June 10, 2010

Is AT&T's new data pricing a bad sign for media's iPad dreams?

Posted by Ben Compaine
Two pieces of seemingly unrelated news hit the online world about 24 hours apart. However, the first may weigh heavily on the second.

Number one was the announcement yesterday (June 2) from AT&T signaling the end, for now at least, of unlimited wireless broadband. As of June 7 most 3G iPad users and all buyers of iPhones and other AT&T connected smartphones will have to pay for data based on usage. Unless grandfathered, from now on it will all be metered.

According to most reports (the New York Times’ David Pogue among them), most smartphone users should come out ahead by under either of the two plans. AT&T itself calculated that 65% of its subscribers use less than 200 mb of the lower price option (half the cost of the current unlimited plan they have) and altogether 98% use under the 2 gb limit of the higher price plan. But for the newer iPad, optimized for streaming video and more accommodating for watching You Tube, will these parameters stunt their use?

The matters if we probe the implications of the second news item, an AP story under the headline “Publishers see signs the iPad can restore ad money.” It began: “Good news for the news business: Companies are paying newspapers and magazines up to five times as much to place ads in their iPad applications as what similar advertising costs on regular websites.”

The story noted that “early evidence suggests the iPad is at least offering publishers a way to get more money out of advertisers.” Perhaps prophetically, though, author Andrew Vanacore hedged his bets, adding two graphs later: “Still, a lot will need to go right for publishers before the iPad and imitator tablet computers become a significant source of income.”

The seeds of what may not go right comes soon enough. Describing why iPad applications such as USA Today’s can justify higher ad rates than the standard online ad, Vanacore replays this scenario: “A reader can click on Courtyard by Marriott's USA Today ad and then with a flick of a finger scroll through images of the hotels' updated lobby design. Another tap and a high-definition video appears, full of happy hotel guests.”

But wait. With AT&T’s new data limited plans, this simple “tap” will generate perhaps megabytes of “high definition” video. Will tablet users want to eat up precious data usage on a Marriott ad. When the pool was bottomless, well, so what. With the pool is emptying fast, then perhaps not. At least, not as spontaneously.

AT&T’s new data plans are likely to be mimicked by other carriers eventually. Some or all might hold off initially so as to gain a short term competitive advantage. But they know AT&T is right. The spectrum for data is finite and when any commodity is free it get overused. Some mechanism is needed to ration it.
Every decision has consequences. It’s not unusual for some to be unintended. Matt Richtel, in his report describing AT&T’s data plan announcement, closed his piece with this anecdote:
“Mike Lapchick, an AT&T customer in Chicago, said that he tended to use his iPhone mostly for e-mail, and that he would probably see his data bill drop in half to $15.“But Mr. Lapchick, who is the chief executive of a company that makes software used by Internet retailers to allow consumers to zoom in on product images, has another concern. As unlimited data plans go away, it could prompt cellphone users to watch their intake.”
He may not have realized it, but Lapchick could have been describing every media business that has hope that iPad and its competitors' forthcoming tablets may just have been blindsided by AT&T without being aware of what hit them. At least not yet.

COMMENTS
1. Top Online Universities on July 22, 2010 1:09 AM writes...
Some or all might hold off initially so as to gain a short term competitive advantage. But they know AT&T is right. The spectrum for data is finite and when any commodity is free it get overused. Some mechanism is needed to ration it.
2. Arika on May 10, 2011 12:50 PM writes...
The new data pricing of AT&T won't make any bad sign to any one. Very informative and important news for me. Thanks for the post.
3. Arika on June 29, 2011 1:14 PM writes...
Older iPad is better than new. It was better in apps and video and all types games. Email technology is the best in iPad. But the new pricing should be given by the user and upcoming user vote or opinion. It will be better for AT&T.


July 17, 2009

Another Innovator's Dilemma: Book Publishers Uncertain About E-Book Releases

Posted by Ben Compaine

 According to a piece from The New York Times this week, “No topic is more hotly debated in book circles at the moment than the timing, pricing and ultimate impact of e-books on the financial health of publishers and retailers.” It goes on to says that publishers are concerned about making e-editions of their trade books available the same time as the print edition.

