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<title>Rebuilding Media</title>
<link>/home/corante/public_html/rebuildingmedia/</link>
<description>The fate of media</description>
<dc:language>en-us</dc:language>
<dc:creator></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-24T23:56:15-05:00</dc:date>
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<item>
<title>Transforming American Newspapers (Part 2) (Vin Crosbie)</title>
<link>http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/08/24/transforming_american_newspapers_part_2.php</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>(<em><a href="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/08/20/transforming_american_newspapers_part_1.php">Continued from Part 1</a></em>)</p>

<center>Violating the Principle of Supply & Demand</center>

<p>If the major reason for the American daily newspaper industry's demise were its stories contained too many dangling participles, then the industry could more easily comprehend its situation than instead hearing that the reason was it had violated the Principle of Supply & Demand.</p>

<p>The understanding of economics, particularly media economics, has <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Mathematician-Reads-Newspaper-Allen-Paulos/dp/038548254X/ref=pd_sim_b_2/102-4390827-8552144" target="_blank">never been its strong suit</a>, except if the topic is how many tons of newsprint to buy, how many points a major stock market dropped, or how cut expenses to match revenues. Most newspaper publishers, editors, or journalists tends to equate economics as solely the science of government financial policy, household spending, Wall Street speculation, and petroleum pricing. They don't understand or have forgotten that a major branch of it is the behavioral science of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microeconomics" target="_blank">Microeconomics</a> - the study of how individuals make decisions to allocate their time and activities.</p>

<p>The main <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradigm" target="_blank">paradigm</a> of microeconomics is known as <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_choice_theory" target=_blank"><em>rational choice theory</em> or <em>rational action theory</em></a>, which states that individuals choose the best action according to their preferences and what constraints of supply, demand, time, and access face them. In it now lays the demise of American daily newspapers as we know them.</p>

<p>How did the American daily newspaper industry violate the Principle of Supply & Demand by failing to adapt the industry's core product to a radical change in consumers' supply of news and information during the past 35 years? To understand how, both start and end at the roots of the newspaper industry. </p>

<p>Start in the European city of Strasbourg during 1605 when the world's first newspaper began publication. It used a technology developed there 164 years earlier by the metalworker Johannes Gutenberg, who had invented <en>a device for producing innumerable copies of the same text</em>. (Please keep that concept in mind, because it's now moldering the newspaper industry). The Supply & Demand equation for accessing daily changing information was then quite the <em>opposite</em> it is today: Consumers had little or no supply of daily news until the daily newspaper. So to produce newspapers, this adaption of Gutenberg's book printing technology spread quickly worldwide.<br />
 <br />
Some modern critics of newspapers say the industry is <em>leaden</em> and <em>'doesn't think outside the box.'</em> They probably don't realize the historical irony that underlay their criticisms. The core of Gutenberg's technology was a box containing <em>lead</em> type whose impressions could print innumerable copies of the same thing. In that core is the inherent limitation that <em>it produces the same edition for everyone.</em> Although in the 19th Century steam and later electrical power speeded Gutenberg's technology and the introduction of offset lithography during the middle of the 20th Century eliminated its use of lead, the analog technology used to produce today's daily newspapers is still Gutenberg's. Indeed, today's analog printing technology still has the same limitation that it had in Gutenberg's days - <em>it produces the same edition for everyone.</em></p>

<p>That technological limitation delineated the newspaper industry's editorial and advertising practices during the past four centuries. Because each edition had a finite number of pages and was printed by analog technology had to produce the <em>same</em> for everyone at once, newspaper editors had to select stories according to two criteria:</p>]]></description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">73512@/home/corante/public_html/rebuildingmedia/</guid>
<dc:subject>Newspapers</dc:subject>
<dc:date>2008-08-24T23:56:15-05:00</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>Transforming American Newspapers (Part 1) (Vin Crosbie)</title>
<link>http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/08/20/transforming_american_newspapers_part_1.php</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Ignorance isn't bliss to the dying. Witness the pathos of American daily newspaper companies. Most have finally begun to realize that the deterioration of their businesses isn't cyclical but grave. Yet few, if any, understand why. Almost all grasp for the reasons.</p>

