian stores,” Anderson said.

Retailers eager to hear the ways Christian music has impacted others will want to attend the two-hour 8 p.m. event The Power of Music: Music for All Ages, offered by CBA in conjunction with the Gospel Music Association. Musically, the concert will feature something for everyone, and will include the opportunity to see up-and-coming artists as well as longtime favorites. The event will be hosted by comedian Jeff Allen (Guardian Studios/EMI CMG Distribution). Musical artists performing will include pureNRG (Fervent Records/Word Distribution), GoFish (GFK Records/Word Distribution) and Phil Stacey (Reunion Records/Provident-Integrity).

 

MONDAY, JULY 13

Registration runs from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a soft close until 6:30 p.m.

The 30-minute Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony starts early, at 8 a.m., in the atrium lobby, celebrating the industry’s 60th year with musical entertainment as well as a brief address to kick off the opening of the exhibit floor. Floor hours Monday will be 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.

WinePress will hold its WinePress Publishing Gala from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in the Town Center presentation area. Attendees are invited to meet select WinePress Publishing authors, enjoy music by recording artist Joshua Williams, receive free resources and discover the answer to “How can I become a published author?”

Product Intelligence Tours will take place from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. The tours are available for $10 for members and non-members, which allow for participation in one or all of the tours. Participants must sign up for each tour individually as space will be limited.

All are invited to the Industry Prayer Gathering, to be held at the Town Center. Participants from each segment of the Christian products industry will lead attendees in prayer.

The exhibit floor has a soft close at this year’s convention, from 6 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

Along with other training sessions at the show, the two-hour Publishers’ Institute: Essential Skills for Entrepreneurs, sponsored by the Christian Small Publishers Association, starts at 6:30 p.m. at the Hyatt Regency Denver—Granite AB. The seminar is designed for publishers and anyone interested in becoming a publisher. Publishing professionals will offer tips for success in publishing and marketing. Registration fee is $20.

Those interested in some entertainment can join B&H Publishing Group for the movie premiere of The Samaritan, which will run 7:30-9:30 p.m. in the Denver Pavilions—Regal Theater (16th Street Mall).

The film is slated for release during the Easter 2010 season and is a true story of human rights, international intrigue and sacrificial love.

 

TUESDAY, JULY 14

New attendees coming to the show Tuesday can register from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The exhibit floor opens at 8:30 a.m. and closes at 6 p.m., with a soft close until 6:30 p.m.

Bookstore Manager hosts Computerizing Your Store, 9:45-10:45 a.m. The session will address point-of-sale, inventory control, merchant services, product databases, Web sites, kiosks and burn-on-demand as options for stores.

Best-selling novelist Karen Kingsbury hosts, courtesy of Zondervan, the new Heart of the Author Luncheon, which runs 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. CBA members pay $15, nonmembers $20. Attendees will have the opportunity to meet several authors, with the aim of the luncheon to help retailers understand the heart of the authors whose books they sell.

The new Product Intelligence Tours run 1-4 p.m.

Indie Time, 1:30-2:30 p.m., is another new addition to the schedule, designed for independent retailers and addressing how prosperity in business is found through partnership among fellow independent businesses. Indie Time will offer hands-on, tactical methods from successful projects. Jeff Milchen, co-founder of the American Independent Business Alliance, will share simple ways to persuade customers to “shop local.” Retailers will learn how to create a culture of support for independent businesses in their communities.

 

WEDNESDAY, JULY 15

On the last day of the show, participants can register from 7:30 a.m. to noon.

The exhibit floor opens at 8:30 a.m. and closes at 4 p.m.

The 7-8:15 a.m. CBA Members Breakfast & Town Meeting, hosted by Chris Fabry, fills in CBA members ($10, no non-member admission) on what’s new from the retail association. CBA plans to convey to retailers how they can operate more efficiently and thrive in the difficult economic times through industry partnership and more. The breakfast event also addresses tough topics and offers real retail solutions.

 

MORE DETAILS

For the final information from CBA on this year’s International Christian Retail Show, go to www.christianretailshow.com.

 

Meet with ‘Christian Retailing’

Take a few moments to visit with the editors of Christian Retailing at the show. Bring your ideas for articles, comment on something we’ve written, share some news with us—or just stop by to get acquainted—during the 2-3 p.m. hour.

At the Christian Retailing booth (#1814), you will find:

MONDAY: Andy Butcher, editor

TUESDAY: Eric Tiansay, news editor

WEDNESDAY: DeWayne Hamby, assistant/book editor

For our on-the-floor comments on the show, follow Christian Retailing on Twitter. Go to http://twitter.com/ChristianRetail. And to receive daily show news, sign up for our free e-newsletter, Christian Retailing Update, at www.christianretailing.com.

 

CITY GUIDE

Downtime in Denver: ICRS host city has plenty of interest

If a shortened schedule for this year’s International Christian Retail Show (ICRS) gives attendees more free time in the host city, there will be no shortage of things to do.

Named the “most photo-friendly city” in America by Popular Photography magazine, Denver is home to a wide array of attractions, from culture and history to entertainment, recreation and shopping.

That may partly explain how MSNBC came to name the Mile High City as one of its “7 Great Tax Refund Vacation” spots, earlier this year. Other 2009 accolades include making the list of Fast Company magazine’s “Fast Cities” for “exemplary initiatives ... improving neighborhoods, transforming lives, and helping build better, faster cities for the future.”

There’s plenty to see and do without venturing far from ICRS accommodation near the Denver Convention Center—which, incidentally, is home to a new solar power system. Covering 30,000 square feet atop the center, the 300-kilowatt system is “both a practical example and a symbol of the city’s commitment to renewable energy,” according to Mayor John Hickenlooper.

Those ready to explore on foot will be pleased to learn that Denver’s downtown was graded the fourth most walkable downtown in the country, by the Brookings Institution. The city’s famed 16th Street Mall, lined by 200 trees, stretches a mile from Broadway to Wynkoop and is serviced by a fleet of free extra-low emission hybrid-electric shuttles, for anyone whose feet get tired.

In addition to stores, there are 39 street cart vendors and 28 sidewalk cafes, while 28 horse-drawn carriage companies operate on the Mall and downtown.

Visitors to the Colorado State Capitol that pause on the 13th step on the building’s west side will find themselves at 5,280 feet above sea level—one mile high.

The city has spent more than $8 billion in the last decade on attractions, including building three sports stadiums, a downtown amusement park, a world-class aquarium, three art museums and an opera house.

Away from downtown, Denver also boasts the largest city park system in the country, 90 golf courses and more than 850 miles of paved trails.

Visitors lifting their eyes will see further draws on the horizon. More than 100 miles of snowcapped peaks of the Front Range can be seen from Denver.