Amidst the uncertainty of how to treat the e-books is the fear of cannibalization of hardcover sales. “If you as a consumer can look at a book and say: ‘I have two products; one is $27.95, and the other is $9.95. Which should I buy?’,” according to Dominique Raccah, chief executive of Sourcebooks.

I’ve been delving into the nuances of book distribution and marketing since I wrote a book about the subject in 1978. And, typical for anything about the book publishing industry, notably missing form this article, and most such discussions, is an examination of the economics and the retail marketplace.

First, for bestsellers, at least—which is what this article focuses on—the real retail price of a hardcover fiction is not about $25 or $30 but the 40% discount price charged by most major outlets, including Amazon and B&N. Thus, the real price difference for most consumers is roughly $15 to $18 for the hard copy vs. $10 for the e-book.

Second, the article does have one data point—that Amazon is paying the same price for the e-book as the hardcover. Assume that is 50% off list. So that from the publisher’s position, it gets the same revenue no matter which format. And it saves the manufacturing cost. And it gets no returns! What’s not to like?

Third, this discussion would be enhanced by knowing how author royalties are being handled these days. If the author is earning a royalty based on a percentage of the revenue the publisher receives, then it is at worst a wash whether it is a percentage of the physical book or the price the e-book distributors pay. And to the extent that books are price elastic, the $10 e-book price point could potentially increase sales, thus resulting in greater revenue.

COMMENTS
1. Nate Wilson on November 17, 2009 4:00 PM writes...
Great article! This seems like a no-brainer to me and if major publishers don't make these rather simple changes in their business models, they absolutely deserve to lose their business. My opinion is that there will always be demand for the nostalgia of paper print, albeit a smaller niche as the future progresses. For now, I am not impressed enough with the limited capabilities of handheld e-book readers to buy one and commit to digital books. My laptop is an inconvenient way to read e-books (relative to a light-weight, ultra-portable paper book) because of it's awkwardness, battery limitations and cumbersome size. The only limitation keeping my iPhone from being the ideal e-book reader (within the constraints of currently available technology) is its too-small screen size. Apple designers take note.
2. clie78787878 on December 4, 2009 5:09 AM writes...
" .Hello,
'Yes', the Cart can be used for subscriptions.
Majority of our merchants' buyers are actually international. Sadly, not a lot of local users are accustomed to buying things online.
It does not include a website (although we also offer that service separately). You can get any 3rd party to do the website and we will just integrate with them.
regards
hazz.hazz"
3. Rabblais on June 11, 2010 2:25 PM writes...
The real difference SHOULD be that e-books have a huge advantage. The printing costs, binding costs, shipping costs, etc., have all disappeared.
Check out Baen Books (Baen.com). I've been buying books for years, e-books, at a great price. For my favorite authors I also get the dead tree edition.
In the long run, this is a great way to get books. If I see one I like, I can order it and start reading in a couple of minutes. 
This is so successful that Baen actually has about 50 FREE books online. Why? Great advertising for their different authors and series. 
This is the wave of the future. It's ecologically better (no waste of paper). It's quick. It's a far better medium for textbooks. A school district could buy a years license for X number of downloads. And books could be updated each year. All for far less money.
This is the new tech. In fifty years, this is the only way it will be done. Since we CAN do it now, maybe we should.
4. Kaleberg on July 1, 2011 10:15 PM writes...
I just popped over to Amazon, and there the typical Kindle book is maybe a dollar or two cheaper than the physical copy on a typical price between $10 and $20. That isn't much in terms of savings. The paperback or a used copy is often cheaper than the electronic version. Of course, a lot of people find the electronic version to be worth its relatively high price, but ebooks aren't about cost savings to the consumer.
The big difference is price fixing, or agency pricing, as they call it. Amazon can set the prices on physical books, so they are frequently sold for half the publisher's list price. The publishers set the prices on ebooks, so they can enforce their high prices.
I usually buy the hard copy. If I don't like it enough to reread it, I resell it on half.com. Otherwise, I spend the 10 or 15 minutes it takes to scan it with a sheet feeder. Then I recycle the original.