<p>Some attribute their grave condition to advertisers suddenly switching huge portions of spending from print to online - an excuse that ignores more than 30 years of declines in those newspapers' printed editions' circulations and readerships. Some others attribute their deterioration to not having transplanted their content into online quickly enough -an excuse that ignores not only the dozen years they've spent transplanting it but how their online editions are now read even less frequently and less thoroughly than their printed editions.</p>

<p>Most of the print newspaper experts who diagnose these companies' condition still prescribe <a href="http://www.ajr.org/Articles.asp?id=3853" Target="_blank">stale nostrums</a> such as more consumer focus groups, subscription price incentives, more stylish typography, or shorter stories. Meanwhile, most of the experts who diagnose these companies' Web sites prescribe balms and accessories such as giving blogs to reporters, adding video, or having the readers themselves report the stories. American daily newspaper companies have long been too financially impatient to submit themselves to anything but ostensibly quick cures and they've even longer been too conceptually myopic to perceive the real reasons for their declines.</p>

<p>I'll declare the real reasons. There are but two and neither has anything to do with <em>multimedia, 'convergence', blogs, 'Web 2.0', 'citizen journalism,'</em> or any ancillary topics you may have heard presented at New Media conferences this millennium.</p>

<p>Nor is either of the real reasons advertisers' abandonment of printed newspapers. Their abandonment is a symptom, not the reason for the decline. Contrary to myopia of many newspaper executives, advertisers aren't newspapers' primary customers. Although advertising revenues may be sunshine for newspaper executives, the roots of their business are readers. A newspaper with readers will attract advertisers but a newspaper without readers will not. Readers ultimately support and sustain the newspaper business.</p>

<p>To understand the real reasons why the American daily newspaper industry is dying, first understand why more and more Americans are no longer reading daily papers and how their abandonment of newspapers has been wrought by changes in their own media economics. Also comprehend why the epicenter of the newspaper industry's problems in post-Industrial countries is America and exactly how grave the situation is there.<br />
</p>]]></description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">73506@/home/corante/public_html/rebuildingmedia/</guid>
<dc:subject>Newspapers</dc:subject>
<dc:date>2008-08-20T19:59:55-05:00</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>What to watch as The Sporting News launches free online formatted magazine. (Ben Compaine)</title>
<link>http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/07/23/what_to_watch_as_the_sporting_news_launches_free_online_formatted_magazine.php</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Today was the first public edition of <a href=" http://today.sportingnews.com/sportingnewstoday/20080723/ ">“The Sporting News Today.”</a> This is a free, online daily version of The Sporting News, the weekly magazine that got its start as a bible for baseball fans.  </p>

<p>The Sporting News has a rich history, starting publication in 1886. I remember my father subscribing in the 1960s. It was thick with box scores and stats for every team and every major sport. In 1977, when the Times Mirror Co bought the publisher for all of $18 million it had a circulation of about  356,000. By the time it was sold to <a href="http://www.vulcan.com/">Vulcan Ventures</a> in 2000 for $100 million it had a circulation of over 500,000, but it was being threatened by the successful launch of ESPN Magazine, which had 850,00 circulation within two years of its 1998 launch. </p>

<p> <img alt="07-23-2008_22-39-28.jpg" src="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/07-23-2008_22-39-28.jpg" width="469" height="317" "align=right"/ align="right" /></p>

<p>The Sporting News was sold again in 2006, to <a href="http://www.bizjournals.com/ ">American City Business Journals</a>. Today the circulation is about 700,000, but at an annual price of only $14.97 for a new subscription—compared to about $61.00 in constant dollars in 1978.</p>

<p>Like many print publications, The Sporting News has been substantially affected by online content. Daily sports news has been particularly hard hit. The Internet is made for getting late night scores, accessing the scads of stats that even casual fans crave, following teams in far-off cities—and all for little or, most often, no consumer cost. </p>

<p>Like most other print publications, it has had <a href="http://www.sportingnews.com/ ">an online presence. </a>The Sporting News Today is something else though. It is a magazine formatted for the screen. But it is not like a Web site. It involves no scrolling. It is pdf-like, though it is not read with Adobe Reader. It is not the print edition read online, as with<a href="http://www.zinio.com"> Zinio</a>. To me each screen looked like a double page spread in a magazine—but with no need for a gutter. I sort of felt that I had spread opened the tabloid-sized magazine. You will note that each of the “double pages” has one page number.</p>

