fbpx
Wikipedia

Graphic.ly

Graphicly (often stylized as Graphic.ly) was a platform for publishers which offered work flow integration, self-publishing, digital distribution, conversion, and promotion for digital content.[2][3][4] Launched by Kevin Mann and Micah Baldwin, the website was initially a platform for digital comic books, but later added support for children's books, art books, and magazines.[5][6][7] Graphicly accumulated more than 3,500 publishers and more than 10,000 independent creators.[8][9] The website hosted an active social community, allowing creators and fans to interact directly. Graphicly shut down in May 2014, and some of its key staff moved on to fellow digital publisher Blurb.[10]

Graphicly
Type of businessPrivate
Founded2007
Headquarters,
USA
Key people
  • Micah Baldwin
  • (CEO, Co-Founder)
  • Kevin Mann
  • (Founder and Chief Scientist)
[1]
URLGraphicly.com

History edit

Graphicly was founded in 2007 as "Take Comics" by Kevin Mann.[2][9] The website was part the 2009 class of TechStars, a startup accelerator.[4][11][12] Micah Baldwin had been a mentor at TechStars since 2007, and after mentoring the Graphicly team through the program, joined the company as founder and CEO.[13][14][15][16]

Steve Ballmer gave the first public demo of Graphicly during Microsoft’s keynote presentation at the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show.[17][18][19]

The company raised a $1.2 million seed round in January 2010, led by DFJ Mercury, with additional investments from Starz Media, David Cohen, Dave McClure, Paige Craig, Jake Nickell, and Chris Sacca.[3] Over 600,000 copies of Graphicly's mobile applications had been downloaded in the first five months of 2010.[2] In January 2011, Graphicly raised an additional $3.8 million in a Series A round from a group led by DFJ Mercury with additional investments from 500 Startups, Dundee VC, Ludlow Ventures, and Venture51.[2][4][7] In addition to the established angel investors, Graphicly's advisors included Tim Ferriss, Jay Adelson, and Gary Vaynerchuk.[8]

In February 2010, Graphicly acquired iFanboy, a comic book community and news platform.[20] This bolstered the interactive elements of their site, which had already pioneered how comic books were read and shared.[4] The purchase did not last and in January 2013, iFanboy split from Graphically in a joint decision between the site and the company.[21] In November 2011, Graphicly acquired Double Feature, a mobile comics reader application.[22]

In 2012, the Graphic.ly comics app was discontinued and the company focused on digital conversion and distribution service: For an upfront fee, the company would convert a comic and distribute it to digital platforms, and then planned to give proceeds (after fees) to the comic owner.[23]

In January 2013, Graphicly raised an additional $1 million in funding, bringing the total venture capital investment to $6 million.[24]

In April 2014, Graphicly officially shut its doors, replacing its website with a notice informing visitors of such. Key employees from the company were hired by Blurb, a self-publishing agency similar in aim to Graphicly. Many publishers who had published their works through Graphicly were offered to move their business to Blurb.[25]

Some of the independent creators were never paid for the proceeds from their published comics.[26]

Description edit

Baldwin described the initial vision for Graphicly as iTunes for comic books.[27] The company allowed comic book creators to distribute their content digitally through Graphicly's native app, which is available for the iPhone, iPad, and Android devices.[2]

The following year, Graphicly shifted the company's focus to their digital publishing platform, which allows authors and publishers to release their books on platforms like the iBookstore, Amazon's Kindle Store, the Kobo Store, and Barnes & Noble's Nook Store.[4][28][29] Baldwin noted that although Graphicly's marketplace strategy had proved successful, the company focused mainly on marketing the highest-selling comics like Spider-Man and X-Men, a departure from their initial goal of helping all publishers, especially independent publishers, gain an audience.[30] In January 2012, the company unveiled an all-in-one self-publishing platform with automated tools that can convert, distribute and promote image-based content.[6][28][31][32][33] The platform also offers real-time analytics integration, allowing creators to track their content across all the marketplaces.[32]

Business Model edit

Publishers paid a flat fee to Graphicly and retained full ownership of the revenue stream afterwards.[28] In the first week after the new platform was released, the company signed up over 1,500 authors and publishers at an average of $650.[4] Graphicly's user base doubled in the first 6 months after the launch of the new distribution options.[34] The transition also attracted content creators outside of comic books, and at one time 40% of all books submitted through Graphicly were non-comics.[6][7][35]

Together, this led to higher sales for Graphicly's content creators, and sales outpace the old Graphicly app 5 to 1.[7] In 2011, more than one book was being downloaded every minute from Graphicly.[3]

