London Zoo is now selling not one but
two new guides.
The conventional guide is a whole new edition, after eight different editions of the previous incarnation. It features a squirrel monkey on the front cover, and is, as might be expected, high on style, low on depth. It manages to make two reasonably embarrassing gaffes: a picture of a rockhopper penguin purporting to be a Humboldt (they do at least have both species in the collection), and a three-toed sloth appearing instead of the resident two-toed.
Not a terrible guide, but not brilliant either - and a step back from the previous version, which did at least have a pleasing awareness of the zoo's heritage.
The second guide is a children's thing. Given the vacuity of the main version, I'm not sure that a children's guide is strictly necessary, although one can but hope that subsequent adult editions may be liberated to not treat their readers as if they had the attention-span of a toddler who's ODed on orange squash. This features a tiger on the front cover, and is "packed" with "cool stickers" and "cute postcards". It is "not for adults" apparently. It is all rather exhausting.
Each guide is priced at a rather enthusiastic £6 - or £10 for a pair.
Meanwhile, Wingham have also produced a new guide, their second. It is truly hideous in its design.
Although 12,000 guidebook sales to 2 million visitors is a pretty low take-up, surely it should be possible to make some profit on these numbers?
I've only just noticed this comment, posted earlier this year by Rob. I'd have said that 12,000 sales was a pretty good figure - especially as the bulk of those 2 million visitors will be returners rather than 'new' visitors (see discussion of German attendance figures, Zoochat
passim). The place doesn't exactly thrust guides at its visitors, either....
If a guidebook is seen as a Good Thing - and I think it should be, for both educational and marketing reasons - there are surely ways to raise the circulation. Having the person on the ticket booth on a generous bonus for each guide sold would be a start....