theguardian reporting:
When we launched The Information last December, many thought we were
crazy. How could a $399-a-year technology news publication compete in a
world all but overrun with free alternatives?
How could an eight-person startup that aimed to educate the world's
professionals about the technology industry compete with venerable
brands like the Wall Street Journal on the one hand and dozens of ambitious tech websites on the other?
Four
months after our launch, I'm more confident than ever that our business
is going to be a lasting one. My confidence is rooted in a simple idea
that all news businesses need to relearn as they redefine themselves for
the digital age: know thy audience.
This idea seems obvious,
almost cliché, especially in the technology sector. I'll confess to
rolling my eyes countless times as I've listened to Amazon CEO Jeff
Bezos and hoards of other entrepreneurs harp on about the importance of
putting the customer first...
Today, most news organisations are adjusting to the fact that the
internet has toppled the distribution models that once supported them in
style. Seduced by the billions that Google and others have made off
free, ad-supported services, they've convinced themselves that online
advertising is the future and thus they should focus on building the
widest possible audience. Subscription offerings, in many cases, were an
afterthought.
The Information is founded on the opposite principle. We believe the best way to build a brand
is to be indispensable to some people, rather than try to appeal to
everyone. The business model aligned with that mission is a subscription
business where our only incentive is to write articles our customers
want so badly they are willing to pay for them.
One benefit of the
model is it helps build our revenue quickly. But a far more important
outcome is that it puts the focus exclusively on high-quality, original
journalism. In the world of ad-supported media, traffic volume is
everything. Too often that means sacrificing quality for quantity and
prioritising stories that generate clicks. In the subscription world,
quantity doesn't move the needle. Quality does...
http://www.theguardian.com/media-network/media-network-blog/2014/mar/19/future-news-digital-media-audience?CMP=new_1194
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