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Two Views of Media

Things have been a bit busy, so I've been behind a bit in blogging. Two stories over the last few days are worth pointing to. The first, in the Economist, looks at some of the underlying economic trends driving disruption in the media overall -- it's not totally grim, but there are certainly some dark passages:

Pick almost any American newspaper company and you can tell a similar story. The ABC reported that for the 530 biggest dailies, average circulation in the past six months was 3.6% lower than in the same period a year earlier; for Sunday papers, it was 4.6% lower. Ad revenues are plunging across the board: by 22.3% at Media General, for example. In 2007 total newspaper revenues fell to $42.2 billion, not to be sniffed at, certainly, but a lot less than the peak of $48.7 billion in 2000.

But tucked neatly down at the end was the stuff I tend to see:

Not all is lost, however. Plenty of innovation is taking place, particularly at local papers, as the latest “Newspaper Next” report from the American Press Institute, an industry group, makes clear. It quotes 24 examples of newspapers becoming “information and connection utilities”, through such offerings as local internet forums. The Pocono Record has renamed reporters “content managers”, since they oversee all the coverage of their beat, in print and online, and get a bonus for higher web traffic.

The hero for industry optimists is Brian Tierney, a former public-relations executive who led a group of investors that borrowed heavily to buy Philadelphia's two main dailies. He has since revived them with a vigorous marketing drive. He is also finding new ways to drum up advertising, such as introducing a business column sponsored by a local bank. People said pigs will fly before our circulation rises, Mr Tierney recalled in a recent speech, before recounting how he celebrated a rise in circulation by projecting flying pigs onto the walls of the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Then over in the NYT earlier this week, Steve Lohr writes about the evolution of IDG. As the story notes:

"The excellent thing, and good news, for publishers is that there is life after print — in fact, a better life after print,” said Patrick J. McGovern, the founder and chairman of I.D.G.

The biggest single step in the company’s online shift came on April 2, 2007, when the last print edition of InfoWorld appeared and it became a Web-only publication. InfoWorld, a weekly, started out as Intelligent Machines Journal in 1978; I.D.G. bought it a year later, and it has long been one of the company’s flagship magazines.

There were nervous months after the switch as the company awaited the reaction from advertisers and readers, but before long InfoWorld’s Web audience was growing and its business improved. Today, I.D.G. says, the InfoWorld Web site is generating ad revenue of $1.6 million a month with operating profit margins of 37 percent. A year earlier, when it had both print and online versions, InfoWorld had a slight operating loss on monthly revenue of $1.5 million.

Both stories showcase the daunting challenges and changes the media face, but also note that the changing economic model can be an opportunity as well. Unique content that is tailored to the right audience, news, entertainment, opinion, whatever, will find a certain level of viewers -- online/offline or a combination thereof.

Published Wednesday, May 07, 2008 7:33 AM by FrankShaw

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