Making your own success

Andy Kessler wrote a book, “Wall Street Meal: My Narrow Escape From the Stock Market Grinder,” about his days as a Wall Street analysts, but publishers rejected it because they could not get it to market for 21 months and feared the topic would be cold then.

Kessler decided to self-publish even though he was told it is not a way to publish successfully. He has his book published in less than two months.

Then he started marketing it. Using his contacts and Amazon, he creates buzz for the book. Eventually major booksellers are calling him and he recently sold paperback publishing rights to a major publisher. His recounting of taking the initiative and not accepting conventional wisdom are in the Wall Street Journal.

Journalists’ contributions to politicians

Washington Post looks at the political contributions made by journalists including some well-known celebrity journalists. This story raises difficult questions for news organizations and its watchers. Many news organizations strongly discourage editorial staff from making contributions, particularly if they cover those areas, but they may not actually prohibit it.

The NY Times, for example, only last year began prohibiting newsroom employees from contributing to political parties and campaigns. People on editorial staffs often want to make contributions to feel like they’re doing something instead of standing on the sidelines.

Another journalism ethics decision came last week when CNBC barred news staff and managers and their spouses and dependents from owning individual stocks and corporate bonds. Part-time employees, such as James Cramer, were excluded from the new rules. Enforcing the rule on spouses may generate friction, either in the family or in the newsroom.

It is darker outside

A researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology has found that over almost 30 years the amount of sunlight reaching earth has declined more than 10 percent, according to this article from the The Guardian (U.K.). No explanation on why this has happened or whether it is a cyclical event. Even though scientists had noticed it for awhile, no believed it. They thought the instruments were off.

On Tuesdays, many won’t receive your email

A couple of recent email studies found that 40% of valid email is not being received by recipients and that Tuesday is the heaviest day businesses to send email.

The recipient study, published in InformationWeek was from a test of 10,000 persons who had asked to participate in the study. The biggest reason the email doesn’t go through are poor attempts by email administrators to block spam.

Bizjournals sends lots of email, which has been requested, and we constantly have to explain to customers that it was probably their own email administrator that blocked our email. Since the block is often done without any explanation by their IT department, customers are reluctant initially to believe us.

EmailLabs in its first Delivery Trends Report found that Tuesday is the busiest day for companies to send email (25.4%) followed by Wednesday (23.3%). Tip on both items was Lockergnome’s Technology News.

Looks like car, but it’s really a truck

From NY Times — Subaru is changing the design of its Outback sedan which will let it qualify as a truck for fuel standards.

The changes sound cosmetic, such as raising the bottom clearance height less than two inches. But the difference in fuel milage standards for light trucks is lower, 21.2 miles a gallon, than for cars, 27.5 miles a gallon.

The main issue is how much longer the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Transportation will continue to use outdated rules defining cars and trucks. Many of the rules go back to the late ’70s, before mini-vans and SUVs, which are also classified as trucks.