July 15, 2009

Network externalities means different business model solutions for old media and new

Posted by Ben Compaine

The difference between the business model needs of the legacy media and the new Web based media has t do with network externalities. This economic concept holds that the value of the services increases exponentially with the number of users of the service. Think telephone networks, fax, Facebook. In all these cases the value is in other users. For the traditional media, there are few if any network effects. The value of the content of the Boston Globe to be is neither increased nor decreased for me as circulation does down—or up. Twitter, on the other hand, becomes more valuable as more users can get access to posts or me to the potential posts or more and more other users.

I’ll come back to this at the end.
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The construct of network externalities struck me while reading coverage of the annual media conference sponsored by small investment bank Allen & Co. for 27 years usually generates news just because of who attends: the top executives of the big media companies, the young stars of the Internet challengers, investment bankers, some politicians, academics and a few outliers, like a sports star. Though the sessions are closed to the media, there are enough leaks to keep the scribes busy.

Most years the gist of the news is about who might be acquiring or merging with whom. This year, in the midst of an economic slump that puts the kibosh on merger activity, much of the chatter was about business models. Media companies that for decades—or centuries—thought they knew where their revenue was coming from are in a quandary about where they might be getting their next dollars or Euros.

Thus the latest theme is the insistence-- from New Corp’s Rupert Murdoch, IAC’s Barry Diller, Liberty Media’s John Malone, and Disney’s Robert Iger, among others -- that the free content gravy trend must end. Consumers are going to have to learn to pay for content online as they do in print or via cable, for music and movies. The legacy media have been struggling with the online model for years now—so far with limited success to show for all their studies, experiments and worries.

But for me, the more fascinating discussion was one of the business models for the new guys, like Twitter and YouTube. Diller reportedly told one session that he did not see how Twitter could make any money, despite its growing visibility. It has something north of 4.5 million accounts, but only a small fraction actually posts anything.

What business model might work for Twitter? It has been highly successful in attracting users and in generating “buzz.” But so far it does not have a business model. It is operating on $55 million of venture capital.

A report on the Allen & Co conference, says that apparently some of the smartest media and Web executives could not come up with a model that would work to generate revenue without undercutting the network externalities that have been so crucial to Twitter's adoption.

Barry Diller, a media industry veteran, commented "I think it's a great service. I just don't think it's a natural advertising medium." John Malone, a cable industry pioneer and savvy media investor, voiced a similar view. Twitter would be hard-pressed to sell advertising on its messaging service without alienating users. He added that Twitter's best bet is to simply get people so addicted to the service that they might eventually pay fees. Malone claimed that Warren Buffet, one of the most successful investors, was thinking along the same lines, applying that model to YouTube, another media property that is wildly successful as measured by use, but still quite unprofitable. Buffett told Malone he would pay $5 a month to continue using it (that’s easy to say for the second wealthiest man in the world).

So here we have publishers and programmers and cable operators not only worried about their tried, if not quite true, business models in the face of declining circulation or viewership, unable even to see a healthy financial outcome for the new players that are growing exponentially, at the same time they achieve millions of users. Can it be that bleak?

Maybe that is why the latest round of investment at Facebook valued that money-sink at “only” $6.5 billion, down from the implied $15 billion by Microsoft’s investment in 2007.

So, finally, back to network externalities. The reason why a subscriber fee as a revenue source is a dangerous road for Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, or YouTube and the like is that any sort of charge, even a nominal one, is likely to lop off a substantial portion of its user base. This is the "Penny Gap.” – the experience that getting a user to go from free to any sort of payment, even a penny, is, in the online world, harder than getting a paying subscriber to pay more. That is, going from free to one cent a month would see a larger drop off in users than a service charging $1 raising its price to $2. The Penny Gap effect sets the network externality model in reverse. As some users drop off, the service becomes less useful to the remaining users, they are less enamored with it and drop and so it spirals down. Thus, services that thrive on network externalities need to proceed very cautiously—as their founders and managers presumably understand.

The folks who run the Web sites of legacy media, whether the online sites of the newspapers or newer sites like Hulu, do not have this issue. The value to me of my local newspaper—or its Web site—does not depend on the increase or decrease in the number of subscribers (except indirectly in the form of maybe more or less content as it generates more or less revenue).

