MagCloud
MagCloud is an American online publishing service founded by Hewlett-Packard in 2008 and sold to Blurb, Inc. in 2014.[1] Mag is an abbreviation for magazine, while cloud is a synonym for online.
Type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Genre | Vanity press |
Founded | 2008 |
Founder | Hewlett-Packard |
Number of locations | U.S. |
Area served | Global |
Key people | Andrew Bolwell |
Services | Self-publishing |
Owner | Blurb, Inc. (2014-present) Hewlett-Packard (2008-2014) |
Number of employees | 17 |
Website | www |
Footnotes / references HP Indigo Division |
Product
MagCloud allows users to self-publish and distribute content, for business or personal use, as a professional-quality print publication or digitally for mobile and online viewing. Magazines are printed in full color via the HP Indigo Division on high quality paper in a variety of sizes and formats at a cost of US$0.16 or $0.20 per page, plus shipping and handling.
Authors set the cost for the publication and can markup to receive profits from MagCloud monthly. MagCloud offers users a variety of publishing and distributions services including automated ordering, print management, worldwide shipping, direct mail services, digital distribution and an online storefront, all free of charge.[2][3]
In addition to discovery on the market for new, small publications, the service is used by existing magazines and publications such as STACK Models Magazine with a more traditional distribution method to make back issues available for sale.[2]
References
- "Blurb acquires HP's MagCloud, aims to dominate long-tail publishing". Fortune.
- "Print-on-Demand & Magazine Collection Development". Library Journal.
- Joel, Comm (2010). KaChing: How to Run an Online Business that Pays and Pays. ISBN 0-470-59767-4.