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Zeno Swijtink
02-06-2009, 06:23 PM
Thursday, Feb. 05, 2009
How to Save Your Newspaper - TIME (https://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1877191,00.html)
By Walter Isaacson

During the past few months (https://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1877126,00.html), the crisis in journalism has reached meltdown proportions. It is now possible to contemplate a time when some major cities will no longer have a newspaper and when magazines and network-news operations will employ no more than a handful of reporters.

There is, however, a striking and somewhat odd fact about this crisis. Newspapers have more readers than ever. Their content, as well as that of newsmagazines and other producers of traditional journalism, is more popular than ever — even (in fact, especially) among young people.

The problem is that fewer of these consumers are paying. Instead, news organizations are merrily giving away their news. According to a Pew Research Center study, a tipping point occurred last year: more people in the U.S. got their news online for free than paid for it by buying newspapers and magazines. Who can blame them? Even an old print junkie like me has quit subscribing to the New York Times, because if it doesn't see fit to charge for its content, I'd feel like a fool paying for it.

This is not a business model that makes sense. Perhaps it appeared to when Web advertising was booming and every half-sentient publisher could pretend to be among the clan who "got it" by chanting the mantra that the ad-supported Web was "the future." But when Web advertising declined in the fourth quarter of 2008, free felt like the future of journalism only in the sense that a steep cliff is the future for a herd of lemmings. (See who got the world into this financial mess (https://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1869041_1869040,00.html).)

Newspapers and magazines traditionally have had three revenue sources: newsstand sales, subscriptions and advertising. The new business model relies only on the last of these. That makes for a wobbly stool even when the one leg is strong. When it weakens — as countless publishers have seen happen as a result of the recession — the stool can't possibly stand.

Henry Luce, a co-founder of TIME, disdained the notion of giveaway publications that relied solely on ad revenue. He called that formula "morally abhorrent" and also "economically self-defeating." That was because he believed that good journalism required that a publication's primary duty be to its readers, not to its advertisers. In an advertising-only revenue model, the incentive is perverse. It is also self-defeating, because eventually you will weaken your bond with your readers if you do not feel directly dependent on them for your revenue. When a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, Dr. Johnson said, it concentrates his mind wonderfully. Journalism's fortnight is upon us, and I suspect that 2009 will be remembered as the year news organizations realized that further rounds of cost-cutting would not stave off the hangman. (See the top 10 magazine covers of 2008 (https://www.time.com/time/specials/2008/top10/article/0,30583,1855948_1863163,00.html).)

One option for survival being tried by some publications, such as the Christian Science Monitor and the Detroit Free Press, is to eliminate or drastically cut their print editions and focus on their free websites. Others may try to ride out the long winter, hope that their competitors die and pray that they will grab a large enough share of advertising to make a profitable go of it as free sites. That's fine. We need a variety of competing strategies.

These approaches, however, still make a publication completely beholden to its advertisers. So I am hoping that this year will see the dawn of a bold, old idea that will provide yet another option that some news organizations might choose: getting paid by users for the services they provide and the journalism they produce.

This notion of charging for content is an old idea not simply because newspapers and magazines have been doing it for more than four centuries. It's also something they used to do at the dawn of the online era, in the early 1990s. Back then there were a passel of online service companies, such as Prodigy, CompuServe, Delphi and AOL. They used to charge users for the minutes people spent online, and it was naturally in their interest to keep the users online for as long as possible. As a result, good content was valued. When I was in charge of TIME's nascent online-media department back then, every year or so we would play off AOL and CompuServe; one year the bidding for our magazine and bulletin boards reached $1 million.

Then along came tools that made it easier for publications and users to venture onto the open Internet rather than remain in the walled gardens created by the online services. I remember talking to Louis Rossetto, then the editor of Wired, about ways to put our magazines directly online, and we decided that the best strategy was to use the hypertext markup language and transfer protocols that defined the World Wide Web. Wired and TIME made the plunge the same week in 1994, and within a year most other publications had done so as well. We invented things like banner ads that brought in a rising tide of revenue, but the upshot was that we abandoned getting paid for content. (See the 50 best websites of 2008 (https://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1809858_1809957,00.html).)

