Posts Tagged ‘newspapers’

Condé Naste and Disney make publishing news

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Gourmet Magazine ceases print publicationThere has been some big news in the publishing industry recently, beginning with Condé Naste announcing the closure of four magazines. Gourmet, the oldest culinary magazine in America, will cease print publication after a final November issue, but continue to offer content via its website. Cookie, Modern Bride, and Elegant Bride are also being shut down.

Magazines and newspapers alike continue to struggle to generate profits with print publications — and print ads.

[...] publishers can no longer rely on the traditional print advertising model alone to see them through to profits. [..] Not only is the future of print in adapting to new models, be it digitally or beyond, but it also will be about finding several revenue streams from their content to offset losses from advertising, and rethinking the old — and sometimes cost inefficient — processes for producing magazines.

But as nice as “go digital” sounds as a solution, there is still the issue of how to generate revenue from online content. Should it be ad-based? Subscriber-based? Will readers pay for online content? These are just a few of the questions that are debated as publications move online and e-publishing continues to grow. Now the industry will have a big-name example to potentially follow: Disney.

Today The Walt Disney Company launched a subscription-based website — DisneyDigitalBooks.com — where it offers hundreds of digital children’s books for $79.95 a year. Users can choose stories that they read themselves, or follow along on the screen as voice actors read the books to them.

By pursuing a subscription online model — as opposed to focusing on downloads and sales for devices like the Kindle — Disney is placing a specific bet about where the children’s market is going, at least in the next three to five years. The move could send ripples through this corner of publishing, if only because of the size of Disney, which annually sells 250 million children’s books.

Disney’s plan is to utilize the online space to lead into other areas of the market that were previously unavailable to them, such as language learning. But as more content is being made available digitally, there are some fears that the increase in electronic publications will lead to widespread online file sharing and abuse of copyright, causing the publishing industry to suffer the same fate as the recording industry.

From choosing a revenue generating plan to choosing the best medium for their content, it’s clear that magazine, newspaper, and book publishers have many hard decisions ahead of them. It will be interesting to see how successful the industry is as a whole at adapting their business strategies to the digital world.

The lessons learned from failing

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

In January 2009, Information Architects (iA) was invited to participate in a paid pitch for the print redesign of Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger.

iA is a user experience design agency that specializes in developing branded online strategies and user interfaces for the software and publishing industries. Based in Japan and Switzerland, the group has amassed an impressive portfolio, with clients such as Mozilla and Zeit Online.

Of the five agencies developing pitches, iA was the only one specializing in user experience. They had a unique perspective to offer, and they focused on issues of usability, readability, and cross-media connections. The result: a gorgeous print design that ignored most newspaper design rules while incorporating user experience design rules.

iA’s redesign included online strategies such as putting readers’ comments next to the related article and increasing scannability by making “print links” — blue keywords — in the articles. They took a creative gamble, but in the end, they lost to another agency.

Why am I sharing this “Story of a Beautiful Failure”? I found it intriguing for many reasons, but there are two lessons that I think are great takeaways for professional writers: (1) it’s not enough to do something great — you have to be able to communicate its greatness to others; and (2) this kind of thinking outside the traditional design box is what professional writers do. (more…)

Old Media >> New Media – Kansan goes online

Monday, January 5th, 2009

The Kansas City Kansan, a GateHouse Media publication, is going online only starting Jan. 10, 2009. All print production will cease. According to an article posted to the newspaper’s web site:

The new KansasCityKansan.com Web site will offer greater opportunity for reader participation through comments and posting their own news and announcements. Businesses and civic organizations, for example, will be able to post their own press releases. Readers will find it easy to share community photos or their own stories and opinions.

As a former employee of Gannett, which has suffered its own economic turmoil over the last few years, I’ve consistently believed in the necessity for newspapers to adapt to the digital age. It’s true, the housing crisis has meant fewer real estate ads and forums like craigslist.org are surely eating into newspaper advertising dollars. Without that stream of revenue, it’s hard for newspapers as we know them to survive. But long before the housing market fell and small businesses were short of cash to spend on ads, the newspaper industry had an opportunity to adapt to the changing times. Now, as the Kansan is demonstrating, they are being forced to go digital and they are cutting jobs in the process. The Kansan is cutting its staff in half.

(more…)