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Baseball’s media strategy: ripoff magazine subscriptions?

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Several weeks after casting my dutiful homer “Vote For Pablo” to make the NL All-Star Team, I received an E-mail invitation from Major League Baseball inviting me to subscribe to MLB Insiders Club.  Baseball has always had backwards-looking marketing overly reliant on its heritage, but debuting a dubiously Official Magazine in the era of social networking and 24/7 sports news shows baseball’s marketing at its worst.

Baseball-dedicated magazines have been around since time immemorial and – like every other magazine segment – they aren’t exactly killing it these days.  Baseball Digest, founded in 1942, recently downshifted to an 8x schedule from monthly, while the baseball-heavy Sporting News showed a 39% decline in ad pages for the first half of 2009.  The biggest players in sports magazines, Sports Illustrated and ESPN: The Magazine, saw ad pages down 28% and 31% respectively in Q1 2009.  (Curiously SI for Kids is one of only 11 magazinesthat showed an ad page increase so far this year.)

MLB InsidersMLB Insiders Club would need to bring something different to the table in order to succeed and what it promises is attractive: “Behind The Scenes looks into the clubhouse and front office of MLB teams” and “MLB Insiders Club Fantasy League Tips!”  First off, it’s surprising to hear that a major league would directly support fantasy leagues.  It would be a lucrative opportunity for a major sport league to get involved in fantasy leagues, but it’s also tantamount to supporting gambling – which has a history, especially in baseball, of being the worst crime a player or manager can commit.  One wonders if the MLB Powers That Be is aware that an official licensed product of this tacit endorsement.

As for “Behind The Scenes,” a review on Baseball Reflection reveals that the magazine practically begs for user-generated content.  The official license may get some access, but it certainly doesn’t guarantee more or better; the premiere issue features an interview with Oakland A’s General Manager Billy Beane, but he’s probably MLB’s most open GM, frequently giving long interviews to blogs like Athletics Nation.  And if UGC is the majority of content, you can be pretty sure the fans mailing it in don’t have any special access.

MLB Insiders Club is published by North American Media Group, a company that specializes in niche media with a few key licenses, including the Professional Golf Association and History Channel.  In addition to magazines, it also pumps out expensive coffee table books.  So for $24/year, you get some indeterminate number of baseball magazines (they don’t say whether its monthly or what) and the opportunity to buy more books (or as the come-on says “Preview Great Books and DVD’s”).  Ouch.

Baseball’s marketing and media sophistication continue to be disappointing and well behind its rivals for attention in the NBA and NFL.  Few of MLB’s teams or players are involved in social networking, while Shaquille O’Neal is the world’s ninth most-followed twitterer (as of this writing) and the NFL has so many tweeters that it had to conjure a “No tweeting during games” policy.  When these other leagues and their team are putting together their communications strategies, they are way past trying to sell magazines to their best customers. With overall attendance down nearly 6% so far this year, MLB needs to do something to make itself more compelling – more necessary – to its fans.  A clever coordinated social networking policy would be an inexpensive, low-risk way to go, especially in light of the vitality of fantasy baseball – one of the original pre-Internet social networks.

More on point: yesterday the Giants E-mailed me an offer for $5 tickets for next week’s Pirates series for my “vote for Pablo.”  Now that’s something I can use.

Maybe the problem for newspaper sites is too many readers

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Traffic reports from the newly-online-only Seattle Post-Intelligence placed its April readership at 4.3 million unique visitors, up from 4.2 million in the same month last year. That’s a modest gain, but considering the population of Seattle-Tacoma metro is 3.3 million, it starts to look like a magnificent achievement.

Seattle PIThe catch is that despite this impressive performance, the monetization is not happening. Each time I’ve reviewed the site over the last couple of weeks, I’ve found a bare few national campaigns and a whole lot of ad network inventory. Sure, the latter can be ‘optimized’ (maybe) and sold for slightly-better-than-rock-bottom rates, but it’s still a long way away from charging premium rates to reach a highly targeted local audience.

Name-brand sites still want maximum reach, but this may be a situation that calls for a wildly different tack. With uniques handily exceeding population, there’s no way an ad team could claim its delivering a ‘uniquely Seattle’ audience to a local advertiser, much less one with certain desired attributes. On a local site with a local target audience, visitors from the rest of the web are not valuable. A restaurant in Seattle should not have to pay for an ad shown to a visitor from Schenectady. And this in turn drives content strategy: no longer should a newspaper site aspire to be the central hub of everything, but merely the central hub of its metro area. Leave the national news to the national sites.

