Exam Cram To Live Again
9/25/2002 -- Later today, Que Publishing is expected to officially announce that it will be relaunching the popular Exam Cram line of certification guides.
In the deal, which was finalized Friday, Que Publishing purchased the world-wide English language rights to Exam Cram from Waterside Productions, a literary agency, for an undisclosed amount. The purchase includes the Exam Cram customer list, logos, copyrights and Web site. Waterside retains the foreign language rights to the line.
Exam Cram's previous publisher, Coriolis, folded in April after its majority-owner, Haights-Cross, decided that it was not financially viable. Waterside Productions bought the rights from Haights-Cross in June.
According to Que Certification Publishing Executive Editor Jeff Riley, Que began pursuing the Exam Cram line back in April because they felt it would be a good match for the company's existing line of certification training guides. "It's the best selling certification line of all time -- there's roughly a million books sold," he said. "There's a lot of benefit to taking over a line that's been so successful.
"The feedback we get from the market is that most people will buy...a cram-type book and a more in-depth training guide, so we feel it's a perfect complement for [our existing] line."
The books will now be called Exam Cram 2, with six appearing on the shelves by the end of this year, with a more expansive relaunch coming in early 2003. Four of the titles will be completely new books or editions. Two will be updated reissues: one for Microsoft Exam #70-270, which was published right before Coriolis went under, and the other for Microsoft exam #70-218, was at the printers when the company closed.
Riley said that all Exam Cram 2 titles will feature new practice test CDs from PrepLogic and a lower price point of $29.99. According to Riley, the line will retain everything that made it popular with readers, but will feature a more stringent internal technical review process, plus review by IT certification Web site CramSession for its seal of approval.
Ed Tittel, founder of the Exam Cram line, told CertCities.com that he's thrilled that the line has found a new lease on life. "It was a terrible shame that the previous owners had to close their doors, [but] I'm proud to realize that the series concept has enough value to be worth another publisher's while to resuscitate," he said.
Tittel, who has been hired by Que Certifiction to be the series' supervising editor, said he's looking forward to the job. "I will be pretty hands-on in helping to develop guidelines, examples, go-bys, sample materials, and in working with book buyers to help them understand where and how the Training Guides and Exam Crams can be useful to certification candidates in particular, and IT professionals in general," Tittel said. "Because previous buyers have certain expectations of the Exam Cram series, we're maintaining the usual layout, the book's look and feel, both inside and outside the covers. What's most important to keep the same, however, is the intense focus on exam coverage, relevant content, and plenty of opportunities to study and practice for the 'real thing.'"
Neil Gudovitz, foreign rights manager for Waterside Productions, said his company is looking forward to continuing to grow the series' profile worldwide. "The series has been highly successful in foreign language-markets and we anticipate this success will be bolstered by the affiliation with the respected Que name," he said. "We will be cooperating closely with Que as we undertake foreign rights representation for the series while we continue to work with those foreign publishers who have made a commitment to the series in their respective languages." -B.N.