Best mountain viewpoints are the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, with an outdoor deck that identifies visible peaks; The rotunda of the Colorado State Capitol, with bronze plaques naming visible peaks; and Cranmer Park, at Cherry and East 3rd Ave., which also has a plaza that names some of the visible peaks. State law prohibits building any structure that would block the view of the mountains from the state Capitol.

With 300 days a year of sunshine, Denver boasts an average maximum August temperature of 85.9 degrees Fahrenheit and minimum of 57.4 degrees. The sun feels warmer because it is that much closer, and visitors are advised to drink plenty of water to keep hydrated.

All that is available for tourists to do might account for the fact that Denver was also recently named the nation’s third “Fittest City” by Forbes magazine.

However, ICRS attendees staying the weekend after the convention who want to sit and take things easy might check out Colorado’s Mile High Music Festival, to be hosted at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, July 18 and 19. Headliners include Christian band The Fray on the Sunday (July 19).

Other performers will include Ben Harper and Relentless7, Buddy Guy, Ani DiFranco and India Arie.

 

Source: Denver Metro Convention and Visitors Bureau. For more information, call 800-2-DENVER (336837), or visit Denver’s official Web site at VISITDENVER.com.

LOCAL MEDIA:

Newspaper:

www.denverpost.com

Television:

www.9news.com

www.thedenverchannel.com

www.kdvr.com

 
Shades of green Print Email
Written by By Cameron Conant   
Thursday, 18 June 2009 01:32 PM America/New_York

How Christian publishers are embracing environmental concerns in their operations

Dwight Baker, president of the Grand Rapids, Mich.-based Christian publisher that bears his family name, is happy to talk about things like “post-consumer waste” and “ground wood stock.” He’s wanted to for years, and has. It’s just that, until more recently, people haven’t always wanted to listen.

But Baker, who says conservation interests have always been part of his “DNA” —his Baker Publishing Group (BPG) now publishes all of its nonfiction books on 30% post-consumer waste paper—is thrilled to be getting support from an unlikely source: Wal-Mart.

For years, Baker was a mostly solitary voice in the evangelical wilderness, calling on other Christian publishers to not only publish books on environmental issues, as his company has done for many years, but to also think about their own environmental choices—like the paper used to produce their books and the source of that paper.

But it took the buyers at Wal-Mart and their recent insistence that publishers use paper made from trees harvested in “sustainable forests”—younger-growth forests where trees are responsibly harvested and replaced—to really get publishers’ attention, Baker said.

“Wal-Mart is now saying: ‘This matters, we’re not joking, you have to work your way all the way back to the forest and make sure you have sustainable materials.’ Wal-Mart did in a few meetings what I couldn’t do with all the time in the universe,” Baker said.

While sustainable forestry and recycled paper are two different things, they “get at the same problem,” which is responsible stewardship of resources, Baker said.

 

ECO-FRIENDLY PAPER

The paper business—and by extension, book publishing—would seem to be a frustrating place for an environmentally conscious person like Baker. First of all, there are all of those trees cut down for books alone: 30 million per year just to make the books sold in the U.S. Some of those trees are harvested from old-growth forests—an example of “unsustainable forestry,” irreplaceable havens of ecological diversity that trap carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that most believe contributes to global warming.

Add to that the fact that even in these eco-conscious times, with marketers clamoring to make environmentally friendly claims about everything from cars to cleaning products, that many publishers don’t even print books on recycled paper and publishers might be Captain Planet’s arch-nemesis. Recycled paper requires 30-40% less energy and conserves 2,000-3,200 pounds of carbon dioxide for each ton of virgin fiber it replaces.

But publishers—including Christian ones—have started to adopt more eco-friendly practices in recent times, some out of a sense of moral obligation, others due to more basic impulses such as cost savings or consumer demand. For most, it’s a mixture of reasons, including prodding from retailers like Wal-Mart.

That means eco-friendly publishing is not just a topic for lifelong conservationists like Baker, but is rather one being discussed by broader audiences such as the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA).

In November 2008 its three-day “Pub U” event in Chicago included several sessions that touched on environmental issues, including one by Jeff Mendelsohn, president of New Leaf Paper in San Francisco.

Mendelsohn has been at the vanguard of the eco-friendly paper movement, selling recycled paper and promoting sustainable forestry practices since graduating from Cornell in the early ‘90s and starting New York Recycled Paper, which eventually was renamed New Leaf Paper.

“Starting a green company was a great way to make a difference in the world; engaging the world through socially responsible business,” Mendelsohn said. “And I chose paper because it’s one of the most polluting industries in the world, and one of the slowest to change.”

When he started his business in 1991, Mendelsohn said the paper industry “was cutting down endangered forests all over North America” and “using an incredibly low percentage of recycled content.”

At the time, most paper companies were also using environmentally hazardous bleaching chemicals made from chlorine compounds—the third practice in Mendelsohn’s unholy trinity of bad eco-behavior.

Today, Mendelsohn said New Leaf Paper makes eight types of post-consumer recycled-paper stock, uses less chlorine than almost any other company in the paper industry and backs its eco-friendly claims with certification from the Forest Stewardship Council, an international organization that certifies and supports sustainable forestry practices.

While New Leaf Paper has carved a niche for itself in the paper market—and Baker laments that recycled paper is still a niche, which is why it usually costs 4% to 6% more to purchase than non-recycled paper due to economies of scale—the company got a big break in 2003.

That was when Raincoast Books, a Canadian publisher with rights to the “Harry Potter” series in Canada, published Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix on EcoBook 100—a 100% post-consumer recycled-paper stock, completely chlorine free, that New Leaf introduced in 2001.

EcoBook 100 was the first book-caliber grade paper made from 100% post-consumer waste, and the fact that it was being used to publish a “Harry Potter” book—and has been used in all subsequent “Harry Potter” books in Canada—was nothing short of a coup for New Leaf Paper.

EcoBook 100 paper generated more than 150 stories in the media, all of which helped raise awareness of the New Leaf brand in particular and of recycled paper in general.

Since that moment in 2003, New Leaf’s business has almost doubled, from $17 million five years ago to now more than $30 million in revenues.

 

RECYCLED CONTENT

While some publishing companies have opted to use recycled paper for years, one large advocacy group believes the recycled content being used is still too low.

According to Green Press Initiative (GPI)—a group with strong support from BPG and New Leaf Paper, both of whom helped GPI develop a treatise on environmentally responsible book publishing—the book industry’s collective average use of recycled fiber is 5%. That is a far cry from the 30% average that GPI’s treatise calls for by 2012, with a majority of that recycled content gathered from post-consumer waste.

The treatise also calls for a reduction in the use of chlorine dyes while encouraging the protection of endangered forests, supporting the use of non-wood fibers for paper production, reducing production impacts and a host of other goals and best practices.