Community edit

Graphicly hosted an active social community which allowed users to comment within the pages of the digital books on the story, artwork, cover art, and overall experience.[2][9] The discussion allowed creators and fans to connect directly, and greatly increased Graphicly's reader engagement.[2][3][36] The website featured a social stream, where users could see activity including recent purchases, comments, and share recent favorites with other users.[3][37] Baldwin called the community the biggest driver of growth for Graphicly.[38]

References edit

  1. ^ Hesseldahl, Arik; Kharif, Olga; MacMillan, Douglas; King, Rachael. . Bloomberg News. Archived from the original on 2016-03-06.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Zax, David (7 February 2011). "Graphicly an Online Comics Community, Nabs $3 Million Funding". Fast Company.
  3. ^ a b c d e Cheredar, Tom (January 25, 2012). "How Graphicly is paving the way for self-published digital comic books". Venture Beat.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Siegler, Mg (January 25, 2011). "Digital Comic Startup Graphicly Draws Up $3 Million To Take 2011 "Beyond The Page"". TechCrunch.
  5. ^ Holiday, Ryan (May 9, 2012). "Graphicly's Micah Baldwin: Why Storytelling Matters". Forbes.
  6. ^ a b c Brothers, David (April 5, 2012). . Comics Alliance. Archived from the original on March 14, 2013.
  7. ^ a b c d Cheredar, Tom (April 5, 2012). "Graphicly shutters iOS & Android comic book apps to focus on self-publishing service". Venture Beat.
  8. ^ a b "Graphicly: About". Graphicly.
  9. ^ a b c Nishi, Dennis (July 24, 2010). "Comic-Con 2010: Comics Enter the eBook Era". Wall Street Journal.
  10. ^ "Indie E-Book Printer Blurb Acquihires Graphicly, Comic E-Publishing Platform Shutting Down". TechCrunch. 27 May 2014. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
  11. ^ "10 Start-up Incubators to Watch". Inc. Magazine.
  12. ^ "TechStars Incubator Hatches 10 New Companies". TechCrunch. August 6, 2009.
  13. ^ Van Grove, Jennifer (October 27, 2011). "Graphicly Founder on Startup Life, Internet Fame & Getting Sober". Mashable.
  14. ^ "TechStars: Mentors". TechStars.
  15. ^ Matthew, Ellis (February 9, 2010). . Fuel Your Venture. Archived from the original on March 20, 2013.
  16. ^ . Pinterest. December 20, 2010. Archived from the original on June 3, 2012.
  17. ^ Bradshaw, Tim (January 8, 2010). "Comic fans flock to Graphicly". Financial Times.
  18. ^ Warren, Christina (January 6, 2010). "Graphicly Creates the Digital Comic Book Store". Mashable.
  19. ^ "Windows 7 Helps Bring Touch PCs to the Tipping Point". Microsoft. January 7, 2010.
  20. ^ Joseph, Tartakoff (February 17, 2010). "Graphicly Buys Comics Community iFanboy". Paid Content.
  21. ^ "IFanboy Update: Independence, Goodbye, Hello". 18 January 2013.
  22. ^ Reid, Calvin (November 8, 2011). "Graphicly Acquires Digital Comics Reader, Double Feature". Publishers Weekly.
  23. ^ "A creator's eye view of Graphicly".
  24. ^ Ha, Anthony (5 January 2013). "Publishing Startup Graphicly Raising $1M More As It Aims For Profitability". TechCrunch.
  25. ^ Melrose, Kevin (May 17, 2014). "Graphicly to hut down as Blurb acquires employees". Comic Book Resources.
  26. ^ Chris Meadows (June 4, 2014). . TeleRead. Archived from the original on 2014-06-06.
  27. ^ Ha, Anthony (March 1, 2012). "Graphicly Opens Publishing Platform To Everyone, Looks Beyond Comics". TechCrunch.
  28. ^ a b c James, Tyler (April 16, 2012). "Talking Graphicly with Micah Baldwin". Comix Tribe.
  29. ^ Ha, Anthony (April 5, 2012). "Graphicly Kills Its Mobile Apps To Double Down On Publishing Tools". TechCrunch.
  30. ^ Baldwin, Micah (April 5, 2012). "Graphicly: Continually Evolving for Content Publishers". Graphicly Blog.
  31. ^ Esposito, Joey (January 23, 2012). "Graphicly Offers Self-Publishing". IGN Comics.
  32. ^ a b McCarty, Brad (March 1, 2011). "Graphicly looks beyond comics to bring analytics to every ebook platform". The Next Web.
  33. ^ Pilkington, Mercy (February 2, 2012). "Graphicly Launches Cross-Platform eBook Distribution". Good eReader.
  34. ^ Brothers, David (June 9, 2011). . Comics Alliance. Archived from the original on November 17, 2012.
  35. ^ SALKOWITZ, ROB (5 April 2012). "Behind a Pivot: Graphicly Closes Marketplace, Refocuses Business". Fast Company.
  36. ^ "Graphicly's Micah Baldwin Talks Digital Comics & Community". Comic Archive. February 18, 2011.
  37. ^ Langshaw, Mark (June 10, 2011). "Graphicly expands community features". Digital Spy.
  38. ^ Ostrow, Adam (September 9, 2010). "How Graphicly Plans to Transform the Comic Book Business". Mashable.

