NiemanJournalismLab reporting:
It’s easy to get cynical about hyperlocal news on the web. People
have been working to figure out a scalable model to support it for
years. But news-model fatigue shouldn’t be mistaken for permanent
failure — it’s just that no one has yet found success.
Community journalism pioneer Steve Buttry, now heading up community engagement at Digital First Media, says he is buoyed by disruptive-change theorist Clayton Christensen’s
notion that 90 percent of successful startups start out with the wrong
strategy and often take three or four attempts to get it right. That
makes some kind of web sense. For those of us trained in the arts of
journalism, though, it’s probably a tough lesson: We’re trained to get
it right the first time.
With that in mind, let’s look into the next round of hyperlocal, the
emerging newsonomics around Patch’s aim to become profitable, just as Digital First Media
(DFM) dials up its own hyperlocal strategies. Though many newspaper
companies are testing hyperlocal strategies, individually or through
their chains, Patch and DFM stand out for the scale of their intent.
We’ll stick with the term “hyperlocal,” even though it’s a squishy one,
because it still best describing the kinds of close-to-where-we-live
school news, local sports, police reports, and government coverage we
find useful. It may a community of 20,000 or 80,000, but for many of us,
it’s less than a whole city.
Let’s start with Patch. Each quarter, as AOL announces its financial
results, CEO Tim Armstrong sticks his head in the boxing ring, and lets
it get punched around a bit. He took over a newly independent Time
Warner spinoff and has been madly transitioning it beyond its sinecure
of the old-timey Internet access business.
I won’t debate here his hits and misses, his romancing of Arianna (or
was it the other way around?), or the half-life of AOL, given its
trajectory and the fact it has lost more than $800 million since its 2009 spinoff.
For the news business, two facts stand out. First, Patch is doing
journalism, employing more than 1,000 journalists. Second, it is testing
a model that needs testing, however Patch’s history is eventually
written.
That model may be getting a rocket boost of revenue, if
January’s trends hold up. In an interview last week, Patch President
Warren Webster says that January booked ad revenue alone equaled half of
all of 2011 ad revenue. If that trend were to continue, we’d
be looking quite differently at Patch’s chances of making it into the
black before AOL’s investor patience runs out. Just last week,
Starboard, an “activist fund,” increased its AOL stake to 5.1 percent, pushing for strategic changes, and Patch is in the middle of its sights.
[Update, 2:52 p.m.: Some added context to the Patch
ad revenue increase: The January ad revenue noted above should be noted
as bookings for the year as a whole, committed by January. Further,
Patch says that, as of today, it now has commitments for more than 75
percent of the total revenue that it recognized in 2011. Those are ads
that it has sold and that will run some time in 2012.
http://www.niemanlab.org/2012/02/the-newsonomics-of-hyperlocals-next-round-patch-digital-first-and-more/
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