One of history's ironies is that hypertext — an embedded Web link that refers you to another page or site — had been invented by Ted Nelson in the early 1960s with the goal of enabling micropayments for content. He wanted to make sure that the people who created good stuff got rewarded for it. In his vision, all links on a page would facilitate the accrual of small, automatic payments for whatever content was accessed. Instead, the Web got caught up in the ethos that information wants to be free. Others smarter than we were had avoided that trap. For example, when Bill Gates noticed in 1976 that hobbyists were freely sharing Altair BASIC, a code he and his colleagues had written, he sent an open letter to members of the Homebrew Computer Club telling them to stop. "One thing you do is prevent good software from being written," he railed. "Who can afford to do professional work for nothing?"

The easy Internet ad dollars of the late 1990s enticed newspapers and magazines to put all of their content, plus a whole lot of blogs and whistles, onto their websites for free. But the bulk of the ad dollars has ended up flowing to groups that did not actually create much content but instead piggybacked on it: search engines, portals and some aggregators.

Another group that benefits from free journalism is Internet service providers. They get to charge customers $20 to $30 a month for access to the Web's trove of free content and services. As a result, it is not in their interest to facilitate easy ways for media creators to charge for their content. Thus we have a world in which phone companies have accustomed kids to paying up to 20 cents when they send a text message but it seems technologically and psychologically impossible to get people to pay 10 cents for a magazine, newspaper or newscast.

Currently a few newspapers, most notably the Wall Street Journal, charge for their online editions by requiring a monthly subscription. When Rupert Murdoch acquired the Journal, he ruminated publicly about dropping the fee. But Murdoch is, above all, a smart businessman. He took a look at the economics and decided it was lunacy to forgo the revenue — and that was even before the online ad market began contracting. Now his move looks really smart. Paid subscriptions for the Journal's website were up more than 7% in a very gloomy 2008. Plus, he spooked the New York Times into dropping its own halfhearted attempts to get subscription revenue, which were based on the (I think flawed) premise that it should charge for the paper's punditry rather than for its great reporting. (Author's note: After publication the New York Times vehemently denied that their thinking was influenced by outside considerations; I accept their explanation.)

But I don't think that subscriptions will solve everything — nor should they be the only way to charge for content. A person who wants one day's edition of a newspaper or is enticed by a link to an interesting article is rarely going to go through the cost and hassle of signing up for a subscription under today's clunky payment systems. The key to attracting online revenue, I think, is to come up with an iTunes-easy method of micropayment. We need something like digital coins or an E-ZPass digital wallet — a one-click system with a really simple interface that will permit impulse purchases of a newspaper, magazine, article, blog or video for a penny, nickel, dime or whatever the creator chooses to charge. (See the 50 best inventions of 2008 (https://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/0,28757,1852747,00.html).)

Admittedly, the Internet is littered with failed micropayment companies. If you remember Flooz, Beenz, CyberCash, Bitpass, Peppercoin and DigiCash, it's probably because you lost money investing in them. Many tracts and blog entries have been written about how the concept can't work because of bad tech or mental transaction costs.

But things have changed. "With newspapers entering bankruptcy even as their audience grows, the threat is not just to the companies that own them, but also to the news itself," wrote the savvy New York Times columnist David Carr last month in a column endorsing the idea of paid content. This creates a necessity that ought to be the mother of invention. In addition, our two most creative digital innovators have shown that a pay-per-drink model can work when it's made easy enough: Steve Jobs got music consumers (of all people) comfortable with the concept of paying 99 cents for a tune instead of Napsterizing an entire industry, and Jeff Bezos with his Kindle showed that consumers would buy electronic versions of books, magazines and newspapers if purchases could be done simply. (See Apple's 10 best business moves (https://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1873486_1873491,00.html).)

What Internet payment options are there today? PayPal is the most famous, but it has transaction costs too high for impulse buys of less than a dollar. The denizens of Facebook are embracing systems like Spare Change, which allows them to charge their PayPal accounts or credit cards to get digital currency they can spend in small amounts. Similar services include Bee-Tokens and Tipjoy. Twitter users have Twitpay, which is a micropayment service for the micromessaging set. Gamers have their own digital currencies that can be used for impulse buys during online role-playing games. And real-world commuters are used to gizmos like E-ZPass, which deducts automatically from their prepaid account as they glide through a highway tollbooth.