But for GPI things are moving in the right direction. According to the group, more than 160 publishers representing 40% of the U.S. book market either have “strong environmental policies” or have agreed to the long-term goals set forth in GPI’s treatise.

Eleven religious publishers are among those who have signed the treatise and committed to a paper policy, GPI Executive Director Erin Johnson said.

Yet, there’s more than a little room for improvement. Johnson, citing 2006 numbers, noted that the U.S. book market uses about 1.6 million tons of paper per year, less than 15% of which is recycled paper.

Bethany Press International (BPI)—an independent printing firm spun off from Bethany House Publishers in 1997—prints about 25% of the books that show up on the ECPA best-seller list in any given month, and works with every major Christian publisher except Zondervan, according to Pete Larson, the company’s chief operating officer.

For Baker, Larson’s company— eco-conscious in its selection of materials—has made “angels” out of many Christian publishers by using 30% post-consumer waste recycled stock for all heavier nonfiction books, paper that Larson said he has been able to get a very good price on in order to keep costs down.

Larson also said that even his lower-grade paper is made of “ground wood,” which utilizes “40 to 45% less tree” than other wood pulp papers and “is lighter-weight, so it reduces shipping costs as well.” Larson said Bethany Press goes through 8 to 9 million pounds per year of ground wood and 4 million pounds of recycled paper.

Aside from using recycled materials, another way Christian publishers have reduced waste—and often saved money—has been to cut down on paper usage.

At Thomas Nelson, trade books are using 11% less paper than in past years due to lighter paper stock.

Other industry changes have been technological. In 2008, Barbour Publishing subscribed to www.netgalley.com, allowing the company to distribute advance copies of its books electronically, which eliminates mailing, printing and paper costs. The move will save the company, even after service fees, about 40% next year.

ECPA has also confirmed that it is in discussions with www.netgalley.com to provide discounted subscriptions to all members of the publishers’ association.

Other publishers—among them, Thomas Nelson and Tyndale House—are cutting costs by going digital with their sales catalogs, posting them online with the help of Edelweiss, a new service from Above the Treeline. Moody Publishers recently switched to only electronic delivery for its publicity releases to media.

Nick Ciske, a BPI “idea capitalist,” has been keeping his eye on two other intriguing developments in book publishing that could reduce the industry’s environmental impact.

The first involves shorter, more inexpensive book runs thanks to digital printing—or “print-on-demand” technology—which works similar to a computer laser-printer, with toner applied directly to the page, rather than using a more expensive traditional press the size of a school bus that uses metal plates to apply ink to the page.

While digital printing isn’t a particularly new development in the industry, its costs are steadily coming down, allowing publishers to print smaller quantities of books for less—thus eliminating unnecessary energy as well as waste from unsold books that are usually remaindered or destroyed.

“Every year we’re seeing higher and higher digital print runs becoming cost-effective,” Ciske said. “So it’s slowly creeping up. There will be a day when you can digitally print 5,000 books cheaper than you can (with a traditional plate).”

Ciske has been in the process of digitizing author content, which BPI can then turn into a book via print-on-demand technology or by way of a laser-etching process that creates a printing plate without the environmentally harmful chemicals of old—a process that’s now the norm for many presses, including Bethany.

“Those chemicals used to be used every day. … We’ve reduced the environmental impact,” Ciske said. But it’s another use for digitized content that piques Ciske’s interest: e-books.

 

E-BOOK HOPES

E-books would seem to be one of the more promising ways for the publishing industry to reduce its paper usage and unwitting promotion of deforestation, creating a robust segment of the industry free from wood pulp.

But is the e-book an idea whose time has come? It depends on who you talk to in the industry, but there are reasons to be optimistic.

In 2008, Oprah called the Amazon Kindle—the $359 e-book reader that allows customers to wirelessly read and download books and other publications—her “favorite new gadget.”

“I know it’s expensive in these times, but it’s not frivolous because it will pay for itself,” she said. “The books are much cheaper and you’re saving paper.”

Most e-books on Amazon.com sell for $9.99, and the Kindle was on back-order during the 2008 Christmas season.

“People are hoping this is the time it’s going to catch on and work,” Ciske said. “And Oprah hopping on Kindle certainly hasn’t hurt.”

Ciske added that previous attempts to popularize e-books failed for a number of reasons, not the least of which was that there was “never an iTunes for books.” But now that Amazon has the content and the device to make e-books work—the Kindle is now in its third generation with the advent of the Kindle DX and is receiving rave reviews—it could finally, after a decade, be the next big thing.

“If I was a (traditional) retailer, I’d definitely be searching for how I’m going to be relevant in a 24-7 content future,” Ciske said. “If retailers don’t evolve, someone’s going to innovate around them.”

Ciske said he and his colleagues had to face similarly daunting realities at Bethany Press International.

“Are we a book printer? We decided that no, we help create and distribute content,” Ciske said.

But ECPA’s information and education director, Michael Covington, while optimistic about the prospects of e-books, pointed out that it’s a small segment of publishing and that even some tech-savvy teenagers are unfamiliar with the Kindle.

“We had a panel of teenagers at Pub U … and none of them knew what a Kindle was,” Covington said. “I think digital content is going to have to be very device-neutral. I don’t think the publishing industry is willing to have a coronation for any one device.”

 

PAPER POLICY

Baker, the conservationist and BPG president, is skeptical about e-books in the near-term—“we’re serving a conservative constituency, not politically, but slow-to-budge”—and stressed that the growing popularity of e-books isn’t a reason for publishers to avoid taking a hard look at their paper usage and environmental policies.

He noted that “99.94% of books sold last month were not e-books,” adding, “E-books won’t save us. You still need to have a responsible paper policy.”

For Baker, that means not only printing all of his company’s nonfiction books on 30% post-consumer waste recycled paper, but also using recycled paper in the office.

Covington said many Christian publishers at Pub U were talking about other steps to lessen their environmental impact, but always with a mind to lowering costs.

“When going green creates the need for additional investment, that’s the big rub,” Covington said.

“Many publishers are doing things like setting copy machines to automatically print on both sides of the paper, cutting back on energy consumption by turning off half the lights, and offering employees flex-days, where they can work from home,” he added.

Yet bigger initiatives were also discussed at Pub U, which might indicate that Christian publishers, while wary of spending money in these economically challenging times, are interested on lessoning their environmental impact in this day of thinking green.

“One of the comments that came out was that publishers need to have a multi-year plan in terms of what their goals are to be a better environmental steward,” Covington said. “They approached it as much from a theological sense as they did a business sense.”

 
The Essential Guide to Christian Retailing: Sell me a story Print Email
Written by By Natalie Nichols Gillespie   
Thursday, 18 June 2009 01:06 PM America/New_York

Despite time and technology, books remain Christian stores’ bread and butter

 

If you own a store in a retail segment that has seen major takeovers, downturns and closings in the last five years, now topped off by a country-wide, full-fledged recession, how do you keep your doors open and turn a profit?

