Panache Partners Breathe Life Into Print Industry without Dependence on Marketing

Written by: Alexis Poole

 

Panache Partners and Signature Publishing Group have rejuvenated the print and publishing industries. And they’ve done it organically, by creating a product that pools creative talent and practically markets itself among affluent, on-the-verve communities. They’ve even created jobs in printing and publishing that allow the industries to experience growth.

In 2002, Brian Carabet and John Shand pooled together their 25 years of experience and created the now internationally acclaimed Design by City series, Spectacular Homes series and Perspective on Design series, along with a host of other coffee-table book series stretching from North America to Canada to London. Panache even custom-designs look-books to fit clientele tastes and needs.

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Brian Carabet and John Shand created the City by Design Series in 2002.

The books are published by sister company Signature Publishing and distributed by Independent Publishers Group, which was the first to market titles solely from independent presses to the book trade. Since 1987, IPG has operated under the Chicago Review Press and has enjoyed many successes with clients spanning the globe. For all their efforts, Panache Partners are experiencing great success and growth. Even better, the company is headquartered in Plano, Texas, a bustling Dallas suburb that is affluent with an elevated cost of living and operations. In Plano, Panache finds a great audience to whom they can market and almost assuredly experience success.

But the thing that sets Panache apart from others is their product. Panache creates the most visually-appealing, creativity-inspiring, luxurious-feeling coffee-table books. They practically open themselves up to a wide audience, from the architect looking for samples of what a particular region might find warm and inviting, to the orthodontist looking for an interesting book to keep her waiting patients occupied. It is the product–hundreds of high-detail, oversized photos on slick, high-quality paper–that markets better than any agency ever could. By organically engaging the senses with a well-made product, Panache created the look-book that doesn’t need a commercial or a billboard to sell it. A product that can sell itself liberates a company from too much of a dependence on marketing and advertising. With more than 40 titles of coffee-table books, Panache can focus its money on Research and Development, pumping more of their resources into travel and photography, writing and editing, print production and finishing–creating jobs in the writing, printing and publishing industries that are in direct competition with their online counterparts.

And when the book is done, every description wittily and stylishly written, every photo oversized and in eye-popping detail, every spine, cover and page offering that visceral texture, scent and aura of a high-quality, well-made item–the coffee-table books put traditional marketing to shame and sell themselves, by referral only.

Worst Company EVER: Biotech Giant Monsanto is Under Attack, Obama and the FDA are Under the Gun

 

CREDO Action - Dump Michael Taylor

Via CREDO Action website

By Allison Hibbs

Monsanto, the multinational agricultural biotechnology corporation long reviled by organic farmers, environmentalists and conscientious foodies worldwide, has drawn more than the usual amount of rancor in recent months. While assailants are hoping the media blitzkrieg will prove as damaging to the company as they claim that its bioengineering and genetic modification practices are to the planet, that hope may prove optimistic in light of its cozy relationship with the United States federal government. Efforts to diminish that relationship have led to the recent circulation of more than one petition calling for the dismissal of FDA Food Safety Czar, Michael Taylor, a former top Monsanto executive.

One reason for the recent outrage is a perceived “crusade” by the FDA against small raw milk dairy farmers, many of whom are Amish, even as they overlook repeated violations by larger, industrial producers. CREDO, a publication of Working Assets, began a campaign in late January to educate and motivate consumers to sign a pledge beseeching President Obama to expel Taylor from the administration.

"While factory farm operators are getting away with serious food safety violations, raw milk dairy farmers and distributors across the country have been subjected to armed raids and hauled away in handcuffs."

CREDO Action

CREDO believes that the FDA’s efforts would be better spent enforcing food safety regulations at the largest industrial producers, where it claims that “antibiotic resistance has run amuck,” rather than focusing so much of the administration’s efforts on sting operations to arrest small dairy farmers.

"Incredibly, Michael Taylor and FDA inspectors have not arrested or fined the Iowa agribusinessman -- Jack DeCoster -- who was wholly responsible for the more than 500 million eggs that were recalled in 2010 salmonella-tainted egg recall. 3Though this industrial agribusinessman endangered the health of millions, Michael Taylor thinks Amish farmers producing fresh milk are more deserving targets of his FDA enforcement raids with guns drawn."

CREDO Action

 

The petition had garnered 151,160 signatures as of SuperBowl Sunday, 75 percent of its 200,000 goal.

SignOn.org Petition: Tell Obama to Cease FDA Ties to Monsanto

Another petition circulating on Twitter and Facebook had reached a total of 220,000 signatures by game time, far surpassing its original goal of 75,000. Written and circulated by Frederick Ravid, this petition includes a longer letter to the president, expressing opposition to the his administration’s appointment of Taylor three years ago.

“Taylor is the same person who as a high-ranking official at the FDA in the 1990s promoted allowing genetically modified organisms into the U.S. food supply without undergoing a single test to determine their safety or risks,” reads the letter. “This is a travesty.” Pointing out that Taylor was in charge of policy regarding the widely-opposed bovine growth hormone and that he fought against the requirement for disclosures on milk from cows that had been treated with the hormone, Ravid goes on to decry Monsanto as a company directly threatening the health and well-being of US citizens.

Reinforcing these concerns are WikiLeaks documents that surfaced last year implicating the Bush administration in questionable tactics used against countries in Europe to impel them to purchase Monsanto GMO products that they were resisting. Other documents imply that the US government considered putting pressure on the Pope to come out in favor of GMO foods. If any such actions were taken, they have proven largely unsuccessful and Monsanto has been repeatedly thwarted in France, Germany and the UK.

 

Additionally, lawsuits have been brought against the biotech giant by India and Canada for biopiracy and biocontamination, respectively; and a group of 270,000 American organic farmers are also suing the company for biocontamination. Ironically, the move is intended to protect these farmers against possible patent-infringement lawsuits brought by Monsanto over GMO seeds that have migrated to – and compromised – their lands.

For all of these reasons (and more), Monsanto has been voted Worst Company of 2011 by Natural Society, and the public seems increasingly to agree. As the acrimony grows, it is beginning to look like the corporation’s PR department has some serious damage control to do if it hopes to retain any influence over government activity.  It is, after all, an election year and Obama may not have the luxury of ignoring so many voters crying “Why, O, why?”