Under a micropayment system, a newspaper might decide to charge a nickel for an article or a dime for that day's full edition or $2 for a month's worth of Web access. Some surfers would balk, but I suspect most would merrily click through if it were cheap and easy enough.

The system could be used for all forms of media: magazines and blogs, games and apps, TV newscasts and amateur videos, porn pictures and policy monographs, the reports of citizen journalists, recipes of great cooks and songs of garage bands. This would not only offer a lifeline to traditional media outlets but also nourish citizen journalists and bloggers. They have vastly enriched our realms of information and ideas, but most can't make much money at it. As a result, they tend to do it for the ego kick or as a civic contribution. A micropayment system would allow regular folks, the types who have to worry about feeding their families, to supplement their income by doing citizen journalism that is of value to their community.

When I used to go fishing in the bayous of Louisiana as a boy, my friend Thomas would sometimes steal ice from those machines outside gas stations. He had the theory that ice should be free. We didn't reflect much on who would make the ice if it were free, but fortunately we grew out of that phase. Likewise, those who believe that all content should be free should reflect on who will open bureaus in Baghdad or be able to fly off as freelancers to report in Rwanda under such a system.

I say this not because I am "evil," which is the description my daughter slings at those who want to charge for their Web content, music or apps. Instead, I say this because my daughter is very creative, and when she gets older, I want her to get paid for producing really neat stuff rather than come to me for money or decide that it makes more sense to be an investment banker.

I say this, too, because I love journalism. I think it is valuable and should be valued by its consumers. Charging for content forces discipline on journalists: they must produce things that people actually value. I suspect we will find that this necessity is actually liberating. The need to be valued by readers — serving them first and foremost rather than relying solely on advertising revenue — will allow the media once again to set their compass true to what journalism should always be about.

Isaacson, a former managing editor of TIME, is president and CEO of the Aspen Institute and author, most recently, of Einstein: His Life and Universe.

Zeno Swijtink
02-15-2009, 03:23 PM
It turns out newspapers are important | PressDemocrat.com | The Press Democrat | Santa Rosa, CA (https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20090215/OPINION/902150358/1350?Title=GOLIS__It_turns_out_newspapers_are_important)

Published: Sunday, February 15, 2009 at 4:24 a.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, February 15, 2009 at 7:53 a.m.

A funny thing happened in recent days: People started to acknowledge that newspapers matter. With its cover story, "How to save your newspaper," Time magazine is only the latest to offer advice. In a rush of magazine, newspaper and online commentaries, it was variously recommended that newspapers: (a) charge for online content; (b) focus on content for their Web sites; (c) transform themselves into nonprofits; or (d) seek a government bailout.

Slate, the online magazine, suggested -- tongue in cheek -- that newspapers seek the tax benefits available to religious organizations. (That would be interesting.)

Even Web sites with a history of scorning the evil mainstream media were voicing support. It was OK, it turns out, to bang away at the failings of old media so long as the original reporting from those very same dinosaurs provided the source material for your latest blog.

Let's consider, for a second, what newspapers do every day.

If you opened The Press Democrat one day last week, you learned some bad news (detailed reporting on how budget cuts would affect local services) and some good news (the Obama administration has shelved plans for oil drilling along the Sonoma County coast).

You received an inside look at the world-famous cyclists who will race through the streets of Santa Rosa later today. And you read the profile and saw the photos of a young winemaker who is leading a local revolution in grape production.

Of course, there were countless other features that day -- news reports, commentaries, obituaries, reviews, photos, videos, charts, blogs and so much more. From the letters to the editor to the business news, from comics to grocery ads, newspapers and their Web sites serve up an astonishing mix of information and entertainment.

Newspapers -- and here's the shameless promotion part -- are how we learn about what's going on in our hometowns and about how events will shape our lives and our livelihoods.

Just so you know, it takes 80 newsroom people to create the package of information and entertainment that comes to your front porch, computer screen and smart phone each and every day. And that's not counting the folks who work in advertising, technical services, accounting, production, circulation and more.

