E. W. Cole
Businessman, Publisher, Freethinker
aka 'Cole of 
		the Book Arcade' 
	
	 E.W.COLE OF THE BOOK ARCADE
Last week we mentioned E.W.Cole of the 
	Book Arcade. Just a little more background on this remarkable Melbournian. 
	Some articles refer to him as a remarkable salesman. This is not true � Cole 
	was a shy man not suited to face-to-face sales. However, he was a remarkable 
	marketer. He could be called the father of marketing in Melbourne. We 
	mentioned the full-page advertisement he took out to promote his new book 
	arcade. He also used the sane tactic to find a wife � a full-page ad in the 
	Herald complete with detailed position description and his reasons for 
	choosing this approach to finding a wife. Cole knew the value of brand 
	marketing long before the term had been invented and created a striking 
	rainbow motif (a century before the Nike swoosh) with which he branded his 
	products. He would purchase large print over-runs from England and 
	elsewhere, print his own cover (complete with rainbow) and sell them at 
	cheap prices in his bookstore. In fact he really invented the concept of the 
	remaindered bookstore in Melbourne. His book arcade was always full of 
	colour, motion, entertainment and activity. You could watch the costumed 
	jugglers, buy food and drink, or find a quiet corner to curl up with a book.
	
	But all the time he was a man with a message. His Coles Funny Picture Books 
	contains ideas that were quite subversive. His attitudes on religion, 
	racism, social organisation and many other things were all politically 
	incorrect at the time, but he managed to give it all a humorous sugar 
	coating that enabled them to creep under the defences of otherwise 
	closed-minded people. If you get a chance to pick up a copy of Coles Funny 
	Picture Book at a fair or market, check to see when the particular edition 
	was published. His family took over the business and the publishing, and 
	over the years Coles ideas were bowdlerised and watered down. It is 
	interesting to watch how by the later 20th century the descendents are 
	finding Cole�s attitudes too radical and start to water them down with 
	unfunny politically correct views from the present. I sometimes wander 
	through Melbourne having conversations with E.W.Cole. �Tell me Mr Cole, what 
	do you think about traders wanting buskers removed form the Bourke Street 
	Mall during peak trading season?� �Great idea my boy. They should do what I 
	did � invite them into their store. I had all sorts of performers in my 
	Indian Bazaar in Howey Place. The crowds came in and usually went out with a 
	few books.� �But things are different now Mr Cole. Book stores are facing 
	competition from large overseas chains like Borders.� �Nonsense son. Bring 
	them on. If local bookstores have had all that time to establish themselves 
	and can�t compete with a few foreigners they shouldn�t be in the business. I 
	could beat them on price, I could beat them on atmosphere, I could beat them 
	on profitability and I could beat them on customer loyalty. If it has the 
	rainbow on it, they will buy it. Some of your current day bookstores have 
	made themselves a refuge for po-faced women from the middle suburbs who 
	don�t want to deal with real life but want to live in an imaginary world 
	pretending to be real life but expressing only a limited range of views. 
	That�s not what a bookstore should be. Books are fun � books are for 
	everyone �and books should expose people to new ways of thinking, not just 
	reinforce their current attitudes. Darwinism my boy. Let me tell you I was 
	pilloried for mentioning Darwin�s ideas in my day, but I got away with it 
	and changed some thinking along the way. And I believe in retail Darwinism � 
	the best adapted will survive.� �What about the protesters in the Mall, Mr 
	Cole. Many of them are expressing unfashionable views. You must have some 
	empathy with them.� �Not all of them my boy. You see, it is one thing to 
	make yourself feel good by confronting people and repeating pre-prepared 
	opinions. But that usually only hardens people in their current thinking. I 
	am interested in changing people�s thinking rather than feeling 
	self-righteous. That�s why I created the Funny Picture Book. Now tell me 
	more about this Internet thing son, I think it may have some real 
	possibilities.�
	If you see someone wandering past Howey Place in intense discussion with 
	an invisible stranger, it�s probably E.W.Cole and me.
	 
	
	
	
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