External links edit

  • Official website

graphic, graphicly, often, stylized, platform, publishers, which, offered, work, flow, integration, self, publishing, digital, distribution, conversion, promotion, digital, content, launched, kevin, mann, micah, baldwin, website, initially, platform, digital, . Graphicly often stylized as Graphic ly was a platform for publishers which offered work flow integration self publishing digital distribution conversion and promotion for digital content 2 3 4 Launched by Kevin Mann and Micah Baldwin the website was initially a platform for digital comic books but later added support for children s books art books and magazines 5 6 7 Graphicly accumulated more than 3 500 publishers and more than 10 000 independent creators 8 9 The website hosted an active social community allowing creators and fans to interact directly Graphicly shut down in May 2014 and some of its key staff moved on to fellow digital publisher Blurb 10 GraphiclyType of businessPrivateFounded2007HeadquartersBoulder Colorado USAKey peopleMicah Baldwin CEO Co Founder Kevin Mann Founder and Chief Scientist 1 URLGraphicly com Contents 1 History 2 Description 2 1 Business Model 2 2 Community 3 References 4 External linksHistory editGraphicly was founded in 2007 as Take Comics by Kevin Mann 2 9 The website was part the 2009 class of TechStars a startup accelerator 4 11 12 Micah Baldwin had been a mentor at TechStars since 2007 and after mentoring the Graphicly team through the program joined the company as founder and CEO 13 14 15 16 Steve Ballmer gave the first public demo of Graphicly during Microsoft s keynote presentation at the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show 17 18 19 The company raised a 1 2 million seed round in January 2010 led by DFJ Mercury with additional investments from Starz Media David Cohen Dave McClure Paige Craig Jake Nickell and Chris Sacca 3 Over 600 000 copies of Graphicly s mobile applications had been downloaded in the first five months of 2010 2 In January 2011 Graphicly raised an additional 3 8 million in a Series A round from a group led by DFJ Mercury with additional investments from 500 Startups Dundee VC Ludlow Ventures and Venture51 2 4 7 In addition to the established angel investors Graphicly s advisors included Tim Ferriss Jay Adelson and Gary Vaynerchuk 8 In February 2010 Graphicly acquired iFanboy a comic book community and news platform 20 This bolstered the interactive elements of their site which had already pioneered how comic books were read and shared 4 The purchase did not last and in January 2013 iFanboy split from Graphically in a joint decision between the site and the company 21 In November 2011 Graphicly acquired Double Feature a mobile comics reader application 22 In 2012 the Graphic ly comics app was discontinued and the company focused on digital conversion and distribution service For an upfront fee the company would convert a comic and distribute it to digital platforms and then planned to give proceeds after fees to the comic owner 23 In January 2013 Graphicly raised an additional 1 million in funding bringing the total venture capital investment to 6 million 24 In April 2014 Graphicly officially shut its doors replacing its website with a notice informing visitors of such Key employees from the company were hired by Blurb a self publishing agency similar in aim to Graphicly Many publishers who had published their works through Graphicly were offered to move their business to Blurb 25 Some of the independent creators were never paid for the proceeds from their published comics 26 Description editBaldwin described the initial vision for Graphicly as iTunes for comic books 27 The company allowed comic book creators to distribute their content digitally through Graphicly s native app which is available for the iPhone iPad and Android devices 2 The following year Graphicly shifted the company s focus to their digital publishing platform which allows authors and publishers to release their books on platforms like the iBookstore Amazon s Kindle Store the Kobo Store and Barnes amp Noble s Nook Store 4 28 29 Baldwin noted that although Graphicly s marketplace strategy had proved successful the company focused mainly on marketing the highest selling comics like Spider Man and X Men a departure from their initial goal of helping all publishers especially independent publishers gain an audience 30 In January 2012 the company unveiled an all in one self publishing platform with automated tools that can convert distribute and promote image based content 6 28 31 32 33 The platform also offers real time analytics integration allowing creators to track their content across all the marketplaces 32 Business Model edit Publishers paid a flat fee to Graphicly and retained full ownership of the revenue stream afterwards 28 In the first week after the new platform was released the company signed