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There are 49 user Comments for “Exam Cram To Live Again”
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9/26/02: Jeff Riley from Indianapolis says: |
You're correct. I thought my email address would appear: [email protected]. The comment about errata is news to me. Can you be more specific? I'd be happy to look into it. With regard to Training Guide errata, it was pulled off the New Riders site when the titles transitioned to Que and will go back up when www.examcram.com launches. Meanwhile, any requests for errata have been forwarded to me and I make it a point to send you the errata immediately. Please let me know ASAP if your experience has been different than that which I have outlined here. |
9/26/02: Jeff Riley from Indianapolis says: |
Re: quality of series. We strongly believe that our stringent review process (peer reviewers, tech reviewers, market reviewers, etc.) -- including the Series Editor leadership of Ed Tittel (who created the series) -- will help us deliver an excellent product. |
9/26/02: Mike Beebe from Baltimore, MD says: |
MCP, CNA, A+, Network+, AASP, Working on CCNA/Project+. I have, use, and recommend the EXAM Cram series. This is truely good news for IT Professionals and students. Thanks for taking the risk to republish, it will pay off for you and many IT Pros out here in the field. Good luck. Look forwarded to seeing the first re-issues. (Is Project+ going to be in the mix?) |
9/26/02: Jeff Riley from Indianapolis says: |
Thanks for your feedback, Mike. Project(plus) is under consideration at the moment. |
9/26/02: Jeff Riley from Indianapolis says: |
BTW, if you are interested in becoming a reviewer for Que Certification, please email me at [email protected] with a summary of your certifications and qualifications. We take a great deal of pride in our team of reviewers and we fully understand they play a pivotal role in our ability to deliver high-quality books. We also value the insight that you, as readers of our books, have into our market and our products. We're not shy about asking you what you think, so please let us know if you'd like to be a part of the Exam Cram team! |
9/26/02: Ed Tittel from Austin, TX says: |
Hey! Let me add some further clarification to this dicussion and information: 1. I was involved with the Exam Cram in the NT4 days, but NOT during the Win2000 days. 2. My own Web site www.lanw.com maintains current detailed errata for all Exam Crams we ever wrote. I plan to work with Que to replicate that functionality at www.examcram.com. 3. I think between our plans to hire 2 tech reviewers, to use peer review, to go through the CramSession review process, and to perform additional reviews and errata updates after publication should give us the best-quality materials in the business, bar none. 4. Anybody has problems, issues, complaints, etc. please e-mail me at [email protected]. I can't fix problems with old Crams, but I will be all over anything related to the new ones. thanks! --Ed-- |
9/26/02: DeJuan E. Bishop, A+, IEEE Affiliate from Richmond, VA says: |
wonderful news, I am looking forward in obtaining the 70-218 study guide. I believe the most impressive news is considering that Que Certification Publishing Executive Editor Jeff Riley takes the time to promptly respond to any comments. Jeff any time frame on projected .NET study guides under the Exam Cram style of writing? IE Windows Standard .NET Server. Also will the new Exam Cram offer any discounts or specials on 2nd editions material? My example is this, if your first edition doesn't provide a CD with e-book, like Microsoft 70-218 didn't then only a few months later you publish a 2nd edition with e-book, will or can Que offer some type of customer satisfaction by discounting "with proof of purchase" the 2nd or 3rd editions of your material? |
9/27/02: Doug Mechaber, MCSE, MCNE, CCDA, BCSD from Santa Monica says: |
To echo other comments: this is fantastic - it was my favorite series. Without skimping on material, most ExamCrams were direct and to the point. This was especially so for the NT4 series, which uniformly were very well done( and first in concept). I found a passel of errors in the 2000 series, especially some - judging by the authors - should have known better. I'd be interested in where the errata for those books appeared - it wasn't on the coriolis web site. (and some of the NT4 errors weren't published either). No doubt sales were helped by the computer book club promotions, but I'd like to think that series sales were also helped by the bundling with value added - like the CD and slipcase (and large discounts at the mega computer stores). I also vote for a ProjectPlus guide. [email protected] |
9/27/02: sc0rp10n from your HDD; update your DAT files... says: |
To Editor Becky Nagel: Many thanx for the corrections to the CramSession aspects of the article...I'm impressed...! Now, a question. The PrepLogic CDs included with the books--are these just a sample excerpt of the regular PL product? They'd have to be, or the price point would be higher by a shot. |
9/27/02: Jeff Riley from Indianapolis says: |
DeJuan: Very interesting proposition. Let me look into it and get back to you. Re: 70-218. How did you get your hands on a copy of this Exam Cram? It was supposedly never printed; was at the printer when Coriolis shut its doors. Can you please email me directly at [email protected] and give me more details. Re: .NET Exam Crams. Of course, this is information our competitors would love to have, so all I can say publicly is that our releases will be delivered according to Microsoft's delivery of the live exams. |
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