Startup Showcase: Byliner: Writing Short and Selling Big
By
Lynn Rosen
Pieces run from 5,000-30,000 words and are readable in a single sitting. They are "the reading equivalent of sneaking out for an afternoon at the movies." Retailers call it everything from a "Short" (Kobo) to a "Snap" (Barnes & Noble). Byliner calls it an e-short, and Tayman calls it successful: "One quarter of every title sold in this space is from Byliner."
0 Comments
View Comments
E
Lynn Rosen
Author's page
Related Content
Comments
%0D%0A%20%20Secondly%3A%20"I%20could%20see%20and%20recognize%20significant%20changes%20afoot%20as%20the%20industry%20moved%20from%20analog%20to%20digital."<%2Fspan>%0D%0A%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookbusinessmag.com%2Farticle%2Fstartup-showcase-byliner-writing-short-selling-big%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="1387" type="icon_link"> Email Email
0 Comments Comments