Earlier today I picked up this year’s “Best Of” edition of Oakland’s East Bay Express. It’s chock-fat with useful content and ads from all over the East Bay, from sandwich shops to bakeries to beauty parlors. Long reliant on ads from big retailers, banks and real estate (among others)heyhe holy grail for SeattlePI and other MSM newspaper sites is to get these advertisers into their ecosystem and away from Google AdWords. And the way to` do that may be antithetical to everything they’ve ever wanted to achieve: get smaller.

inland+studyIn fact, under the radar (and probably not on purpose), the ‘getting small’ strategy is already well in use. According to the Inland Press Association (via Newsosaur), the newspapers with the smallest circulations have actually had the least impact on their bottom lines. That’s because they were never reliant on the big retail, bank and real estate ads that drove old newspaper profits. The weekly independent papers actually stand to recover well and retain these ads because of their long-standing relationships with local businesses.

So, yes, I see a future where the San Francisco Chronicle is no longer the dominant player in its metro area, but independents like the Bay Guardian and SF Weekly stand tall. These smaller papers with distinctive editorial voices and tighter relationships with local advertisers may be the future of the newspaper.

The question for the reputable MSM big-city dailies is how they can get true local businesses – the restaurants, nightlife, storefront businesses and so forth – to advertise. In these narrow margin times, that means putting out a marketing solution they can afford. So long as CPM remains the measuring stick, newspapers will need to reduce readership to make it truly affordable and guarantee they can reach the audience they need. Starting point: the number of uniques is something less than the metropolitan population.

In an era of worries about media and business homogenization – the ‘Walmart effect’ and c. – going small may be the best defense for keeping local media, attitudes and businesses flourishing.

avid Foster Wallace on Making Choices

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

I’m trekking along with the Infinite Summer group that has dedicated this summer of The Year Of The Depend Adult Undergarment (also known as Y.D.A.U. or 2009) to reading David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest.  At over 1,000 pages and hundreds of characters, footnotes and plot-strands, it’s an intimidating doorstop tome, but a lot more fun than I ever hoped when I started: a recognizable Pynchon crazy-world of language games and coincidence, but eminently more friendly.  (This is a good thing, since I have been reading diligently for three weeks, nearly two weeks ahead of the ‘Book Club’ schedule, but still find myself barely 40% through the book.)  The personality and philosophical thrust of the the book seem much in line with what we know of the man, who died tragically by his own hand last year with another giant novel stuck in perpetual rewrite.

Wallace’s philosophical bent – he cares deeply about Choice and Distraction in an era with too much of both -  is the source of running plots and discussions throughout IJ.  This led me to seek out some of his other more casual writing, which in turn me brought me to this commencement address posted on Scribd.  These are wise words, worth reflecting on in our media-saturated age.

(PS For those who are not in on Infinite Jest, 2009 is Y.D.A.U. because in the IJ-world, the US President has sold off calendar sponsorships to  pay off the debt from a toxic waste disaster that destroyed four New England states, which are then expatriated to Canada.   ‘Subsidized time’ pays off the lost tax revenue from those states.  This is but a passing story in a book full of shaggy dogs.  If that tickles you even a little, consider picking up a copy.)

Click on the “Toggle Full Screen” button at right for a better view:
David Foster Wallace Kenyon Address

Book Publishers: Embrace The E! (or else)

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Yesterday The New York Times reported on book publishers’ discomfort with releasing books simultaneously as E-books and through traditional channels.  One idea, not supported universally, is to release E-books later than hardcover editions in the same manner that paperbacks are held back for at least a year.  The reason proffered is to preserve the initial $20-35 hardcover price versus the $9.99 becoming commonplace for E-book editions.

sQ1EMoVD81yp2ywxp7yFX4gt_500The ‘hold-back’strategy is ridiculous and totally ignores how most readers actually use their books.  While E-Books only represent a small slice of total sales today (but growing fast), there’s little question that somebody willing to shell out $200-300 for a ‘reading device’ is likely to be a passionate reader.  As one of those, I would surmise that many of the sales on E-Readers are actually incremental to publishers’ income, keeping people like me away from used book stores and libraries.  That’s where the E-Books goldmine is for publishers: not in keeping existing sales but in diverting money away from long-standing secondary and ‘free’ markets.  While its true that publishers get a nice arbitrage gain from the de facto DRM of a first-edition hardback (tough to reproduce cheaply, tough to read freely in its reproductive form), that gain can in turn be picked up by the reader upon completing the book by selling it or trading it.  An E-Book edition is essentially non-transferable.  I pay less – and perhaps the publisher makes less – but its fungibility also destroys its secondary market value.