<p>By offering to send subscribers an email each day, readers so do not have to bookmark anything. Just click the link.</p>

<p>The content is vintage Sporting News: Right now heavy on baseball, but lots on football—professional and college. There is hockey, basketball, NASCAR, tennis. Even Little League World Series coverage is promised. And, with a nod to WEB 2.0, it will offer readers the opportunity to provide their own input: “You’ll get a byline,  file to an editor.” (Actually, a clever spin on “Letters to the Editor.”)</p>

<p>No surprise, the business model for the Sporting News Today is, for the moment at least, advertising, though it was rather light for a first edition. The inaugural issue had a full page from SpeedTV.com, three half page house ads for Sporting News affiliates and a full page promotion for the revamped Sporting News magazine, which will become a bi-weekly. (Management expects to lose 100,000 circulation from current levels to the free online publication).</p>

<p>I’m not a design expert—I’ll leave that to my colleagues at <a href="http://www.innovation-mediaconsulting.com/home.php?idioma=EN">Innovation Media Consulting Group</a>.   But the Sporting News Today will feel comfortable to readers who like the look of print and are put off by clicking here and there for do their online reading. The layout feels modern but grounded in print. How that plays may be generational—or not.</p>

<p>As a final note, it may be worth pointing out that while traditional print publications are downsizing, The Sporting News Today is hiring. Indeed, I got turned on to its impending launch by Charles Apple, it’s new art director, who was <a href="http://www.visualeditors.com/apple/2008/07/charles-apple-leaving-virginian-pilot-for-sporting-news-e-paper/">hired away</a> from the Virginia Pilot newspaper.   (Has anyone seen numbers on how many print journalists have been hired by online-only ventures other than self-funded blogs?)</p>

<p>There has been speculation in recent years on when we will get the first announcement that a daily newspaper will shut down its presses completely and switch to digital-only. There are still some big hurdles, like portability.  But should services such as <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Kindle-Amazons-Wireless-Reading-Device/dp/B000FI73MA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1216865551&sr=8-1">Amazon’s Kindle</a>  take off,  allowing readers to take their digital publications on the go, then the Sporting News Today model may have legs and encourage a general interest newspaper to give it a whirl.<br />
</p>]]></description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">73462@/home/corante/public_html/rebuildingmedia/</guid>
<dc:subject></dc:subject>
<dc:date>2008-07-23T21:13:34-05:00</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>Hard data confirms changes in Wall Street Journal’s news choices under Murdoch (Ben Compaine)</title>
<link>http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/07/02/hard_data_confirms_changes_in_wall_street_journals_news_choices_under_murdoch.php</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>I really, really promise that I will not be stuck forever on what might be seen as a crusade about the change in the editorial mix of <em>The Wall Street Journal</em> since Rupert Murdoch took control. I don’t want to become the Ben-one-note on this as Lou Dobbs has become for his anti-immigration tirades.</p>

<p>Still, there is some news on the subject. I have <a href="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/02/07/murdoch_does_not_take_wall_street_journal_to_the_right_place.php">written several times</a> now about how the <em>Journal</em> has been devoting its front page to hot-off-the-press headlines that are essentially the same as what every other daily publishes: “Obama wins primary,” “Cyclone levels Sri Lanka.” This is a form of run-of-the-mill reporting to which the <em>Journal</em> brings little value added and, with earlier deadlines than most local dailies, perhaps less value.</p>

<p>But now comes some hard data—that’s what I like more than impressions—that does indeed confirm a substantial shift in the <em>Journal’s</em> editorial coverage since the change in ownership. The Project for Excellence in Journalism undertook a <a href="http://journalism.org/node/10769">content analysis of the front page stories</a> in the <em>Journal</em> for the four months before the December 12, 2007 date that News Corp. acquired control of Dow Jones, the parent of the WSJ and the three months following. Its finding was unambiguous:<br></p>

<blockquote>In the first three months of Murdoch’s stewardship, the Journal’s front page has clearly shifted focus, de-emphasizing business coverage that was the franchise, while placing much more emphasis on domestic politics and devoting more attention to international issues.  
</blockquote>
<img alt="pej_WSJ.png" src="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/pej_WSJ.png" width="478" height="348" align="left" />

