What is the relationship between grinding iron books and publishing houses?
Motie is a cultural development company engaged in book planning, commonly known as booksellers. In China, such institutions do not have the right to obtain ISBN, so they can't complete the publication of a book from beginning to end, but only do most of the work, such as planning the topic selection, editing and processing, printing, publicity and distribution through some channels (ISBN is generally provided by publishers and distributed by book planning companies through different channels). Although this constitutes most of the production process of a book. But in China, ISBN is only controlled by XXXXX's publishing house, so these book planning companies can only reach a cooperative relationship with the publishing house to jointly publish a book. In most cases, ISBN is bought from the publishing house for free, but it is divided. What is the specific cooperation mode of Jobs Biography is unknown. So we can make an analogy: books are children, book planning companies are mothers, publishing houses are fathers, and China is almighty God. In this process, if God doesn't like the child, he can let it die at any time. The essence is: at present, all publications in China are published by publishing houses, and no other organization or individual has the right to publish them. Mill Iron is actually a content provider, which goes out through a publishing house to get legal coats. But because this content provider is so powerful, the publishing house that provides them with ISBN has no right to speak at all. Only one ISBN was provided. Private book planning companies like Mo Tie are more grounded, more market-conscious, more dynamic and more creative than state-owned publishing houses, and can plan books that meet readers' interests, but national policies do not allow them to publish independently, so they are stuck on the book number. Because state-owned publishing houses are strictly controlled by the government, the government can rest assured that they will publish (in fact, there are many barriers to the review of selected topics, and political issues will be severely accountable); For the government, private enterprises will always be like outsiders, untrustworthy and uneasy.