The Penny Gap issue remains. Though media execs are calling for an end to free content as a way to save their franchises, so far no one has been willing to make the move, as they fear it will have a greater impact on the ad revenue than user fees will bring in. When The New York Times abandoned its subscriber Times Select pay tier, it made the decision that it could make more from advertising to large numbers than from a combination of subscriber revenue and lower advertising dollars.

The lesson is that the legacy media folks are going to have to solve their business model problem with a different solution than the one that might be best for new content Web sites like Twitter.

June 19, 2009

What's the Boston Globe Worth? A newsstand copy may cost you more than the company

Posted by Ben Compaine
So The New York Times Co. has put the Boston Globe on the market and has acknowledged that a few folks are kicking the tires.
What could the Globe fetch? Well, certainly nothing within a rifle shot of the $1.1 billion it paid 16 years ago. David Carr, himself of the Times, asked six experts who specialize in valuing media properties. You could get the short answer in his column.
But even more fascinating is the almost stream-of-conscious responses of the six that he posts verbatim on the Media Decoder blog at the Times site.
The values—all guesses of course-- range from $250 million to a negative $25 million. Yes—The Times Co. might need to offer a buyer (if it could be called that) cash to take off their books the stream of losses projected for the paper into the immediate future, the union contracts and the 400 guaranteed-for-life jobs.
Bottom line? The price of the newspaper company may be less than what it charges ($1.00) to buy a copy of the newspaper.
Who woulda thunk?

May 16, 2009

Newspapers shouldn't be seeking -- and don't need-- government help

Posted by Ben Compaine
Few of my friends or acquaintances are fans of the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal. I live in Cambridge, Mass, where President Obama received 88% of the vote in November.
So I thought I’d call their—and your—attention to the lead editorial in today’s paper. Titled “Ink-Stained Politicians,” it is critical of congressional initiatives to “rescue” the newspaper industry. One of the leaders of this movement is my own senator, John Kerry. As are many of us, he is concerned about the future of the hometown Boston Globe. (The stakes may be particularly high, though, for the senator. In his re-election bid last year the Globe gushed: "The case for reelecting John Kerry would be strong under any circumstances . . . [but] the country needs his voice more than ever.")
So it was Sen. Kerry’s subcommittee that held a hearing on May 6 titled "The Future of Journalism." It was a morose affair, with publishers enumerating the fate of failing and fallen comrades. Then the senators turned to the culprits, Huffington Post and Google.
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The hook for the hearings was what role Congress could conjure to help out what Kerry buys into as “the fourth branch of government.” One proposal, from Maryland Senator Benjamin Cardin, would allow newspapers to convert to nonprofit status (hmm-it seems like the point is that they are already nonprofits. What they should say is not-for-profits). Their operating revenues would be tax exempt. In return, they would be precluded from endorsing political candidates, though, as the Journal points out, that wouldn’t prevent them from taking sides more subtlety.
The other idea being floated was some sort of an antitrust exemption that, as described by Dallas Morning News publisher James Moroney, would allow the newspaper industry to conspire to find ways for making money from putting the work of its journalists online. Of course, I thought that was what the industry has been doing with such projects as Newspaper Next and The Newspaper Project. But I suppose a major league baseball-like exemption would allow publishers to band together for steps that would prevent the Huffington Posts and Googles from making money off their backs.
The Journal’s position is one that I have trumpeted, as have my colleagues here Dorian Benkoil and Vin Crosbie. That is to let the forces of technologies, consumer behavior and the marketplace play themselves out, at least for awhile longer, before panicking. I have argued (as have others) that there will be changes, for sure. But that there will also evolve multiple business models. There will be winners and losers. Services lost-- for example some local coverage if some cities or towns lose their daily printed papers—are highly likely to be regained as new players jump in to fill a vacuum.
We see hints of that with an array of Web sites that focus on local and even hyperlocal news. Some, like EveryBlock, for the moment are compendia of links to local government sites, some blogs and even local news from other sources. But that doesn't mean that is their end point. It is their opening gambit. Should they gain traction some will start adding original content (or they may find the to gain traction they will need original reporting). A few, such as Buffalo Rising and Patch, already do have reporters covering the local scene. Very few now. But given time, and a market, more later.
Dallas’s Moroney speaks for many in the legacy media who are urging Congress to legislate a "consent for content" requirement to get the Googles and Huffington Posts of the online world to pay "fair compensation" for content they pick up and then sell advertising on. The Journal comments “So, although most newspapers are giving away their content free online, the feds should guarantee them a stipend from anyone who gets someone to pay for it. There's a winning business model.”
In any event, it would seem to be a matter for negotiation rather than legislation.
The Journal continues: “The larger story here is that newspapers are enduring the familiar process of economic "creative destruction," in this case brought on by the Internet. Advertisers are fleeing to search engines, while barriers to entry in publishing have crashed. Despite the pain this causes to certain companies, this is not much different than any other industry buffeted by new technology or business strategies.”
Creative destruction is right. In the early 1990s, the 200 year old Encyclopaedia Britannica was a $650 million company. Five years later in was bringing in one third that. It’s business model based on a high priced part time sales force selling “guilt” as much as $2000 sets of books was undermined by Microsoft’s Encarta, given away for free on a CD with a new computer and based on an old Funk & Wagnall supermarket-distributed encyclopedia. The World Book suffered similarly. Both have had to retreat and reformulate to survive in the world of DVDs and online delivery. Where was Congress then?
The Journal’s editorial concludes with an argument almost stolen (dare I charge?) from a recent post of mine, save the last line:
“Some new business model will emerge for journalism, if not for all newspapers, and in the meantime the business of reporting the news isn't vanishing. It is taking new forms and adapting, with newspapers growing their audiences online even as the sources of their revenue shift. The industry is currently debating how to charge customers for content, and no doubt many experiments will be tried. No matter who emerges victorious, the journalism business will be stronger and more credible if it avoids the government's embrace.”
To its credit, the Obama Administration is keeping its distance. Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, responding to a question, commented that while it's sad for cities to lose their daily papers, any public assistance "might be a tricky area to get into.…I don't know what, in all honesty, government can do about it."
The sooner the suits in Washington and the executive suites in Dallas understand that, the better off it will be for the future of journalism.