<p>&nbsp;<br />
<p></p>

<p>The before and after change is most dramatic in several areas, as seen in PEJ’s chart I’ve cribbed here. Political news is up four fold, reflecting the intense coverage of the primaries that in the past election cycles would have received less space (if only because until recently the <em>Journal</em> rarely devoted more than a single front page column to any story). The full report at the Project’s Web site also compares the “new” Journal’s editorial mix with that of <em>The New York Times</em>, which Murdoch is keen compete with. There are still substantial differences, with the <em>Journal </em>devoting more of its front page to foreign topics, business and economics, less to politics. </p>

<p>Jack Shafer, writing at <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2193558/">Slate’s Press Box</a> last month, made note of the PEJ data, but chose to focus on his more generalized impression that the <em>Journal</em> may indeed be better under Murdoch because “it was swinging hard again in its traditional wheelhouse to produce great <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2193558/sidebar/2193648/">enterprise journalism</a>.” He proceeds in identifying some examples, all, indeed quality reporting in which the <em>Journal</em> has long excelled.</p>

<p>This may be wishful thinking on Jack's part. I hope not. He has certainly identified some fine-- and traditional -- Journal pieces. But I'm speculating that perhaps they stand out because, as Jack notes, the primary season is over, and there had been no devastating earthquakes or cyclones for a few weeks, and the presidential campaign was in pre-convention simmer. Indeed, in the midst of these fine articles was the <a href="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/06/04/wall_street_journal_contuinues_its_me_too_big_story_strategy.php">front page on June 4</a>, as Obama wrapped up the Democrat's nomination. It struck me immediately as I picked up the Journal and <em>The Boston Globe</em> from the driveway that the <em>Journal</em> article was readily interchangeable with the <em>Globe</em> (and other dailies) articles. In my analysis, every day the Journal wastes newsprint with such headlines, photos and copy is a day lost to do the type of journalism Jack is rightly trumpeting.<br />
<a href="http://www.reason.com/news/show/29001.html"><br />
I’ve mentioned before</a> that I have great respect for Murdoch as a savvy businessman and as a risk taker who has made real contributions to the competitive landscape of the media.. My current critique is that the hot news approach is not a strategic direction that plays on the Journal’s long time strengths. To the contrary, it takes the paper on a path that daily newspapers should be trying to leave behind.</p>

<p>Ok. ‘Nuff said. I’ll leave this behind. If only Lou would move on from his obsession.</p><br />
</p>]]></description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">73413@/home/corante/public_html/rebuildingmedia/</guid>
<dc:subject></dc:subject>
<dc:date>2008-07-02T14:52:09-05:00</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>Wall Street Journal contuinues its &quot;me too&quot; big story strategy (Ben Compaine)</title>
<link>http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/06/04/wall_street_journal_contuinues_its_me_too_big_story_strategy.php</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p><em>The Wall Street Journal</em>'s editors <a href="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/archives/2008/02/07/murdoch_does_not_take_wall_street_journal_to_the_right_place.php">again flub</a> an opportunity to differentiate themselves from the fading pack of daily local newspapers. At least the Times used the slightly more accurate "Claims" rather than "Clinches" and uses a marginally less trite photo.The Journal used the same photo as chosen by the <em>Philadelphia Inquirer</em> editors. <p align="center"><img alt="06-04-2008_07-53-06.jpg" src="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/06-04-2008_07-53-06.jpg" width="633" height="502" align="left" /> <img alt="06-04-2008_07-54-37.jpg" src="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/06-04-2008_07-54-37.jpg" width="504" height="684" align="left" /><br />
<img alt="06-04-2008_08-03-25.jpg" src="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/06-04-2008_08-03-25.jpg" width="473" height="523" /><br />
     <img alt="06-04-2008_08-22-29.jpg" src="http://rebuildingmedia.corante.com/06-04-2008_08-22-29.jpg" width="326" height="400" align="left" /></p>

<p><br />
It will take the a few circulation reporting periods (March 31 and September 30) to get a feel for whether the Journal's new "look like a conventional daily" strategy is a positive or negative.<br />
</p>]]></description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">73348@/home/corante/public_html/rebuildingmedia/</guid>
<dc:subject>Strategy</dc:subject>
<dc:date>2008-06-04T06:57:11-05:00</dc:date>
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