Christian retailers who are surviving and even thriving in 2009 say it’s by prayer, by leveraging new technology and by finding innovative techniques to get back to the old basics: selling books that meet customers’ needs.

Stores interviewed by Christian Retailing on average generate 40% or more of their annual sales from books—not including Bibles—and have not significantly changed the amount of floor space devoted to books in the last five years.

Book sales come from new titles and backlist, from fiction and nonfiction, from children’s books and reference books, from brand-new authors and the tried-and-true. Topics and trends can drive significant sales—from the emergent church to money management—and retailers who want to keep making it are constantly finding ways to reach customers with the right prices and products.

“I would say our floor space has remained about the same for books,” said Jeff Andrews, book manager for Wellspring Christian Resources in Urbandale, Ill. “And when you look at our overall sales, nearly every day books are still on top.”

 

FROM FRONT TO BACKLIST

Rick Warren’s Zondervan blockbuster The Purpose-Driven Life became the best-selling hardcover book of all time in both the Christian and general markets. Gary Chapman’s The Five Love Languages (Northfield Publishing/Moody Publishers) has been around for nearly two decades and has appeared on the New York Times Paperback Advice best-sellers list more than 90 times. Spinoffs of the original book—The Five Love Languages: Singles Edition, The Five Languages of Apology and more—have multiplied the series’ impact.

Titles such as Warren’s and Chapman’s are examples of books whose sales have expanded into the many channels available today—from airport bookstores to Amazon and from Barnes & Noble to digital downloads on Kindle.

Now, with brand-new titles being sold in these diverse channels, backlist has become a bigger focus for Christian retail. Stores and suppliers say they are giving more marketing and promotional emphasis to their backlist titles, blogging about them, pairing an author’s new and older titles on displays, and watching news and cultural trends closely in order to promote books on popular topics.

“If I don’t have a deep backlist, if I just have what’s new and current, you can get that at Wal-Mart,” said Sue Smith, manager of Baker Book House in Grand Rapids, Mich. “In fiction, especially, I need to have everything that is in print by their favorite authors. In Grand Rapids, there are Christian bookstores everywhere. There are other Christian stores a half-mile from me in both directions. I can’t afford to be out of what the customer wants.”

Retailers must understand their store’s customers in order to know just what to stock.

“We can’t afford to carry all of the depth that we used to, but we try to make sure that we are constantly carving out our niche that fits our customers,” said John Pope, owner of Cornerstone Bookstore in Boone, N.C. “We are always reviewing our categories. We have a new section on emerging issues. We have also set up a section for college students on dating and the like. We have a Christian history section, and we carry charismatic books.”

Successful stores know their locale and anticipate what books their customers will need, and they also keep on top of trends—both in publishing and in society. Savvy retailers promote books that match topically with “hot buttons” in the church, current news topics and upcoming blockbuster movies.

Many retailers bring popular authors’ backlist titles to the forefront to populate displays when a new title is released. Some stores pair nonfiction and fiction equivalents; for example, if a novel’s protagonist suffers from depression, a nonfiction book on the subject might be sold with it.

“We are absolutely doing backlist better,” said Sally Holefca, assistant manager for Baker Book House in Grand Rapids, Mich. “We are definitely looking at the long tail”—fewer products selling in large quantities—“and firmly believe in having more than just frontlist best-sellers. People do come in looking for titles that are 2 or 3 years old. We also have a separate area with out-of-print books.”

 

COMPETITIVE PRICING

The constant retail challenge, booksellers agreed across the board, is pricing. Customers, especially in today’s economy, go where they can get what they want at the best price. That means finding a way to match or beat Wal-Mart, Amazon and Christian Book Distributors, all known for selling books at lower price points than traditional brick-and-mortar booksellers.

In the last year, Holefca said Baker Book House has put its money where its mouth is, offering a deal to local churches to beat Amazon’s prices on books purchased from their store. The effort is becoming a big success.

Publishers have begun to lower the prices of hardcover titles from around $25 to the $22-23 range, but retailers would like to see that come down even further.

“Twenty dollars seems to be the breaking point for customers,” Pope said. “So if a book comes in at $23, I have to decide if I can take a hit on it to sell it under the $20 mark.”

On the other hand, trade paper prices have increased in the last couple of years, with many books now priced at $14.99.

“Price points are edging up on trade paper books from $13.99 to $14.99 as kind of a standard price,” said Steve Oates, vice president of marketing for Bethany House Publishers. “They have been at $13.99 for five to seven years, so a 7% increase over that span of time is actually quite low when you think of it in terms of inflation. Book prices in the CBA (market) are not rising as quickly as inflation.”

Oates agreed that $20 is the breaking point for customers.

“We are seeing more market resistance to hardcover books, I think more from the retailers than from the consumers,” Oates said. “When we are doing hardcovers, we are marking most of them under $20 to make them seem more affordable right now. People are being very careful with their spending, and we need to be sensitive to the consumers and their situation.”

Christian retailers also have the opportunity of selling digital books through the Symtio program, with the average transaction ringing up at $14. Buyers of Symtio product cards can purchase a book to read in a variety of formats, on a personal computer, PDA or iPod, for example.

 

FICTION THEN AND NOW

Today’s Christian fiction is coming of age, covering topics that once would have been taboo, among them homosexuality, extramarital affairs, illegitimate children, divorce, remarriage and bipolar disorder.

By examining these real-life struggles through the lens of a Christian worldview, authors are giving hope a voice in the fiction market.

Christian fiction readers are dedicated fans. According to a 2008 survey by R.R. Bowker of 6,400 U.S. book buyers, the general adult population reads on average of 4.4 hours per week, book buyers (in general) read 5.2 hours per week, regular fiction buyers read 6.3 hours per week, but Christian fiction buyers read eight hours per week. The study also found that Christian fiction buyers are significantly more influenced by personal recommendation and the placement of books than by other book buyers and are significantly less influenced by advertising.

“Christian fiction has changed so much just in the last three or four years,” said Sherry White, senior buyer at American Wholesale Book Company, supplier for Books-A-Million stores. “There are so many good, fresh new voices out there.”

And while there are a lot of new authors, it can be tough for publishers to expend the resources to “groom” an author who doesn’t sell a lot of books right away.

“As we observe the best-seller lists for CBA, we don’t notice much change in the authors who appear on the list. We see many of the same authors each month,” said Cheryl Kerwin, senior marketing manager for Tyndale House Publishers, which plans to release around 50 fiction titles this year.