COMMENTS
1. karenc on May 16, 2009 11:17 PM writes...
Unlike this article, the Wall Street Journal article is extremely inaccurate in how they portray the hearing. The conclusion that one gets reading it is that Senator Kerry and the rest of that sub-committee are speaking of a bailout - something never mentioned in the hearing.
In addition in a bizarre paragraph, they twist Senator Kerry's reference to the media as the fourth estate, wording that has been used since the 19th century to refer to a free press as a check on government, to somehow mean he favors government influenced media. (The fact is that he was a co-sponsor in 2005 to a Lautenberg bill that would outlaw government agencies from paying for propaganda - as various Bush agencies did in 2004.)
I watched the hearing and to me one good thing was that it got some people from the MSM and some news aggregators together. What seems clear is that it would be impossible to fund a newsroom on the revenues that newspapers can currently get from online viewing of their newspapers. However, Google News and other aggregators need the content from news rooms to function.
Here is a link to a Washington Post article that explains that it was legislation that defined the current playing field - where Google et al flourish and newspapers fail. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/15/AR2009051503000.html Where other than the Commerce Committee's sub-committee on Communications should this occur?
It also is highly likely that plans for this hearing were initiated before the Boston Globe's plight was known. In addition, though the BG editorial board has always endorsed him, their reporting has often been pretty weak. I seriously doubt that there are many papers in this country where a reporter would have gotten away with accusing a 4 term Senator just after he announced that he would soon be treated for cancer of not being honest because he had not told him this 2 weeks before he had told all of his family and close friends. This is clearly not favoritism.

March 27, 2009

For-Profit, Not-for-Profit, Unprofitable for-Profit: All to be Part of the Media Model Mix