Take, for example, my current reading: Infinite Jest.  It’s been fifteen years since it was first published, so there are plenty of used copies out there for around $10 and libraries consistently stock it, while a new copy runs $16.  Because of its ease of delivery and portability, I elected to get the $10 Kindle edition with the publisher getting some profit and no incremental printing costs.  Had I purchased a used copy, I would likely have resold it later for half-price – meaning no profit for the publisher, virtual cost of only $5 to me and $10 profit to the used book store (for selling it twice at 50% profit).  So where is the advantage to the publisher in holding it back?  It’s simply ceded its ability to profit off of its back catalog.

This is one of the central mysteries of Kindle Store availability to date.  It features plenty of hot new titles, but the back catalog titles is still mysteriously empty with many major authors most famous works; Roth, Mailer, Pynchon, Heller and Updike just for starters.  Wouldn’t a great cut-rate selection be a great source of found profit with barely any incremental cost?  I understand there may be unanticipated contractual issues (a la last year’s Writer’s Strike over web royalties), but the longer they wait, the more the price will drive towards Zero (as it did for the music industry and iTunes).  Already sites like ebooksbay.org are popping up with ‘free’ back titles.  (I found a fully convertible PDF copy of Gravity’s Rainbow last weekend.  There goes a lost sale.)

Click here for free Free

On this very same day by coincidence, Chris Anderson’s Free: The Future Of A Radical Price was released for free on Kindle and immediately shot up to #1 on the Kindle sales chart.  I’ll leave his argument for other bloggers, but in Anderson’s eyes, he’s able to do this because he (and presumably his publisher and agent and c.) can use it as a platform to make money other ways: speaking fees, leverage at his job, increased opportunities generally.  This is also the direction the music industry has taken with its ‘360-degree’ contracts for its biggest artists; Live Nation taking a cut of all of an artist’s revenue streams, from ticket sales to licensing.  The book publishing industry needs to figure out its ‘Freemium’ strategy quickly.  As a post on Mashable points out this morning, not all Free business models are created equally.  People will pay (as I have done with IJ) for convenience or added value.  What can book publishers bring to the table?  Figuring this out quickly before E-Readers become commonplace – look for them to spread like wildfire among textbook-toting students – is absolutely urgent for an industry that’s lived off the same industrial-based business model for hundreds of years.

The Kindle Store’s Magazine Salesmanship Needs Work

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

First in a series of posts about adapting to life with a Kindle 2

One of the things I most looked forward to in my Kindle was the magazine store. For a fraction of the cover price in most cases, the full text of a magazine is quickly and seamlessly downloaded to your Kindle. If you order a subscription, each new issue supposedly turns up automatically upon publishing.

For publishers, youd think this would be a great deal: distribute a copy with no physical costs, satisfy your hungriest readers, allow inexpensive sampling and get a few more eyeballs on the advertising. (Disclosure: I have no idea what Amazons deal points are with publishers.)

In its actual use, however, the Kindle Store seems to be doing everything possible to frighten away new potential readers. The Kindle Store, from which every issue is sold, is a neglected sad piece of real estate that does little to provoke buying.

First, KS forgets the basics of single copy sales: featuring whats actually in an issue. Instead of that weeks cover lines and an illustration, you get a narrative of what the magazines history and its mission statement. So instead of buying Newsweek with this review and that think piece and such-and-suchs guest column, youre faced with a black box.

The review system doesnt help either. It appears to be entirely unmoderated. I found one one-star review that said I love the magazine but Im canceling to save money. How is that a review of issue content?

On such a small screen, of course I dont expect the full featured infographics that are the one true unimpeachable USP of magazines, but I was surprised to get no illustrations whatsoever. The New York Times is able to provide photo lead-ins for its Kindle-formatted issues, why cant The Atlantic?

