Top magazine execs think they need to have fewer meetings, launch new
products faster and better adapt their content to mobile devices to set
themselves up for the future.
"Let's do a deck on that, let's have a meeting on how to have a
meeting," said Joe Ripp, CEO of Time Inc. on the industry's tendency to
navel gaze. "We need to move faster."
Speaking on a panel at the MPA—The Association of Magazine Media's
annual conference Tuesday, the industry's bigwigs admitted that while tablets held out promise for magazines, they were in the early stages of building a significant business on the devices.
Tom Harty, president of Meredith's National Media Group, publisher of
mass women's brands like Parents and Family Circle, said tablet editions
make up just 2 to 3 percent of its business (slightly below the
industry average). "Maybe it's our genre," he offered.
In the printed form, magazines are attractive for their covers and
physical presence and as an impulse buy, but those qualities are lost on
mobile devices, Condé Nast president Bob Sauerberg admitted. "We all
need to work to bring that home in the digital media."
Panelists said that their subscription business is healthy, even if the
newsstand slide continues. But they also recognized the need to ramp up
the consumer side of the ledger. Meredith's Harty said his company is
testing various models to "get the consumer to give us more money" in
view of the fact that "advertising is not growing."
Moving on to the buzzword of the day, native advertising, the
executives said they were set up well to offer advertisers premium ads
that are valued by readers as a complement to the online tonnage
available via automated buys. Harty called magazines the "original
native ad" format, pointing out that for some readers, the ads are the
best part of the magazine.
At a time when other purveyors are playing fast and loose with the
format, blurring the lines to make it mimic editorial, the magazine
execs said it was important not to fool readers. And although the
industry's own American Society of Magazine Editors recently put out guidelines
addressing how native ads should be labeled, Hearst Magazines president
David Carey warned that the industry shouldn't over regulate, either.
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