I know what some of you are thinking. Newspapers make mistakes. Newspapers are too liberal, or too conservative. Newspapers are too serious, or not serious enough. Newspapers pay too much attention to celebrities and sports, except when they pay too little attention to celebrities and sports.

It's all true.

When this column is posted online, some of you will add your rejoinders, testifying to all that's wrong with newspapers and newspaper columnists. You should never be reluctant to criticize the newspaper when you think it deserves criticism.

You should know that newspaper companies are changing, but they aren't going away. Every day, almost 200,000 people pick up this newspaper, and more than 50,000 people visit pressdemocrat.com. More people take advantage of information provided by newspaper companies than ever before.

The problem isn't readership. The problem is a bad economy; the problem is that nobody has yet figured out how to share the costs of news gathering between print and online. Organizations of all kinds are still searching for an online business model that pays for quality content.

For better and worse, a lot of valuable information was made available at no cost on the Web, and people came to expect it -- in the same way they would expect a free newspaper to continue to be free.

But some kinds of information can never be free because there are costs associated with producing that information. Newspapers hire skilled and experienced people to do this work.

So, over time, the future of newspaper companies will depend on people's ability to recognize that some kinds of reporting can't be given away.

Your favorite blogger may enrich your life in many ways, but he or she won't be dispatching reporters to the war in Iraq, or to a City Hall near you, or to interview a world-class cyclist.

Newspapers were slow to recognize that technology was revolutionizing the ways that people receive information. (First, we were arrogant and dismissive. Later, we were in denial.)

But that's over now. Newspapers know they need to work differently, embracing round-the-clock news coverage and the extraordinary power of technology to share information and convene communities of interest.

Your hometown newspaper isn't likely to be perfect any time soon. In a changing economy, it may not be able to do everything you would like it to do.

But it will be there, providing a daily report on the place where you live.

After 40-some years in this business, I won't be confused with an innocent bystander, but I think it's OK if people occasionally recognize the unique role the newspaper plays in the life of their town.

(Pete Golis is a columnist for The Press Democrat. E-mail him at [email protected])


All rights reserved. This copyrighted material may not be re-published without permission. Links are encouraged.

Tars
02-16-2009, 11:06 AM
Newspapers -- and here's the shameless promotion part -- are how we learn about what's going on in our hometowns and about how events will shape our lives and our livelihoods.

Just so you know, it takes 80 newsroom people to create the package of information and entertainment that comes to your front porch, computer screen and smart phone each and every day. And that's not counting the folks who work in advertising, technical services, accounting, production, circulation and more.

I feel sorry for the paper publishing people; they are so desperately trying to rationalize a healthy job future for themselves into actual existence.

In no more than 10 years, it will be common to see people carrying the "universal digital appliance" that Bill Gates predicted in "The Road Ahead", way back in 1995. We are seeing steady progression towards this "appliance" in the form of ultra-thin laptops, wi-fi, and the Kindle, just to to name a few.

One of my favorite day-off activities is to sit at a lunch counter, and read the local paper. But in 10 years (fingers crossed that I'm here), I expect that as I sit down at the counter, I will pull my digippliance from my back pocket, unfold it , and click my favorite links for all types of news, including local news, which it downloaded as it charged during the night. I'll also have several hundred books and large volumes of reference material pre-loaded.

Zeno Swijtink
02-16-2009, 11:15 AM
I feel sorry for the paper publishing people; they are so desperately trying to rationalize a healthy job future for themselves into actual existence.
(...)
But in 10 years (fingers crossed that I'm here), I expect that as I sit down at the counter, I will pull my digippliance from my back pocket, unfold it , and click my favorite links for all types of news, including local news, which it downloaded as it charged during the night.

But who is going to write the news stories? The issue is not so much how you access the news - paper or digital - but what will be the business model?

Tars
02-16-2009, 01:36 PM
But who is going to write the news stories? The issue is not so much how you access the news - paper or digital - but what will be the business model?

You just contributed to it. In 1995, there were only a handful of sources for local news - the PD, channel 50, and a few local small town weeklies. Now, how many people are blogging locally? How many just give their opinion here on Wacco, amongst their cyber-community peers?

Yes, yes...there's a quality issue with blogs. One must separate the wheat from the chaff on those. Same thing goes on Wacco, right?