Finally, the pricing structure is bizarre. A single issue of Newsweek at 49 cents is an awesome bargain. But The Atlantic charges a monthly fee even though it does not publish monthly; its a 10x. Worst of all, the just-added Economist has a single issue price of $5.49, which pretty much says Stay Away, Do Not Buy Me in the competitive arena of the Store. Id also saw the discrepancy makes its competitors also look like it does not value its content highly enough since there are no ad impressions attached at this point. I appreciate that the pricing is probably set by the publishers, but some iTunes-style guiding hand could help a lot here.

I know the Kindle DX is supposed to amending many of these issues with its larger screen and greater graphic capabilities, but expecting me to pay $480 to get a better magazine delivery system is just not going to happen. In the meantime, Amazon should spend a little time in the Kindle Store making the magazines and newspapers a little more enticing. You know, with marketing.

Endings & Beginnings

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

One last mention of Walter before we return you to our usual pontifications on media, music and so forth. After four weeks of having him here, I conceded that I was not going to be able to find him a home on my own and enlisted the help of San Rafael’s Milo Foundation. After a teary farewell on a Thursday, he was rehomed by the following Sunday. Quick work! He was adopted with another little friend, a puggle named Princess, and is now residing in Fairfax.

Though we do miss him a little, its also something of a relief to have moved on from one of my proxies for unemployment depression. I suspect from the picture below that he might miss me a little, too, but Im calling this a happy ending for us and a great new beginning for Walter.

Walter in the arms of The Entroporium

Extreme Makeover: Dog Edition

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

An update on Walter’s progress

This is Walter as I found him wandering alone in the Oakland hills.
The photo on the left was taken just minutes after I managed to coax him on leash.
Weight: 13.5 pounds

Walter: Before

Two weeks later – neutered, eye surgery, haircut, two squares a day and a little love.
Weight: 15.1 pounds

Walter: After

How ’bout that?

Your Ultimate Problem With Social Media

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

I spent a little time the other day going through my LinkedIn connections and noticed that one of them, a deceased business school colleague, still had an active account. Tracy’s blog is a testament to how fast her illness went from bad to fatal: a long reasoned post asking for privacy on October 13, 2008 followed just 16 days later by a death announcement.  But Tracy’s LinkedIn page still shows her as a Microsoft employee.   Whether this is an oversight or a tribute, I’ll never know.  That’s fine, but I can’t help but be a bit spooked when I see Tracy’s name on my account.

I still stumble across the Contact entries of departed friends and family in my phone and my various electronic address books.  To delete them feels disrespectful, but honestly when will I need these again? When is it OK to unfriend the dead?

Dolla was one of Twitter's hottest topics on May 19.  "Hmmm, how can we monetize that?"

Dolla was one of Twitter's hottest topics on May 19. "Hmmm, how can we monetize that?"

All of this unpleasantness brings me to this post’s real topic. Especially in the face of 8.9% unemployment, there has been considerable discussion lately over online reputation management. Sure, we know not to put up pictures of partying and other hijinks. But the ultimate uncomfortable social network question faces all of us participants: blogging and micro-blogging our private lives and thoughts, registered and active on any number of social network sites, what happens to all this stuff when you die?(And remember, death never comes at a convenient time.)

This is no small problem for media companies and people actively involved in self-branding and promotion. The rapper Dolla, who was murdered earlier this week, had just opened a Twitter account and posted his first tweets. His MySpace page (56,000+ friends) has no mention of his passing except RIP notes from his fan base, while a couple of telephone promotions still feature his voice hyping his latest single. (Try dialing (678) 500-8475 to hear Dolla speak from beyond the grave.) This is no small problem for his record company, which is still presumably going to try to shift a few units of his upcoming album.  The sheer volume of tweets after the news got out should be encouraging to those who still want to make dollas off Dolla.

Vote for Nick!

Vote for Nick!

Major League Baseball has a terrific series of unified web sites packed with all the information you could ever want (assuming you’re not a Baseball Prospectus type). When Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart was suddenly killed earlier this season, the folks who run the MLB web sites were faced with the task of stripping all his information respectfully from the network. Unfortunately there were a couple of embarrassing cases where his name was missed and remained on the site – most egregiously, as of May 19 on MLB’s official news site, Adenhart was still touted as an up-and-coming pitching prospect.