“It is becoming more challenging to break out new authors,” she added. “We’ve seen some recent success with some of our new authors that write in what might be considered a more literary style of novel. We’re excited to see the demand for writing from these authors as they grow into ‘fan favorites.’ ”

In terms of genre, Kerwin said suspense and thriller novels are on the rise in the Christian and mainstream markets, “primarily because there are quite a few good writers coming into the ranks, such as Susan May Warren (‘P. J. Sugar’ series) and DiAnn Mills (‘Call of Duty’ series).”

Avid fiction buyers love to connect, so if a frontliner knows and loves fiction, it will go a long way toward turning a one-time shopper into a returning customer. Avid fiction readers also look for two things: the newest title from their favorite author and the stories everyone else is reading. Consider the success of the New York Times best-seller The Shack by William P. Young (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA) and the novel based on the recent Christian movie Fireproof by Eric Wilson (Thomas Nelson). Fiction readers continuously consume what has been termed the “next big thing.”

For Christian retailers, that means an opportunity to capitalize on what’s hot, but also to expand sales to a backlist deeper than many departments can sustain. Once fiction fans decide they like an author, they will want to read everything that author has written. And while they can find the latest Ted Dekker or Karen Kingsbury novel at Wal-Mart, they won’t find what Dekker wrote five years ago or what Kingsbury had out in 2001. That’s where CBA stores continue to find their fiction niche.

 

BUILDING TRAFFIC

Although books remain the bread and butter for Christian retailers, overall traffic is still a challenge.

The trick in today’s retail climate is not only to get customers in the door, but also to keep them coming back. That means keeping a good variety of fresh voices on the shelves while maintaining inventory at a manageable and affordable level. When customers can order books with the click of a mouse and have them delivered to their front doors the next day or download them digitally onto Kindles and iPods, there has to be a compelling reason for the consumer to keep visiting their local Christian retail store.

“The reading habits haven’t changed much—it’s really where they are shopping,” said Sue Brower, acquisitions editor for Zondervan. “There is a larger selection of outlets to purchase books.”

What helps retailers win customers is the constant availability of the newest titles from big-name authors and word-of-mouth, as well as a good depth of backlist titles from which they can choose.

“It’s always exciting to find retailers who want to partner with us on new promotions and share the risk as we find ways to grow author brands and increase awareness about the amazing stories being published right now,” said Jennifer Deshler, senior marketing director for Thomas Nelson.

“I love it when a Christian retailer takes note of their customers’ individual tastes in reading and makes recommendations accordingly,” said author Mindy Starns Clark, whose latest suspense novel, Shadows of Lancaster County (Harvest House Publishers), released in January. “Nothing communicates ‘we value your patronage’ better than a bookseller who remembers previous transactions and/or feedback and offers relevant buying suggestions on subsequent visits.”

One way Smith at Baker Book House keeps her staff engaged is to hold brief, daily training sessions. They take only a few minutes each morning, but the effort keeps the 32 employees of the 16,000-square-foot store knowledgeable about current inventory and departments.

“Every morning we pray together; then we train on product knowledge,” Smith said. “We take different sections of the store and take like 10 minutes to go through them.

“Each person is responsible for a department and reads a book out of that department to review the best-sellers for us. By reviewing the book for us, that person trains the rest of the staff on that title. Our staff can take any of the books home for free as long as they bring them back with the spine intact. The training keeps us sharper. Today, you can’t just sit around.”

Efforts like these pay off in the minds of customers and authors alike.

“I think Christian retailers know their product,” said best-selling author Kristin Billerbeck (“The Trophy Wives Club,” Avon Inspire). “In my local store, they are such a safe environment for hurting people. They pray for needs and can hand-select a book to comfort or be of help to the customer. I also think it’s great how they keep an author’s backlist.”

 

RETURNING CUSTOMERS

Stores that succeed change their displays often, dedicate endcaps to new product and keep customers notified through e-mail updates and special promotions. Beyond having a Web site, they are creating a presence on social network sites like MySpace and Facebook, and blogging and joining Twitter. And they are creating databases of customers and regularly e-mailing coupons to be redeemed in-store.

Books-A-Million has book clubs that attract customers to an interactive reading experience, and many Christian retailers still bring in authors for book signings. A coffee bar or comfortable seating with free Wi-Fi also creates an engaging atmosphere.

Social networks, blogs, podcasts and video sites like YouTube are helping authors connect directly with fans.

Angela Hunt, Karen Kingsbury, Robin Jones Gunn and many other fiction authors maintain up-to-date Web sites with dates of their appearances, latest projects and fan perks like contests and giveaways. Many also send regular e-newsletters.

Gunn held a virtual tea party with her Facebook friends, and Hunt invited her Facebook friends to join her in watching the Hallmark TV movie Taking a Chance on Love, a sequel based on her popular characters from The Note, her 2001 novel that was made into a 2007 Hallmark original movie.

Kingsbury for years has contacted retailers personally, held contests, created her own brochures for retailers and given away cruises, opportunities to name a character in one of her novels and more. She has endeared herself to readers by answering letters and making frequent appearances.

Most recently, she began posting videos on YouTube, showing her family on game nights and promoting her favorite causes and books.

It’s Kingsbury’s kind of dedication, coupled with a warm retail environment, that keeps customers loyal.

“With the economy the way it is, we can reach people in a crisis,” Pope said.

 

TOP 10 BOOKS FOR 2008

The chart below shows the value of a backlist book. It especially pays for stores to stock books such as 1992’s The Five Love Languages that seem to have nine lives, but others, even those just a few years old, can continue to pay dividends in terms of sales and customer satisfaction.

1. The Shack, William P. Young (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA, 2008), $14.99

2. The Love Dare, Stephen and Alex Kendrick (B&H Books/B&H Publishing Group, 2008), $14.99

3. 90 Minutes in Heaven, Don Piper with Cecil Murphey (Revell/Baker Publishing Group, 2004), $13.99

4. The Five Love Languages, Gary Chapman (Northfield Publishing/Moody Publishers, 1992), $14.99

5. Love & Respect, Emerson Eggerichs (Thomas Nelson, 2004), $22.99

6. Someday, Karen Kingsbury (Tyndale House Publishers, 2008), $13.99

7. 3:16, Max Lucado (Thomas Nelson, 2007), $24.99

8. Captivating, John and Stasi Eldredge (Thomas Nelson, 2007), $14.99

9. The Purpose-Driven Life, Rick Warren (Zondervan, 2007), $14.99

10. Jesus Calling, Sarah Young (Thomas Nelson, 2004), $13.99

The 2008 best-seller list is compiled from sales of Christian books in hundreds of Christian retail outlets nationwide, collected using Pubtrack Christian (www.ptchristian.com). All rights reserved. Copyright 2009 Evangelical Christian Publishers Association.