Posted by Ben Compaine
A college classmate, Peter, who lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan, asked me what “my take” was on the changes in the media world, referring to the de facto demise of this home town Ann Arbor News.
If you’ve been on vacation in Bali and didn’t want to pay the $15 a day resort Internet fee, the shut down of the 45,000 circulation News will make this the first city to lose its newspaper. The plan, according to owner Advance Publications, is to completely shut down the operation, lay off all empoylees, then start fresh with two new companies that will need far fewer staff. One, a Web venture called AnnArbor.com, will have some original reporting but rely substantially on reader input and community forums. A second company is described as a printing company that will publish a twice weekly newspaper fo some sort. Advance is also cutting back its daily newspapers in Flint, Saginaw, and Bay City to a thrice weekly schedule.
Types of organizations eligible for non-profit status under IRS 501(c)
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My take, I wrote Peter, is that I suspect new players will see it as an opportunity to pick up the slack. They will enter with a different expense base. Maybe no single one will totally replace today's version of the newspaper, but in aggregate they will cover whatever territory for which there is a demand, e.g., an entertainment paper-- probably ad supported. More local stuff online. More stuff you can view on iPhone-like devices or Kindle-like. We’re in a period of fits and starts, but if there is a market there will be big guys or entrepreneurs who will fill the gaps. At the premium end there is the example of the for-profit (they hope) GlobalPost.com. The low end may be the for-profit (they hope) citizen journalist new AnnArbor.com.
But what about the not-for-profit model, a proposal popularized by an op-ed piece in The New York Times last month? An academic study being prepared for publication in the Journal of Media Economics this summer (I’ll post more details in July) looks at the fortunes of nonprofits in the magazine business. It notes that “nonprofit” can take many forms, both legally and as operational models. Many not for profits rely heavily on advertising revenue, just as their for-profit cousins. The study observes that they can be just as susceptible to economic downturns as for profit publications.
Indeed, at a small conference I attended earlier this month, I pointedly asked Rick Edmonds of the Poynter Institute whether the general downward pressures facing the newspaper industry had affected the St. Petersburg Times. That paper is something of the poster child for the non-profit model. The paper is controlled by a foundation set up by the late Nelson Poynter. If the paper has a surplus – the nonprofit term for profit—it declares a dividend. This is turn is the primary source of support for the many good program of the Poynter Institute. Edmunds had to admit that the Times is indeed taking a hit from the same forces felt by all newspapers. It has made staff cuts in its newsroom to help keep up profit. Even so, dividends are down. The Poynter Institute has a comfortable cash reserve for now. But the larger point is that the Times as well as the Institute are not immune to the forces and trends in the industry or the economy.
Philanthropic organizations—even the wealthiest—cannot defy gravity. Harvard, the richest of universities, is having to make major cutback because its endowment—line the financial markets—shrunk 22% ($8 billion) between July and October 2008 alone.
So let’s suppose that a newspaper does indeed have a billion dollar endowment behind it. To generate income it must invest that money somewhere. The more aggressively it’s invested, the more money for the newsroom. If invested in Treasury notes, the endowment is safer—but it may be short changing its mission—essentially leaving money on the table that could be used for journalism. So it takes a moderate course of investment. And suppose that lets the endowment generate a 5% return devoted to newspaper operations. That would be $50 million initially, a nice subsidy to keep up salaries, news bureaus, staffing. But what happens, as it has this past year, if the invested funds lose 20% of their value—well under the markets overall financial loses in the past year, thanks to our hypothetical endowment's conservative portfolio.
Now, with an $800 million portfolio, if it still drew 5%, it could only add $40 million to its income. What’s a publisher to do? Just as advertising and circulation revenue are falling, so is the endowment income that could otherwise prop up its finances. True, it may be better off than its fully for- profit brethren. But it will inevitably need to make cuts: in personnel, in travel, in salaries—the same types of cuts we hear about weekly.
So not-for-profit is not the solution, endowments are not the solution. What is?
As I wrote to Peter, there is not a solution. We have left behind an either/or world for one of many options. There is opportunity for non-profits, such as the well established Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting or the new Pro Publica. The entrepreneurial for-profit sector is represented by a new model with GlobalPost. The Detroit newspapers are leading the way (or were pushed) for daily newspapers in hybrid online and print. Advance Publications is trying out another for profit model in Ann Arbor.
The result will be an evolving stew of print, online, mobile, video and audio news sources—international, national, local and hyperlocal. For profit and not for profit. From existing well known media companies, from nonmedia players, from entrepreneurial start-ups. Those that will be successful and those that will prove unsuccessful.
When I teach about marketing, the most important word I emphasize is the word “some.” I tell them not to think in terms of “People want more news” or “People are willing (or unwilling) to pay for…” Market segmentation is about “some." “Some people” want. “Some people” will pay. Some. The digital technologies here and still emerging make it far more efficient to provide news, entertainment, whatever, to each of us in more forms than at any time in history.

