Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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What If the Newspaper Industry Made a Colossal Mistake?

What If the Newspaper Industry Made a Colossal Mistake? | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

What if, in the mad dash two decades ago to repurpose and extend editorial content onto the Web, editors and publishers made a colossal business blunder that wasted hundreds of millions of dollars? What if the industry should have stuck with its strengths—the print editions where the vast majority of their readers still reside and where the overwhelming majority of advertising and subscription revenue come from—instead of chasing the online chimera?

 

That’s the contrarian conclusion I drew from a new paper written by H. Iris Chyi and Ori Tenenboim of the University of Texas and published this summer in Journalism Practice. Buttressed by copious mounds of data and a rigorous, sustained argument, the paper cracks open the watchworks of the newspaper industry to make a convincing case that the tech-heavy Web strategy pursued by most papers has been a bust. The key to the newspaper future might reside in its past and not in smartphones, iPads and VR. “Digital first,” the authors claim, has been a losing proposition for most newspapers....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Readers continue to leave print newspapers, but they’re not migrating to the online editions. What if almost the entire newspaper industry got it wrong?

 

In my opinion, newspapers were ripe for disruption because printing on dead trees was economically unsustainable and technology offers better reach -- when done right. The entire value proposition changed and like the music industry, newspapers reacted too slowly to the digital realities.

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There are now more Americans working for online-only outlets than newspapers

There are now more Americans working for online-only outlets than newspapers | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

As of March, there were 197,800 Americans working in the “internet publishing and broadcasting” sector versus 183,200 people working for U.S. newspapers.

The BLS data goes back to 1990, and since then employment at newspapers has fallen by nearly 60 percent, having peaked in June 1990 at 457,800 people. The number of newspaper jobs has fallen consistently since then.

Digital publishing, meanwhile, has grown considerably. Throughout much of the early 1990s there were around 30,000 online publishing jobs, though that figure grew to 112,000 by 2000. Then the dot-com bubble burst and the number of jobs shrunk by about half....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This chart pretty much says it all when it comes to traditional newspapers versus digital media jobs and trends.

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Newspapers Get Slammed Again: Ad Print, Digital Revs Dip

Newspapers Get Slammed Again: Ad Print, Digital Revs Dip | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

To paraphrase Oscar Wilde: “The only thing worse than transitioning from a print to digital advertising model, is not transitioning from a print to digital advertising model.”
OK -- Oscar’s version was a lot pithier. But the paradox pretty well sums up the predicament faced by newspaper publishers, who not only must contend with declining print circulation and ad woes, but also face disappointing returns on the digital ad side, per the Pew Research State of the News Media Report.

According to Pew, U.S. newspaper publishers’ total advertising revenue sank 8% in 2015 compared to the prior year, with most of this decline due to continuing drops in print ads, which still make up 75% of total ad revenues, and fell 10% last year.

However, digital, long touted by publishers as the future of the industry, isn’t even close to making up for these drops: Digital advertising actually sank by 2% as well.

(Pew’s estimates for ad revenue are based on its analysis of results from seven large, publicly-traded newspaper publishers; Pew notes that the Newspaper Association of America stopped reporting official revenue figures for the industry back in 2013)....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Newspapers continued their seemingly irreversible decline in revenue according to the latest Pew research.

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How Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos reinvented The Washington Post, the 140-year-old newspaper he bought for $250 million

How Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos reinvented The Washington Post, the 140-year-old newspaper he bought for $250 million | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A lot of people were surprised when Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos bought The Washington Post for $250 million in 2013.

At the time, The Post was a legacy media company facing years of decline, while Bezos had no prior experience in the newspaper business.

But in less than three years, Bezos has completely changed the outlook of the 140-year-old newspaper. Its readership has exploded, and its content has become more suitable for the digital world.

Here's a look back at how Bezos revitalized The Washington Post since taking over less than three years ago....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

So maybe we shouldn't write off traditional/legacy media so quickly after all?

rodrick rajive lal's curator insight, May 19, 2016 1:22 AM
I guess print is still in, and a lot can be done to re-invent traditional media!