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The first book to tell the story of one of the world’s most
influential media businesses, The Family Business draws on more
than 70 interviews with company insiders as well as book-industry
luminaries to present the Ingram story and how a little-known
Nashville-based company grew to play a pivotal role in transforming
book publishing around the world. The history of the Ingram Content
Group is one of the most important and remarkable business stories
that almost no one knows. Launched as a favor to a family friend,
it started as a local textbook distributor—one tiny division
within a thriving corporation focused on oil, construction
supplies, and shipping. It grew into the world’s largest book
wholesaler, then into the most influential and innovative supplier
of infrastructure and services to publishers around the world. Over
the past 50 years, from its headquarters in Nashville, Tennessee,
Ingram has played a pivotal role in modernizing the book business.
Two members of the founding family have led the way: Bronson
Ingram, a tough-minded industrialist who instinctively recognized a
golden opportunity to apply modern efficiencies to antiquated
logistical systems, and Bronson’s son John Ingram, an
“intrapreneur” with a keen understanding of both the
opportunities and the risks created by the new digital
technologies. Led by these two brilliant managers, Ingram has used
its unparalleled industry-wide connections to help transform book
publishing from a tradition-bound business into a dynamic, global
twenty-first century powerhouse. Now, for the first time, The
Family Business captures the whole story. In its pages, readers
will learn about: The introduction of the Ingram microfiche reader
in 1972 and how it catapulted book retailing into the electronic
era Ingram’s network of coast-to-coast distribution centers
turning U.S. book publishing into a truly national business for the
first time Ingram using fast-growing video, software, magazine, and
international wholesaling operations to create a phenomenal record
of expansion, growing from a million-dollar company into a
billion-dollar giant in just two decades Two of book publishing’s
most powerful organizations—Ingram and Barnes &
Noble—almost coming within a hair’s breadth of merging, and how
the deal fell apart at the eleventh hour Ingram’s unparalleled
ability to rapidly fulfill product orders empowering Amazon’s
unique customer service model and enabling its explosive growth
Lightning Source, a technological marvel spawned by Ingram,
converting the “long tail” of niche books from a costly
headache for publishers and retailers into a steady source of
profitable sales Ingram’s transformation of the book supply chain
enabling countless booksellers and publishers to survive and even
thrive in the disruptive era of Covid-19 Today, with Ingram’s
expanding portfolio of service and infrastructure businesses
playing an ever-growing role in the world of publishing, the
company stands ready to help lead the industry into an era of even
more dramatic change. The Family Business is the first book to
recount the story of this strategic powerhouse that everyone in the
publishing industry does business with, and that practically
everyone admires—but that few people really understand. A
must-read for people in the book business and the world of media,
and anyone else who wants to understand how this vastly influential
industry really works, this book fascinates with the story of the
ways today’s electronic information technologies are transforming
the world.
Coup is the behind-the-scenes story of an abrupt political
transition, unprecedented in US history. Based on 163 interviews,
Hunt describes how collaborators came together from opposite sides
of the political aisle and, in an extraordinary few hours, reached
agreement that the corruption and madness of the sitting Governor
of Tennessee, Ray Blanton, must be stopped. The sudden transfer of
power that caught Blanton unawares was deemed necessary because of
what one FBI agent called ""the state's most heinous political
crime in half a century""-a scheme of selling pardons for cash. On
January 17, 1979, driven by new information that some of the worst
criminals in the state's penitentiaries were about to be released
(and fears that James Earl Ray might be one of them), a small
bipartisan group chose to take charge. Senior Democratic leaders,
friends of the sitting governor, together with the Republican
governor-elect Lamar Alexander (now US Senator from Tennessee),
agreed to oust Blanton from office before another night fell. It
was a maneuver unique in American political history. Expanded
edition, with a newly discovered account of the events by Senator
Lamar Alexander: ""In December 2015 something unexpected happened.
Keel [Hunt] delivered to my Nashville office a brown three-ring
binder. He had only recently discovered it in a box that had been
in storage for thirty years."" -Senator Lamar Alexander This binder
contained the forgotten typescript, written in 1985, of Alexander's
recollections of the events leading up to his early inauguration on
January 17, 1979. In this expanded edition of Coup, the Senator's
22,000-word text has been added as a lost footnote to Hunt's
definitive account. From the foreword by John L. Seigenthaler:
""The individual stories of those government officials involved in
the coup-each account unique, but all of them intersecting-were
scattered like disconnected pieces of a jigsaw puzzle on the table
of history until the author conceived this book. Perhaps because it
happened so quickly, and without major disagreement, protest, or
dissent, this truly historic moment has been buried in the public
mind. In unearthing the drama in gripping detail, Keel Hunt assures
that the 'dark day' will be remembered as a bright one in which
conflicted politicians came together in the public interest.
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