I choose my preferred newspaper(s) to read. Then, when I read a newspaper I scan the lead-ins on articles, and choose which ones to read. Others I skip over. I have preferred authors, whose material I can depend on more. Same with blogs, websites, online newsletters from preferred organizations, etc.

It will be the same with whatever exists in 10 years in the place of today's blogs, YouTube, personal websites, etc. What is available in 10 years will dwarf into minisculity, what is available today.

Add to that, AI software on your digippliance, or on your preferred website, will learn what your likes are, and run bots to gather articles from the web, and make them available to you via wide-area wi-fi. If you want to see what tomorrow's news sources will look like, check Google News. It will be something like that, but with much more detailed info and opinion from local sources. It won't look like Google News, of course. It will be much more customizable, as the web is today, compared to 10 years ago.

The "wheat" of the bloggers will be paid by the advertising revenues garnered by popularity of their sites. Advertising won't die, but it will much-less-frequently be delivered to us via paper.

"Information wants to be free". In projecting the future of printed media, I'm reminded of today's music industry. Used to be, if you were a recording musician, you had to make a demo & run the corporate gauntlet. Now, any musician with the acumen to create a MySpace page can advertise, market, and sell their own music. The price of music is in freefall; so will be the price of editorial opinion.

Zeno Swijtink
02-16-2009, 02:30 PM
You just contributed to it. (...)

Yes, yes...there's a quality issue with blogs. One must separate the wheat from the chaff on those. Same thing goes on Wacco, right?

I choose my preferred newspaper(s) to read. Then, when I read a newspaper I scan the lead-ins on articles, and choose which ones to read. Others I skip over. I have preferred authors, whose material I can depend on more. Same with blogs, websites, online newsletters from preferred organizations, etc. (...)

Bloggers do not write news stories, they write commentary. They are parasites on the back of the journalists who go out, research a story, talk to many people. Good journalism may take weeks, months. It's tied in with paper newspapers. Still unclear whether and how it can survive when everything moves online.

Tars
02-17-2009, 10:18 AM
Bloggers do not write news stories, they write commentary. They are parasites on the back of the journalists

Well, I guess we know where your heart lies in this matter. Think I inadverdently pressed one of your emotional buttons. Your opinion there is practically a word-for-word talking point put out by every paper "journalist" whose readership is evaporating away.

You're correct about most bloggers in regards only to investigative reporters. you way oversimplify the negative of blogging, and the positive of journalists.

You appear to be a person who likes to read a paper newspaper. Hopefully, in that process, you've noticed that there are really terrible journalists and professional pundits. (after my reply here, I'm going to post examples of each in this forum). Same thing with bloggers. Just as it's the same thing with car dealerships, restaurants, and hair stylists. The ones who suck eventually die off by not being patronized, or by being ridiculed into disappearance. This effect has been minimized in the past because news readers were forced to get thier news fix through the bottleneck of a limited number of newspapers. That bottleneck is widening rapidly.

I read the Daily Kos (https://www.dailykos.com/)...a blog. The Kos maintains an investigative support staff, and invests in other independent information gathering services, such as pollsters. How is that parasitical? Whereas, one of the most recognized pundits in the world, George Will, was just this morning outted (once again) for supporting his opinions with blatantly made-up statistics. So much for journalistic integrity.

Back to the original subject: Here's a link to a New York Times experiment (https://prototype.nytimes.com/gst/articleSkimmer/) on new ways to present the news online. It's called an "article skimmer", which gives a very brief excerpt of news articles on one page, including international, national, and local stories. This is what a future online newsource may well do, with many more features and abilities of course.

You asked what the business model for newspapers will be. I think that something that will highly affect it will be user micro-charges. It's being tried in various forms now, but doesn't seem to work with the current credit card business paradigm. In the future, we should be able to pay very small amounts - pennies, or even fractions of pennies, to online news soiurces when we access their articles. in 10 years, when I click on to the "Zeno's Sebastopol News "It's not a danged blog, dang it!" site, Zeno's PayPal (or whatever) account will be credited perhaps 3 cents, from my account. Not much for sure, but then anyone around the globe, who is interested in Sebastopol, can access the site for 3 cents. That's a lot of cents. The birth of the Zeno online publishing empire!