 
CBA at 60 Print Email
Written by Christine D. Johnson   
Wednesday, 17 June 2009 10:50 AM America/New_York

Looking back at the highlights of the trade association’s summer conventions

 

This year CBA is marking 60 years of serving the Christian products industry. In this retrospective, Christian Retailing looks back at some of the highlights of CBA summer conventions past.

CBA is celebrating its milestone “by calling attention to the 60 years of progress our member retailers and suppliers have made,” Bill Anderson told Christian Retailing, noting that in that time, “we’ve seen a tremendous amount of growth in the quality of product, marketing of product, product packaging, music production, DVDs.

“Christian retail has catapulted forward, employing retail disciplines, technology, aggressive marketing, customer relationship management, fresh concepts, using improved locations and increasing the strength of their specialization is Christian retailers. They’ve done all of this without losing their ministry focus.”

 

1950: The Hotel LaSalle in Chicago hosts the inaugural CBA show. Forty-eight exhibitors presented their products to the 279 in attendance.

 

1951-1953: The show remains in the same location for several years, increasing each time in attendee and exhibitor count, from 374 attendees and 66 exhibitors in 1951 to 467 attendees, 59 exhibitors in ‘52 and to 603 attendees, 66 exhibitors in ‘53.

 

1954: Though the convention stays in Chicago, it changes locations to the Morrison Hotel. In attendance were 603 convention-goers, 66 exhibitors.

 

1955: Just over 100 exhibitors and 881 attendees travel to the Shoreham Hotel-Motor Inn in the nation’s capital for the first CBA show outside of the windy city. CBA’s annual report notes the availability of roadside signs to retailers, and bookstores order more than 200 of the 6-by-8-foot signs.

 

1956: It’s back to Chicago, with the Sherman Hotel as the convention site and 1,207 attendees, 108 exhibitors and 270 stores. Attendance is 35% higher than last year. CBA’s new president is R. Gordon Mitchell of the Home Evangel Book Shop, Toronto, and a past vice president of CBA.

 

1957: Aug. 18-22. Chicago is once again the site of the show, with record-breaking attendance: 1,325 total and 290 stores. With the convention’s theme “Knowledge on Fire,” one reporter notes its “remarkably deep tone.” A Michigan retailer says: “I can go back and sell records better than before having seen the consecrated people who make them.” CBA passes its membership goal with 614.

 

1958: CBA’s convention at the Sheraton-Jefferson Hotel in St. Louis sees 1,100 total, 109 exhibitors and 280 stores in attendance. CBA introduces a $2 registration fee. Henrietta Mears of Gospel Light Press is banquet speaker, with tickets at $3 each. International flavor includes two missionaries interested in literature distribution in Hong Kong and Colombia.

 

1959: The 10th CBA convention, held in the Pantlind Hotel, Grand Rapids, Mich., sees 1,586 total attendees and 125 exhibitors. Theme: “He Profits Most Who Serves Best.” Key workshops address bookstore accounting and audiovisual sales. Uncas Manufacturing Co. gives away the first CBA gift jewelry this year.

 

1960: Aug. 7-11, it’s back to the Sherman Hotel in Chicago, with 1,804 attending, 134 exhibitors and 130 first-timers, a record. Theme: “The Written Word Endures.” Robert Kregel of Kregel’s Book Store in Grand Rapids, Mich., is voted in as CBA president. The banquet speaker, courtesy of Word Records, is commentator Paul Harvey.

 

1961: Aug. 6-10 is the date and an Ocean Row site, the Deauville Hotel, is the location for the Miami Beach convention. The theme is “Christian Booksellers for Times Like These.” There are 138 exhibitors, and CBA membership hits 830. Fleming H. Revell launches a daily newspaper, CBA Convention Daily News. Banquet address is by Sen. Frank Carlson of Kansas. Plans for a half-million dollar Bible promotion are laid out by the Ecusta Paper Division of the Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. Tie-in ideas for booksellers are demonstrated at a special display. The promotion aims to reach more than 80 million readers in November and December with the message that the Bible is “The greatest gift of all.”

 

1962: It’s July and once again, the convention is back at Chicago’s Sherman Hotel, not Miami. There are 1,811 delegates, 387 stores and 153 exhibitors present, and the theme is “Eye Hath Not Seen.” Attendance tops the 1960 record at the same location. For the first time, a dealer choir is organized and sings at the banquet and other activities. A resolution is passed, adopting “Big Brother,” a correspondence prayer fellowship program with overseas or missionary bookstores. Living Letters by Ken Taylor is introduced. Concordia is giving away a book, How to Fight Communism Today.

 

1963: After eight years’ absence, the convention returns to the Shoreham Hotel-Motor Inn, Washington, D.C., Aug. 11-15. Total attendance is 1,649 with 144 exhibitors, and the theme is “Christian Booksellers—Workers Together With Him.” Speakers are Don Brandeis (Baker Book House) and Harold Lindsell (Harper and Row, Publishers), with devotions by J. Sidlow Baxter (Zondervan Publishing House). The youth program divides children into groups for ages 6-11 and 12-18 with a full schedule of activities, including sightseeing. Speakers include Carl Erskine, former Brooklyn Dodger pitcher (Fleming H. Revell). Workshops include how to sell handcraft (cost of materials: $1) and a session on gold-stamping.

 

1964: Attendance is 1,170 with 156 exhibitors. Banquet speaker is Richard Halverson, an associate of Bob Pierce of World Vision. Publishers representing European and Far Eastern countries exhibit at the first International Exhibition of Publishers and Booksellers—Centro Biblico from Italy, Committee of Literature for the Evangelical Churches or CLIE from Spain and The Epworth Press from England.

 

1965: The theme is “Freedom—A Gift From God” for the Aug. 1-5 convention at the Sheraton Hotel, Philadelphia. Attendance is 1,941 with 146 exhibitors. This year’s site is chosen in part because of proximity to New York’s World’s Fair. John Bass, appointed new executive secretary, succeeds William F. Moore, who is to become general manager of Family Bookstores of America. Walter Knott of Knott’s Berry Farms is a luncheon speaker, Zondervan having published his most recent book.

 

1966: July 31-Aug. 4 sees 1,812 total attendees at the convention at the Sherman Hotel in Chicago. The theme is “United to Serve.” For those placing orders at the show, C.W. Boyer Co. has a giveaway—a novelty “Tranquilizer Pill Bottle”—and Zondervan is celebrating its 35th birthday with a party. Ethel Barrett is the first woman CBA banquet speaker.

 

1967: The El Cortez Hotel in San Diego sees 1,565 CBA convention-goers with 133 exhibitor personnel, July 30-Aug.3, marking the first CBA convention on the West Coast. A higher ratio of first-timers and more internationals than ever before are present. Eighty-five delegates fly to Hawaii afterward for a reconvened session incorporating discussions with Hawaiian booksellers. Bill Zondervan is named Salesman of the Year.