up over 1 500 authors and publishers at an average of 650 4 Graphicly s user base doubled in the first 6 months after the launch of the new distribution options 34 The transition also attracted content creators outside of comic books and at one time 40 of all books submitted through Graphicly were non comics 6 7 35 Together this led to higher sales for Graphicly s content creators and sales outpace the old Graphicly app 5 to 1 7 In 2011 more than one book was being downloaded every minute from Graphicly 3 Community edit Graphicly hosted an active social community which allowed users to comment within the pages of the digital books on the story artwork cover art and overall experience 2 9 The discussion allowed creators and fans to connect directly and greatly increased Graphicly s reader engagement 2 3 36 The website featured a social stream where users could see activity including recent purchases comments and share recent favorites with other users 3 37 Baldwin called the community the biggest driver of growth for Graphicly 38 References edit Hesseldahl Arik Kharif Olga MacMillan Douglas King Rachael Best Young Tech Entrepreneurs 2010 Bloomberg News Archived from the original on 2016 03 06 a b c d e f g Zax David 7 February 2011 Graphicly an Online Comics Community Nabs 3 Million Funding Fast Company a b c d e Cheredar Tom January 25 2012 How Graphicly is paving the way for self published digital comic books Venture Beat a b c d e f Siegler Mg January 25 2011 Digital Comic Startup Graphicly Draws Up 3 Million To Take 2011 Beyond The Page TechCrunch Holiday Ryan May 9 2012 Graphicly s Micah Baldwin Why Storytelling Matters Forbes a b c Brothers David April 5 2012 Graphicly Switches From Digital Comics Distribution To Ebooks Distribution Comics Alliance Archived from the original on March 14 2013 a b c d Cheredar Tom April 5 2012 Graphicly shutters iOS amp Android comic book apps to focus on self publishing service Venture Beat a b Graphicly About Graphicly a b c Nishi Dennis July 24 2010 Comic Con 2010 Comics Enter the eBook Era Wall Street Journal Indie E Book Printer Blurb Acquihires Graphicly Comic E Publishing Platform Shutting Down TechCrunch 27 May 2014 Retrieved 2020 02 04 10 Start up Incubators to Watch Inc Magazine TechStars Incubator Hatches 10 New Companies TechCrunch August 6 2009 Van Grove Jennifer October 27 2011 Graphicly Founder on Startup Life Internet Fame amp Getting Sober Mashable TechStars Mentors TechStars Matthew Ellis February 9 2010 Getting Funded An Interview with Graphicly Co Founder Micah Baldwin Fuel Your Venture Archived from the original on March 20 2013 Official Pinterest Blog Pinterest December 20 2010 Archived from the original on June 3 2012 Bradshaw Tim January 8 2010 Comic fans flock to Graphicly Financial Times Warren Christina January 6 2010 Graphicly Creates the Digital Comic Book Store Mashable Windows 7 Helps Bring Touch PCs to the Tipping Point Microsoft January 7 2010 Joseph Tartakoff February 17 2010 Graphicly Buys Comics Community iFanboy Paid Content IFanboy Update Independence Goodbye Hello 18 January 2013 Reid Calvin November 8 2011 Graphicly Acquires Digital Comics Reader Double Feature Publishers Weekly A creator s eye view of Graphicly Ha Anthony 5 January 2013 Publishing Startup Graphicly Raising 1M More As It Aims For Profitability TechCrunch Melrose Kevin May 17 2014 Graphicly to hut down as Blurb acquires employees Comic Book Resources Chris Meadows June 4 2014 Graphicly s acquisition leaves publisher payments in doubt TeleRead Archived from the original on 2014 06 06 Ha Anthony March 1 2012 Graphicly Opens Publishing Platform To Everyone Looks Beyond Comics TechCrunch a b c James Tyler April 16 2012 Talking Graphicly with Micah Baldwin Comix Tribe Ha Anthony April 5 2012 Graphicly Kills Its Mobile Apps To Double Down On Publishing Tools TechCrunch Baldwin Micah April 5 2012 Graphicly Continually Evolving for Content Publishers Graphicly Blog Esposito Joey January 23 2012 Graphicly Offers Self Publishing IGN Comics a b McCarty Brad March 1 2011 Graphicly looks beyond comics to bring analytics to every ebook platform The Next Web Pilkington Mercy February 2 2012 Graphicly Launches Cross Platform eBook Distribution Good eReader Brothers David June 9 2011 Graphicly Redesigns to Bring a Sense of Community to Digital Comics Comics Alliance Archived from the original on November 17 2012 SALKOWITZ ROB 5 April 2012 Behind a Pivot Graphicly Closes Marketplace Refocuses Business Fast Company Graphicly s Micah Baldwin Talks Digital Comics amp Community Comic Archive February 18 2011 Langshaw Mark June 10 2011 Graphicly expands community features Digital Spy Ostrow Adam September 9 2010 How Graphicly Plans to Transform the Comic Book Business Mashable External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Graphic ly amp oldid 1153178199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.