(MLB also made the curious decision to cease selling Adenart’s name on customized jerseys. Possibly respectful, but also cutting off an avenue for fans to pay tribute. In fairness, this also prevents using Adenhart as a political statement, having been killed by a drunk driver.’ Imagine a ballpark MADD/Adenhart protest and you can (possibly) understand that MLB would not want its brands involved.’ Beer is a pretty big sponsor of all things MLB.)

So what about the rest of us? Looking over at my links over on the right-hand sidebar, I have nine social media sites that I actively use and there are several others that I’ve abandoned without pulling down my pages. If I were to disappear tomorrow, what would be my legacy? My tweets? My blog? I would hope not, but the reality is this is the best evidence of my existence, especially to friends and others that I don’t see on a regular basis (which is, what, 75%+ of most folks’ Facebook friends?)’ And what should I do about it?

One company believes it has the answer.’ Deathswitch promises to send out an E-mail upon your death, which could include your passwords, final wishes or (most tantalizingly) the last word in an argument.’ A premium account would prompt as many as 30 different mails sent to your friends, enemies and other interested parties.

The simplest thing is to do what you should do for all your interests: make sure that your loved ones know what you want done with this stuff.  Recognizing that your reputation may be it when you leave ‘ and that your reputation may be founded entirely on your public life make taking care of your online presence an essential part of your tending to your legacy. And since the health of social media depends on pages of user-generated content creating advertising platforms – at least that’s what it is today – you may wish to consider if you want an ad on your electronic tombstone.

Further Reading

Postscript to Rockets-Lakers

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

As it turned out, the Rockets-Lakers series did not turn out to be the art versus science showdown that I’d been hoping for. The key game turned out to be Game 2, in which the Lakers -- having lost its home court advantage in Game 1 -- simply decided to fight. As Ron Artest demonstrates here, it’s tough to stick to the plan with an elbow in your throat.

And then things get even tougher when you lose one of the second of your two best players to a broken foot, as Yao Ming did in Game 3. Although the Lakers lacked the killer instinct to put away the Rockets, even after a horrible 40-point beatdown in Game 5, the theories on offer in the Michael Lewis article did not seem possible to apply after that point.

One of the hottest topics in sports player management over the last decade has been whether the scientific approach to roster-building really creates competitive advantage. I had hoped this series would bring some light to its relative chances at success in the NBA. What it ultimately proved -- again -- is that the playoffs are still a crapshoot with any team having a 45% chance of winning on a given night, especially when emotions and injuries throw one team off its game.

Further reading: Why Don’t The A’s Win in October? (or “Why Doesn’t Billy Beane’s S*** Work in the Playoffs?”)

Rethinking The Newspaper: It Can Be done

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

newspapersA recent Clay Shirky post, “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable,” says that the newspaper as a business model is dead, killed by its reliance on industrial printing technology. The future, he tells us, will be based on experiments in journalistic form and not any particular form of media, new or old. Meanwhile, as I talked about in an earlier post, magazines are withering away from pressure on CPMs and reduced interest in advertisers.

My bet or, as last as things move these days, this months bet is that well start to see a merging of the forms.

As Malcolm Gladwell writes in this weeks New Yorker, the biggest handicap that underdogs give themselves is engaging in competition on the terms of the stronger party. An underdogs chance of victory nearly triples if it finds a way to not play the game. Right now newspapers whether they admit it or not find themselves the underdog for information distribution but still (so far) the best at obtaining information. So why do they insist on sharing the same distribution models as their potential destroyers?

The New York Times' new reader uses AIR capabilities to flow text and show video. (Credit: Rafe Needleman / CNET)

The New York Times' new reader uses AIR capabilities to flow text and show video. (Credit: Rafe Needleman / CNET)

The New York Times is one of the best at this. To my knowledge, it was the first with a dedicated iPhone application, it looks great on a Kindle, and its new Adobe AIR format is simply spectacular. Still, as everyone knows, the Times is hurting and in talks with everyone from Google to Geffen to find a suitor.

