After Hachette’s recent announcement that its manga publishing arm, Yen Press, would be joining Orbit, the mega-publisher’s science fiction and fantasy imprint, and that Kurt Hassler would be taking over as the sole Publishing Director of Yen Press (see “Yen Joins Orbit”), ICv2 caught up with Hassler and asked him a few questions about the effect of the internal reorganization on Yen Press and the current state of the manga market in North America.
Will this reorganization result in any change in the trade dress of Yen Press titles—i.e. the addition of an Orbit symbol, etc.?
As stated in the press release, Yen Press will continue to develop as an independent imprint. It’s worth pointing out that this is an internal organizational change more than anything and should at a consumer level be largely invisible. The trade dress of Yen’s titles will remain unchanged. The Orbit logo will not be added to Yen titles.
Will this result in any changes to Yen Press’ release schedule for 2009?
Not at all.
Roughly how many titles do you anticipate publishing in 2009 under the Yen imprint?
Yen will release about 100 titles in 2009 under the Yen imprint.
What’s your take on the current state of the manga market in
I think that the current state of the manga market in
How has Yen Plus been doing? Any changes planned for Yen Plus going forward?
The reaction to Yen Plus has been overwhelmingly positive. Based on the feedback we’ve received, fans have been thrilled with the title mix and diversity of the selection. We don’t have any changes planned at the moment (other than some lineup changes that will be clarified in the coming months), but the key to success is always revising your strategies based on an evolving market.
How has your reporting structure changed as a result of Yen joining the Orbit Division?
Based on the reorganization, I will report to Tim Holman who has been placed at the head of the new Orbit division, and Tim will report directly to David Young, our CEO.