 

1968: Chase-Park Plaza Hotel, St. Louis. There are 1,600 attendees with 132 exhibitor personnel. Charlie “Tremendous” Jones, insurance salesman and sales counselor offers lots of personality, his “combination of buffoonery, practical sales suggestions and basic spiritual truths set the pace for the four-day convention,” writes a Christian Bookseller reporter. Canadian store managers choose to formally organize.

 

1969: Netherland Hotel, Cincinnati, with 1,924 in attendance, 154 exhibitor personnel and more than 400 stores, an all-time high. Charlie Shedd, author of The Stork Is Dead, Letters to Karen and Letters to Philip, wins over some attendees who once thought he was mistaken on his views of sex. Twelve young people participate in the Third Annual Future Christian Booksellers Association Institute, the first held during the convention.

 

1970: The Leamington Hotel in Minneapolis has a 40,000-square-foot convention hall and air conditioning. The theme for the convention Aug. 2-6 is “Successful Seventies.” Most workshops are standing-room-only. “ ‘Gone was the circus-like clatter of past years,’ one publisher remarks. “Yet, selling was done—fantastic sales for some exhibitors. Most convention-goers liked the change, but one confessed he sort of missed the excitement and showmanship of the past,” reports Christian Bookseller Magazine.

 

1971: The theme is “70s—Decade of Decisions.” A record-breaking 2,341 are registered with 159 exhibitors. Held up by a Senate vote, Sen. Mark Hatfield addresses a capacity crowd by telephone, later making a personal appearance at a Word reception and staying through the next day to sign his book Conflict and Conscience. The banquet features music by Dino and Doug Oldham.

 

1972: July 30-Aug. 3 are the dates in Cincinnati with Francis Schaeffer of L’Abri Fellowship speaking at a luncheon. Thursday’s banquet sees George Beverly Shea, recently turned author, speak and Dale Evans sing. CBA’s new president, Dan W. Jantz, is also presented.

 

1973: For the July 16-19 convention in Dallas, Word Inc. in Waco, Texas, has lined up a concert with a 70-piece orchestra, Ralph Carmichael conducting. Hal Lindsey speaks at the banquet and Pete Gillquist at the Teen Banquet with Andrae Crouch and the Disciples performing.

 

1974: July 21-25, Minneapolis. This marks CBA’s silver-anniversary year, with the convention featuring Anita Bryant, Evie Tornquist and 2nd Chapter of Acts. Retailers are encouraged to visit local host companies Augsburg Publishing House, Bethany Fellowship and World Wide Publications.

 

1975: Anaheim, Calif. Johnny Cash performs at the convention, which also includes Catherine Marshall, Joyce Landorf, Lloyd John Ogilvie and Robert Schuller. There is a large number of new, small exhibitors and a proliferation of order desks. Suppliers are often sharing a booth because space is limited.

 

1976: James Dobson speaks at the convention in Atlantic City, N.J. About 5,500 booksellers are present, amid fortune tellers and shooting galleries in this tourist area. Several new hymnals are highlighted as well as higher-quality creative gifts than in years past. With an election nearing, there are more books on politics. The Miracle of Jimmy Carter (Logos) sells more than 600,000 in a month.

 

1977: July 10-14, Kansas City. Attendees number 7,298, about 2,000 higher than the previous year. Representing 36 countries are 118 foreign publishers and booksellers. More than 2,000 are present to hear closing banquet speaker Charles Colson.

 

1978: Denver. Bill Anderson’s first convention as part of the CBA staff, as its first full-time convention manager. New author Charles Swindoll speaks at the show, and Herbert Lockyer Sr. is keynote speaker.

 

1979: July 16-19, St. Louis. Bob Benson emcees the 30th convention banquet. CBA sues the city of St. Louis to protect its contract for convention center use.

 

1980: Closing banquet speaker at the Dallas Convention Center is pollster George Gallup, whose The Search for America’s Faith (Abingdon), written with David Poling, is announced as “the religious publishing event of the year.” The 200th anniversary of the Sunday school movement is celebrated, while Warner Press marks its centennial year.

 

1981: At the Anaheim Convention Center, Calif., New Leaf Press introduces TV host Tammy Bakker’s autobiography, I Gotta Be Me. Vision House premieres excerpts of its new film series, “Walter Martin Speaks Out on the Cults.” The presenter is a convention speaker, along with Tim LaHaye. Visiting authors include Cheryl Prewitt, Miss America 1980, whose autobiography, A Bright-Shining Place, is published by Doubleday. Chuck Swindoll is the banquet speaker, and Herbert Lockyer Sr. the keynote speaker.

 

1982: Author and artist appearances at the Dallas Convention Center include Calvin Miller (“The Singer Trilogy,” InterVarsity Press), Andrae Crouch (Lexicon Music), Charles Swindoll (Strike the Original Match, Multnomah Press) and John MacArthur (The Family, Moody Press). Sandi Patty also makes her first CBA appearance. The convention features the world premiere musical presentation of How Firm a Foundation, celebrating Thomas Nelson’s New King James Version. Joyce Landorf is the keynote speaker.

 

1983: In the Year of the Bible, the convention goes to the capital, where former Nixon aide Charles Colson is the keynote speaker at the Washington Convention Center. David C. Cook introduces three Narnia board games based on the classic C.S. Lewis series. NavPress and The Navigators hold a 50th anniversary reception.

1984: CBA’s 35th convention features Lloyd Ogilvie, R.C. Sproul and Debby Boone. Oxford University Press debuts its Oxford NIV Scofield Study Bible at the Anaheim Convention Center. Scripture Press Publications marks its 50th anniversary. New releases include Tyndale House Publishers’ The Book, a special CBN edition of its The Living Bible.

 

1985: Bill Anderson is named CBA president. Richard Foster and Philip Yancey are featured speakers.

 

1986: Washington, D.C. Charles Colson is the banquet speaker.

 

1987: July 11-16, Anaheim, Calif. For the first time, CBA welcomes some 3,000 consumers to the exhibit floor during a special preview showing called the “Books, Music Gifts Expo for the Christian Family.” Some suppliers report up to 75% increase in sales from the 1986 convention, which also attracts 300 members of the press. Presidential candidate Pat Robertson is the banquet speaker.

 

1988: July 16-21, Dallas. A VCR screen with a continuous presentation of convention highlights is placed near entrances for passers-by to watch. About 250 Dallas-area pastors, music directors, youth leaders and seminary students attend CBA’s Outreach Adventure, which includes a tour of the convention floor. Sandy Patti, Twila Paris and Steve Green perform.

 

1989: July 8-13, Atlanta. CBA unveils LifeDiscovery, a $3.8 million national image campaign and marketing partnership to be launched in October 1990. A record number of more than 10,000 people from 46 countries attend the 40th annual convention. Authors Gordon MacDonald and Frank Peretti speak at the banquet.

