InPublishing reports:
New media is now old. This year, the internet celebrates its 45th
birthday, while online news in the UK has reached adulthood. Any
publishing strategy
needs to understand that we are now in a ‘three generations in one’
news industry. There are
still the legacy products like 'dead tree' newspapers and
analogue broadcast but there is also the content re-versioned for
online. Then there are the purely 'digital native' enterprises who
sprang up fully formed
by the internet. One new trend is that those three generations are
increasingly combined in interesting ways.
Last year, I wrote in this magazine that newspapers had all accepted
the idea of ‘digital first’. This is the idea that even if you make
most revenue out
of analogue, you must still re-structure your business according to
the priorities of digital production and consumption. It is now the time
(overdue in
fact) to hire developers, publish on demand and design everything
for mobile.
The implication of that strategic shift is that content is now King,
Queen and Jack of Hearts. In a world where the consumer can easily
access what they
want directly or through networks, it is the product not the
platform that matters if you want to create a sustainable business. The
last twelve months
have backed that up in spades.
...
Thinking like natives
Some publishers have tried to create a digital startup culture
within their own walls. European publishing giants Sanoma and Axel
Springer have literally
invited outsiders in on a competitive basis and picked the best for
further investment. Even the dear old BBC has created a News Lab to act
as a kind of
internal innovation consultancy.
...So the dead tree press may still be sacking staff but it is also hiring
new people. Digital revenues don’t match the golden days of the analogue
advertising past but they are continuing to rise. The Guardian
losses are being slashed, while groups like the Telegraph and Mail
report profits. Even
parts of the local press are getting their heads back above water.
But there are two other massive structural trends that should concern UK
papers: the new
realities of global competition and the power of the platforms.
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