So instead of wringing our hands about public trusts and eroding institutions, perhaps we should be asking of our Third Estate What can you do to adapt? Something basic to your business model that doesnt play to the other guys strength? Here are a few Ive thought about:

  • Does it really need to be daily? If people are already receiving a stream of real-time news everywhere they go and at their desks, do newspapers need to be real-time, too? Local alternatives with a more magazine-like format and deeper stories like the Bay Guardian and SF Weekly are well positioned to take over many of the essential local functions of a newspaper and with lower circulation, their ad rates are less prohibitive, meaning they get the bar, restaurant and nightlife ads that are essentially blocked from big dailies. Reliance on major retailers to be your biggest advertisers is a recipe for death in an era where retail doors will close continuously, like, forever. (But what about the recent SF/LA closure of The Onion? Ill address that in a minute.)
  • Does the news need to lead? Every news site has a Most Frequently Viewed or Most Frequently E-Mailed feature. Lets face it. Its very rare that the top stories, even on the most serious sites, are todays news. (Or as SFist notes about the Huffington Post today: Boobies. Boobies. Boobies. Boobies. Boob.) I would hate to see our locals ignore the news, but why couldnt it be treated like a magazine cover with offers of advice, news coverage, quizzes Things that reel the reader in.

    Here are todays SF Chronicle leads:
    * A stricter, drier Bay to Breakers
    * Craigslist cuts ‘erotic services’ section
    * If state cuts too deep, it loses stimulus funds
    * Senate testimony sheds light on alleged torture
    * Young boost diversity as population ages

    Seriously, not a single one of these lines would sell a magazine at the checkstand. No editorial viewpoint expressed, no help offered simply no answer toWhy buy? Why not feature elements from throughout the paper? “Take your medicine, its good for you” doesnt work for marketers in any other industry, including medicine. Why is it the norm here?

  • Does it need to be shaped like a newspaper? Why not a glossy cover? Billions of magazines have done just fine that way. In particular, Im a fan of The Atlantic and The New Yorkers newsstand strategy: a single compelling image with a flap violator that entices the reader to pick up the magazine and look inside.
  • Can it be targeted better than Its local, its yours? In printing All The News That Fits, newspapers lose the single biggest weapon a marketer has: the freedom to select an audience. Its wonderful that the Chronicle expresses the regions diversity and interests, but I think its fair to say that the news interests of, for example, a 70-year old woman in the Sunset and a 25-year old man in The Mission are very different. So how come the same information in the same format is being sold to both? Using copy splits, could different front pages go to different neighborhoods and not just regional sections to outlying areas?
    Its also worth noting that this could open up new revenue streams. In my opinion, one of the seeds of the demise of The Onion in SF/LA is that it didnt take the thinly-veiled prostitution ads that are easy money for the Bay Guardian and SF Weekly. With CraigsList now discontinuing those same ads, thats a lot of advertising cash set free. Where will it go? Well, if you had a well-targeted newspaper that didnt need to worry about offending its audience with certain content/ads, you just might be able to scoop it up. So, yes, Im imagining a world where Candy TS Outcalls replaces Macys.)
  • Further, why is it serving so much of the area? In an era when advertisers pay more for the specificity of an audience, why is the San Francisco Chronicle the leading paper of Contra Costa County? And Oakland? And most of remote Northern California? Surely some of these readers are more profitable than others. And those that arent can get their news somewhere else.
  • Does every copy need to have the same content? When I received the Sunday paper, the first thing I did every week was throw away 50% or more of it. Why not allow a la carte sections?
  • Is it automatic for its customers – and especially its best ones? Mark Cuban – who got me thinking about this originally and reels off another thousand or so ideas in his blog post on the subject – points out that his local paper was blowing one of the very basic elements of keeping him engaged: pricing policies. Aside from receiving no volume discount, Cuban says that the billing policies discourage people from staying involved. Why arent subscriptions annual or far more? In the core areas, closest to the printer and the most attractive identified customers, especially those that own their home and are less likely to move, why not offer 5 years, 10 years, even a lifetime subscription?
  • Finally, what unique advantages can newspapers bring to ‘real-time’ media? Yes, there’s still an opportunity for symmetric warfare for newspapers. My old colleague Sebastian Provencher at Praized Media recently blogged on just this with regard to the Yellow Pages, but it applies equally well to local paopers. His 2300-word post on real-time information flow between local merchants and customers should be required reading for local media outlets that seeks to make its revenue from being an intermediary in these relationships. You should have a look, but I can boil it down to one tantalizing word: souq.

Im curious for your thoughts on this since I know my few readers are newspaper lovers, too. Dont forget to comment!

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