 

1990: July 14-19, Denver. Children’s merchandise creates the biggest stir, with virtually every major publisher offering an expanded selection of children’s books. A record number of 11,071 people, with 2,000 stores represented, attend.

 

1991: First time in Orlando, Fla., and attendance is high, at 12,000, but sales are slow and there is theft at the booths. There are approximately 1,300 booths. The “McGee and Me” video series debuts. A special event is held at SeaWorld, and the closing banquet features Chuck Swindoll and Jerry Jenkins.

 

1992: The convention, with the theme “Take Flight,” is moved to Dallas because of the delayed completion of the scheduled San Diego Convention Center. There is a record number of exhibitors, with total attendance (including exhibitors) at 12,050. Attendance and sales are up. Dallas is better than Orlando, some say, because buyers are buying, not sightseeing. Suppliers report sales exceed their expectations.

 

1993: Atlanta. Attendance is 12,663, with 2,634 stores represented and 414 exhibitors. Actor Charlton Heston cuts the ribbon to open the show. Exhibitors report flat sales. The banquet features Oliver North.

 

1994: Denver. The convention’s date is moved up to June 25-30. Attendance is down to around 12,000, representing 2,500 stores. There are 1,465 booths, many reporting increased sales. Convention’s theme is simply “One.” Wendy’s Dave Thomas cuts show floor ribbon. Nearly 70 attend the bookseller school for new and prospective retailers. Dan Quayle speaks.

 

1995: Denver. Nearly 800 international delegates are visiting from 58 countries. Michael W. Smith cuts the exhibit floor ribbon.

 

1996: Anaheim, Calif. Record attendance this year is 13,663 with 2,801 registered stores, 419 exhibiting. Jars of Clay, Point of Grace and The Imperials perform.

 

1997: The July 12-17, Atlanta CBA convention is a strong order-writing show. There are 13599 in attendance with 2,773 registered stores, 438 suppliers exhibiting. International attendance grows 50% from 1994 to 1996. Foreign rights business is booming. Music suppliers are in favor of their location on the newly divided floor.

 

1998: July 11-16, Dallas. All-time high of 13,741 attendees. Number of stores present declines from 2,773 to 2, 679.Just In Time inventory is a hot topic. The show features for the first time a fully segmented floor, which receives mixed reviews. Author signings are at exhibit booths rather than at personality booths on the floor’s perimeter.

 

1999: July 10-15, Orlando, Fla. The 50th anniversary tops last year’s all-time high of 14,694 attendees. CBA’s second International Marketplace nearly doubles, with 29 exhibiting companies representing 12 countries. For the first time, CBA offers a convention chaplain—author John Trent.

 

2000: New Orleans, La. July 8-13. Attendance is down, 12,107 (representing 2,629 stores). Exhibitors numbers 525, with some suppliers choosing not to attend because of location. Pacesetter event features Alan Keyes. Bibleman cuts the opening ribbon. First annual Christy Awards take place, honoring the best in Christian fiction.

 

2001: Atlanta. July 7-12. There are 14,239 in attendance—2,687 stores represented. Christian African-American Booksellers Association has a display at the show for the first time. Crossway launches the English Standard Version translation. Bruce Wilkinson—whose The Prayer of Jabez (Multnomah) is named Charles “Kip” Jordon Christian Book of the Year—speaks at the Sunday morning worship service. Joni Eareckson Tada is inducted into CBA’s Hall of Honor.

 

2002: July 13-18, Anaheim, Calif. For an unprecedented second time, Bruce Wilkinson’s The Prayer of Jabez (Multnomah) is named Christian Book of the Year. During the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association awards banquet, Wilkinson challenges publishers to expand their reach globally. Attendance totals 13,129.

 

2003: Actor Mel Gibson surprises those in attendance at CBA’s Impact Awards ceremony in Orlando, Fla., by making a brief appearance to mobilize support for his The Passion of The Christ. President George W. Bush speaks via video to attendees.

 

2004: June 26-July 1, Atlanta. CBA’s attempt to bring attendees together in prayer for industry issues is met with lackluster response, as fewer than 15 retailers gathers for the Industry Prayer Meeting. New strategies include a new show schedule, and training and exhibit floor changes.

 

2005: Denver, July 10-14. The convention’s new name is the International Christian Retail Show, with the theme this year “Success In Store.” Registered attendance totals nearly 10,000, almost 1,000 down. Professional attendance reaches just over 3,000, and exhibitor personnel is 6,679. Changes at the show, including the Solution Centers with practical merchandising and marketing ideas, are a result of CBA’s reinvention effort. Products tied to the forthcoming movie The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe are a big presence.

 

2006: Denver. July 9-13. Attendance is down 9% across the board, while the show’s ironic theme is “Be Part of Something Bigger.” The show features appointment-only times on the exhibit floor. Les Dietzman, president of Berean Christian Stores, is announced as the next chairman of CBA’s board. Wal-Mart buyers come to the show, but keep a low profile.

 

2007: Atlanta. July 8-12. After six years of declining numbers, more than 9,000—including nearly 3,000 professionals—attend, a similar number to 2006. Church store attendance increases 16%. Exhibitors drop to 6,007, and there are 67 first-timers exhibiting. Workshops focus on CBA’s More From the Core initiative and CBA WebSearch is unveiled, allowing users to search the Web sites of member suppliers.

 

2008: Orlando, Fla. July 13-17. The theme is “It’s a New Day.” However, numbers are notably down at 7,448 total. Professional attendance is down 17%, and exhibitor personnel comes in at 4,787. William P. Young’s The Shack (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA) gets the most attention among new books, and Symtio, an iTunes-style card program, is announced by Zondervan.

 
INDUSTRY INSIGHTS: Our greatest challenge, our greatest opportunity Print Email
Written by Staff   
Tuesday, 09 June 2009 10:43 AM America/New_York

Since college, my personal and vocational passion has been to help people discover the power of great Christian content in their lives. I became a Christian at the end of my freshman year and immediately began reading the Bible my roommate gave to me.

Not long after, I visited our local Christian store and met the new owner, Steve Potratz. During our conversation he recommended that I read The Pursuit of Holiness by Jerry Bridges. Every time I visited

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Fiction: the great escape Print Email
Written by Staff   
Monday, 08 June 2009 01:01 PM America/New_York
Growing category is a bright spot fornewcomers, fueled by ‘hunger for hope’

Defying current sales trends, Christian fiction continues to grow, offering a bright spot for retailers, publishers and readers in a bleak economy.

In the midst of the economic recession, some publishers are targeting growth while others are launching new fiction lines for the first time.

Although some have suggested that even flat sales are good in the current economy, considering a February Association of American Publishers (AAP) report of a 19% drop in religious books for the month, news of growth is even better.

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