Anyone in the Newspaper/Web business is aware of print-to-web products. Here is an example from the Allentown Morning Call.
The idea is that these special sections, which are often(but not always) advertorial, are put online in an awkward format, but since advertisers are willing to pay an upsell fee, it can end up being a decent percentage of the online revenue.
Something like that. It varies.
A more horrific example is when the print product is emulated with a Flash flipbook.
I think it’s high time that newspapers ended this ridiculous practice. It’s harming their reputation by making them look clueless in the online marketing arena.
If you want to offer the PDF of the print product, do so. But let’s not feign to be doing anything for our print advertisers by throwing this crap up. The usability is so horrible, it is of practically no value to the users, which means it can’t be of any value to the advertisers.
It’s no wonder that local online advertising is a hard sell. It’s been presented in a way that lacks any real value and the advertisers sense that.
Sure, it might hurt in the short-run, but maybe it doesn’t have to. Offer the advertisers an option to do some “real” online marketing with that forced upsell.
The real issue is the conflict of interest of saving declining print revenues, while trying to build online ones, as I mentioned about classified ads in my last post.
This conflict includes circulation revenue, as pointed out by Richard Addis, and expounded upon by Jeff Jarvis. I’ll only add to their points that circulation revenue covers print and distribution costs. When those costs are largely removed, there is no need to pass them on to user, and that’s the reason why web content is free.
At one point someone got it into their head that people were paying content. They weren’t. They were paying for print and distribution costs.
And all of this really goes back to my point about the value of the distribution channel.
When you control the channel, which could be the press, or it could be a cable box or a radio frequency, that channel has value.
When the channel is a commodity like the web, your content doesn’t necessarily become less valuable, but all other content is potentially equally valuable.
That means that you need to change the way you create content and do business. I hate to quote myself, but I think an old post of mine was on the right track.
I once had an editor tell me that the value of our newspaper’s organization was in the process we had created for producing good journalism.
Not so.
For newspapers, the business value was that they owned a press, and therefore a distribution channel, not in any of the journalism that resulted.
Read that carefully. I’m not saying there was no value in the journalism. It held tremendous value. It still does.
That editor, though, was not giving due credit to the medium. The product which is created is a direct result of the medium which it is created for. Remember your Mcluhan, folks.
I rushed this post do to a busy schedule, but I think the conclusion is somewhat clear.
Newspapers need to free themselves of the baggage that is weighing down their online strategies. Let print be print, and online be online, and don’t let one hinder the other.
May the best man win.
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