COMMENTS
1. Peter Jacobson on March 29, 2009 10:47 PM writes...
I largely agree with Ben's analysis. What's exciting is the way that new media approaches and strategies can emerge to replace old ways of transmitting news and content.
But will there be enough people on the ground who will actually gather and report the news? Or will the new media simply expand the current contentless talking heads approach to news? Will there be enough staff to track local politics and hold officials accountable? Will wrongdoing be exposed?
If online news services can replace the essential local news that papers like the Ann Arbor News have provided, then the transition may well result in the positives that Ben mentions. As someone who still likes the feel of the newspaper, I'm skeptical. But my children, no doubt, will not mourn the demise of any newspaper. They simply don't have the investment in it that I do.

February 26, 2009

$10 a month for SMS, not a dime for the digital newspaper. What's wrong with this picture?

Posted by Ben Compaine
There is a delicious irony that the wireless phone companies reap the rewards of enlisting tens of millions of users to pay about $10 monthly for the feature of sending and receiving 160 character text messages, yet publishers can’t make a business of convincing a small fraction of that number to pay half that amount to receive an online “newspaper” or magazine.” We pay to create our own information but won’t pay to receive news and other information created by “professionals.”
This phenomenon is at the heart of a sudden groundswell of concern for the future of the newspaper. Of course, it’s been building, with wave after wave of bad news (which editors thrive on when it refers to anything but their own backyard) of steep declines in circulation and an erosion in advertising that transcends the fall off signaled by the general recession.
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And the remedies being proposed? Stripped to their core, there are two. One is to rely on some form of philanthropy. An investment officer at Yale and a financial analystpropose turning newspapers into nonprofit organizations, perhaps endowed by a foundation. They estimate that it would take only $5 billion to fund The New York Times (assuming I suppose a stock market that is more robust that we see at the moment).
The second is to cajole readers to pay something for the online version or to pay more for the print version. In this column I’m focusing on the latter. Another day I’ll add my analysis to the non-profit fantasy.
The re-ignition of the “pay for content”—or as it is now called a “paywall” --- is a response to the tsunami of bad news emanating from all corners of the legacy media business. Although local television and radio are hurting while magazines are downsizing, most of the Sturm und Drang has been about the even worse performance of newspapers. The New York Times has eliminated its dividends to conserve cash and has taken a $250 million loan from a Mexican oligarch. Hearst Corp., once the largest newspaper publisher in the U.S., put the Seattle Post-Intelligencer up for sale Jan. 9, and announced it will convert to digital only or shut it down if a buyer is not found soon.Same for its San Francisco Chronicle. The Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News nowdeliver papers only on Thursdays, Fridays and Sunday. The Tribune Company is in bankruptcy. And on it goes.
The argument of the growing bandwagon is that newspapers must stop giving away their content free in their online incarnation. They can’t depend on advertising revenue to pay for the same amount of quality journalism that has been supported under the traditional newspaper business model. They need to start charging something. Though not new (I last wrote about it almost three years ago), the subject has been largely dormant until recent months) when a flurry of articles and Blog posts have energized the subject. Tim Burden, at Printed Matters, has nicely annotated the debate since December.
The Achilles heal of this line of reasoning is that advertisers have long covered the full cost of content for newspapers. The share of the total cost of running a newspaper that is derived from circulation revenue has at best covered the cost of the paper, ink and maybe the press, the gas and trucks. Subtract the cost of the presses, printing and delivery and subtract the revenue paid by readers and what is left is the actually the cost of producing the content and the revenue provided by advertisers. At its core, readers have been receiving the information for free for decades.
So if the issue is how can “newspapers” continue to provide whatever mission we think they have fulfilled for the past century as they migrate to an all digital format, then we must follow the money. And that takes us to advertisers-- the same folks who make Google “free” and Yahoo “free” and Huffington Post “free” and “Politico “free.”
