Trinidad and Tobago-born Anthony Phills has entered the world of publishing in an unconventional way. His Caricom Commerce Magazine, launched almost a year ago, is not in a traditional print format but is an app that can be downloaded on iPad and Android tablets.Phills, who spent several years in Canada but now lives in LA, was in the land of his birth last week for Animae Caribe where the spotlight was on his innovative work.
"The magazine has been around since 2012 and the genesis was in July when we were in Jamaica. It was my idea as we were in Jamaica at a Jamaica Fest Concert."A business person had approached me for financial assistance and it got me thinking. When I returned to LA, I got the bright idea to start a magazine to showcase people with products in the Caribbean islands that can be exported abroad," he said.
Phills explained that Caricom Commerce promotes business people and products from the region to the Caribbean diaspora, as well as international clients.Past issues have featured the Caribbean presence at the Toronto Film Festival and business opportunities in the Bahamas.Phills said he got the help from family, then started working on building applications that would allow the magazine to be downloaded on tablets.
"I got help from my brother, a writer, and sister who is a project manager and a business person in Jamaica to get our first issue off the ground in December," he said.That initial effort cost him between US$50,000 to $75,000 and Phills admitted that he had "to put my money where my mouth is."
"Apart from the writing of the content there is the programming of the app because we are on the iPad and we are on the Android, that is what makes it so expensive. I did not go to the bank, I financed this from my pocket," he said.Phills said in the past he had approached investors about coming to the Caribbean but they were reluctant because of stereotypes about the region. If it did not have to do with the beaches nobody wanted to know about it. But I told myself there is money in this region," he said.
Caribbean content
Phills' magazine features entrepreneurs with unique products or those who take traditional products and market them in new ways."So we featured Omar Lewis at the T&T Animation Festival. He took a colouring book for children and the Government gave him money to make a movie of it."I would like to take this colouring book and movie and give it a digital format for the Caribbean. I will build it for the Android and Apple iPad," he said adding that the aim is to have Caribbean content for users.
"But we do not have that here in the Caribbean. Apple has over one million applications, and if you look for how much of that is Caribbean it is very few, less than 50."I am producing this magazine so people will know where to get the content, so if I have the help of Government funding then I can develop the app for the colouring book and give it to any child for free from the Caribbean. It is not just a colouring book but tells a cultural story of the Caribbean."
Technology platform
Phills said he decided to release the magazine as an app for tablets rather than a Web site because "it talks the language of the world community.""That is where they are gathering their information and I could not find anything from the Caribbean doing this.Many people boast of having a magazine but they take the pages, scan them and then put it on an iPad. That is not delivering an experience," he said.He said the subscription price of US$20 a year is lower than what people would have to pay in the United States.
"This is strictly a digital app someone can download from iTunes or you download from Google Play."This is specifically for a tablet, so when you buy your tablet you will have Caribbean content on it with regard to business information. You download it and in the store section you download it for US$20 per annum, or each edition for US $3.99," he said.Phills said less than 100 people living in the Caribbean have subscribed to the magazine so far, but hundreds of people from the Caribbean diaspora have subscribed.
He said he is not yet making any money off the project and it is a long term project."It is not break even as yet as it is technology. I am not looking at the numbers as yet. My mission is to be in this for the long term and to make a difference," he explained.One of the projects Phills is working on for the immediate future is a Caribbean recipe book in digital format.
"The Caribbean has great foods. So you have a recipe and pictures of shark and bake and I build the app and spin it around on the screen and when it is clicked on you get the different flavours."Then people can order it from anywhere in the world. It is something I would like to work on with the Ministry of Trade," he said.Phills believes Caricom Commerce Magazine is unique.
"We are not your standard magazine. We are here to help and guide Caribbean businesses. When people from around the world want to know about the Caribbean they will read our magazine. We want to highlight the Caribbean as the best place in the world," he said.