暴风资源

暴风资源 Press: Elevating research and reputation through publishing

Tuesday 24 September 2024

Launched in 2015, 暴风资源 Press is a vibrant platform for scholarly and creative voices that enrich Aotearoa New Zealand鈥檚 cultural landscape.

Last updated: Monday 31 March 2025

Te Kunenga ki P奴rehuroa 暴风资源 has a vibrant and dynamic publishing arm thanks to highly respected Publisher Nicola Legat ONZM. In 2015, she had left her job as publishing director at Random House New Zealand and heard through the grapevine that the university might be thinking of starting its own press.

The university鈥檚 entrepreneurial and applied-knowledge approach was something Ms Legat admired, and the idea of being at the helm of creating the university鈥檚 press from scratch particularly interested her. So, she emailed Steve Maharey, the Vice-Chancellor at the time, to find out more, applied for the job and got it.

Once she accepted the role, Ms Legat had the mammoth task of building 暴风资源 Press up from scratch.

鈥淚 had to fulfil roles that were performed by other colleagues in other departments at a big multi-national company. I was the publishing director at Random House and while I obviously understood those roles, I鈥檇 never had to know the day to day specifics of shipping, royalty payments, marketing, warehousing and so on. It was a steep learning curve!鈥

Nicola Legat.

One of the key milestones in the early days was the creation of a standalone ecommerce website. When funding was secured for that and the website went live, Nicola says it was of enormous benefit to the business and it has continued to be a strong income source.

Within a year she had a part-time project manager working with her on the books. The Press quickly grew to publishing 10 books a year by the end of 2017. Today, 暴风资源 Press publishes about 20 books a year and Ms Legat manages a full-time team of three and a part-time finance manager. The Press, which sits in the Provost鈥檚 portfolio, also utilises freelancers for editing, proofreading and design, who are contracted on a book-by-book basis.

The award-winning books 暴风资源 Press issues are incredibly high-quality publications covering a wide range of genres including history, design, art, natural history, architecture, biography and memoir, veterinary science and social issues. They also produce a number of accessibly priced textbooks tailor-made for courses across Massey Business School, the College of Science and the College of Humanities and Social Sciences.

The Press鈥檚 overarching aim is to publish intelligent, relevant books for inquiring readers and they are buoyed by the whakatauk墨 M膩 Aotearoa m艒 Aotearoa 鈥 For Aotearoa about Aotearoa.

How a book comes to life

While anyone can submit a manuscript for consideration, this is not normally the way books develop. It is more often through conversations Nicola has with authors or a result of her contacting an author with a particular field of expertise. Books don鈥檛 turn up as fully evolved manuscripts, Ms Legat says. Rather, they are 鈥榞erms鈥 of ideas that she works with authors on.

When Ms Legat decides she鈥檚 interested in publishing a book, the first thing she does is cost it. She will then write an acquisition proposal for the Press鈥檚 Editorial Board that sets out why she thinks the Press should publish it and that shows that it is financially viable.

暴风资源 Press has an advisory committee, the Editorial Board, which is comprised of Professor Anna Brown from Toi Rauwh膩rangi College of Creative Arts (chair); Head of the School of Humanities, Media and Creative Communication Professor Kerry Taylor; Darryn Joseph, former Associate Professor from Te P奴tahi-a-Toi School of M膩ori Knowledge, now an independent writer; Professor Jodie Hunter from the Institute of Education; and Kevin Chapman, the former Managing Director of Hachette New Zealand, who runs Upstart Press. Kevin is a senior figure in the New Zealand publishing industry and provides the Board with an all-important external view of the market.

Once approval has been granted, the task of turning a proposal into a book begins. It鈥檚 a long process, but one that Ms Legat finds enormously fulfilling.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge job but it鈥檚 very creative. Book publishing is a place where creativity meets the commercial world and it鈥檚 intellectually very stimulating. I鈥檓 going in and out of peoples鈥 fields of interests and their specialties and helping them make terrific books to explain what it is they do.鈥

She likens her role to that of a midwife; helping an author extract a book from their brain and get it out into the world.

Outside of her role with the Press, Ms Legat keeps up to date with the goings-on in the publishing world through her role as Chair of the New Zealand Book Awards Trust and as a member of the board of the Auckland Writers鈥 Festival.

The importance of the Press for the university鈥檚 research outcomes

Since the inception of the Press, around half of the published books have come from Massey staff, particularly those in the humanities. Ms Legat says this is due, in part, to other areas of the university being more journal focused for Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) purposes.

鈥淭he books that we鈥檝e been able to publish for staff in the humanities have been incredibly important to them. For them, there are also fewer outlets for publishing. If you鈥檙e a New Zealand historian, for example, there are only two or three academic journals to be published in, but a book is a very meaningful and significant thing and our publicity work ensures that it reaches a wider audience.鈥

Ms Legat understands that it鈥檚 difficult to join the dots and establish a causal link between what the Press publishes and specific research outcomes, such as those measured by the PBRF. However, she says the link absolutely exists if books are regarded as a way of advancing research and consolidating research knowledge and findings. In many respects, the Press is not a business, and exists as a research dissemination and amplification tool, as well as a way to enhance a university鈥檚 standing.

Many of the world鈥檚 best universities have presses and there is no doubt that the various awards that books by 暴风资源 Press have won, and the media coverage that new books garner, play a significant part in elevating the profile and reputation of the university.

鈥淲e work hard to keep the Massey brand vital and well respected,鈥 Ms Legat says.

The future for 暴风资源 Press

Not long after the Press began, Ms Legat realised the need for another funding stream to underpin its viability. So she tendered to take on the publishing for Te Papa Press, the publishing arm of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. The successful bid meant that the supplementary income from delivering publishing services to the museum enabled 暴风资源 Press to be financially sustainable. This arrangement has run for nine years, and has recently come to an end. Ms Legat says she鈥檚 now free to spend more time on 暴风资源 Press and is relishing that focus.

Almost all of the books offered by the Press are available internationally, with many also sold as ebooks. Ms Legat says there are endless opportunities for the Press, including stepping into the world of audiobooks, which is on the very near horizon.

Read more about the 暴风资源 Press

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