If newspapers have essentially been able to thrive on the revenue from advertisers alone (again, with cost of printing more or less covered by circulation revenue), why are they having so much trouble today? The answer is not one single factor, But a major contributor is thatnewspapers – whether print or digital—are just worth less to advertisers than they were 20 years ago. Back then, local advertisers did not have many options for reaching the mass local audience. What was the alternative for auto dealers? For real estate agents? Supermarkets or department stores? For some, direct mail was one possible option. But that was about it. Using pre-prints instead of ROP became attractive for some large display advertisers, leaving the publishers with a piece of the cash flow. Advertisers were hit with regular rate increases. And they pretty much had to pay, The publishers made good money.
But then a double whammy. Just about the time the Internet became a real alternative for classified listings—think Craigslist, Monster.com, eBay, Autotrader.com—and for retailers—think DoubleClick, Google, et al—the boys at the cable operators had perfected the insertion of highly local spots into their feeds. Between 1989 and 2007 local cable advertising increased from $500 million to $4.3 billion—or from 0.4% of all advertising to 1.6%. Advertising in newspapers fell from 26% to 15% in this period. Although some of the highly local advertisers going to cable may have taken some of their funds from budgets for radio or other local media, it is probable that a significant share came from the hides of newspapers. I estimate perhaps up to 20% of the decline in local newspaper advertising share can be attributed to local cable spots.
The other whammy, the gorilla in the room, is Internet advertising. No need to elaborate. But its impact on newspapers is not just that it has siphoned off dollars per se. Much more importantly is that the Internet has given most advertisers greater market power against newspaper publishers. Many big advertisers—like car dealers, real estate offices and big box retailers—don’t need the newspapers as much.
And this also explains why even an all-digital newspaper may have trouble supporting its economic model with online advertising. If newspapers could have simply eliminated all hard copy production costs and kept its advertising rates at the online equivalent of print milline rate, they could be profitable even with less advertising. But online rates are much lower on an equivalent copy sold vs. online visitor basis.
All old media also had a house edge over advertisers stemming from merchant John Wanamaker’s insight, “Half my advertising dollars are wasted. I just don’t know which half.” Now they do. Publishers (and broadcasters) are at a disadvantage in promoting the efficacy of their product when online metrics provide much greater certainty on who is clicking and even buying, vs. the legacy media.
Hence, the renewed look at shaking coins from the readers or viewers. Easier wished than accomplished. We already have a history of those who have tried and succeeded. It’s a short list: The Wall Street Journal. Those who have tried and considered it a failure include The New York Times, Slate, the Atlanta newspapers and USAToday. The Penny Gap lives.
The magnitude of the challenge can be distilled from The New York Times’ experience with its Times Select. In its two years of existence, the Times attracted 227,000 paying customers, at $49 annually. This translates into about $11 million annually. And this was just for access to a portion of its material. In abandoning a partial pay model, the Times calculated that it could get greater revenue from advertising on those paid for pages by opening them up, no charge.
I suspect that what we will find in the intermediate future is a mix of models and choices, among them:
• The Detroit model is one reasonable experiment: An attractive daily digital version, with home delivery of the paper reduced to Thursday, Friday and Sunday.
• An advertising supported all digital model, with the publisher closing down the printing plant, selling off its trucks, laying off the circulation and production departments.
• A voluntary pay model. This may take one of several forms. The “shareware” model for software has proven to work to a point. Users are asked to pay what they can or think the product is worth. Many users will be free riders. But, as we see with public television and radio, millions in their audience make annual contributions. (In 2007 at least one-third of those who downloaded Radiohead’s free "In Rainbow" album made a payment, in some cases higher than what the band would have received from a CD sale.)
How these and other variations develop will also depend on changes in the mobile business. The rate of adoption of SmartPhones with iPhone-sized screens; the pricing and availability of e-readers, such as the Amazon Kindle and the price for wireless broadband will enter into the viability of digital news formats replacing physical formats.

COMMENTS
1. eric on March 1, 2009 10:22 PM writes...
why does everyone nip around the edges?
im no journalist. but i have been reading papers for 40 years. they are 90% trivial. both subscribers and advertisers left when they had ANY other alternative.
that the times had 227,000 subscribers and they killed it tells me all i need to know. short term pressures killed long term viability. they decided to rest on their brand too long. they wont catch up. they can try, but they wont.
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2. jayackroyd on March 12, 2009 8:31 AM writes...
Weird that you include Politico. It gets its revenue from its print edition. And it's not profitable.
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