The Future of the Newspaper, Part One – The Print Version

9 minute read

This past decade we have seen many markets rocked by the digital era, none more so than the news & entertainment industry. We only have to look at our own lifestyles to know just how much has changed. The demands we place on what we read, watch and listen to – are quite astoundingly different compared to only a few years ago.

Sadly however, the people that have run these industries from the top always seem to be clueless as to what the future holds. I will read with interest the changes new Fairfax Chairman, Roger Corbett makes in his first 3 months in charge or if he just takes a ‘steady as she goes’ approach. In my opinion he has to immediately show he has got something to offer and he has to get creative .

In the first of a two part series I am going to take a look at The Print Newspaper both here in Australia and also in The USA where I am currently located. In Australia we have two major real estate newspapers, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age these are both controlled by Fairfax.

The second part of this series to be released this time next week will focus on the future of online newspapers.

The Boardroom

We have a management problem, boardrooms are filled with people that have a good record of running traditional companies or companies that have made the digital transition easily. However, the majority of boardrooms today are filled with people that are not qualified to understand the digital age and the behavior of their own market in this digital age.

In the beginning it was much easier to launch a jobs, cars or houses website if you had an established classifieds newspaper to get it off the ground. Realestate.com.au was not saved by investment from News Ltd (although it helped) , it was the aggressive push through their newspapers and property guides from News Ltd (and a slack competitor) that established its success.

Today it is nearly impossibly to run a newspaper if you do not have strong jobs, cars and houses website in each of the key markets. Newspapers can no longer survive without the online world!

For an established newspaper to change, it has to start at the top. If the stories of Roger Corbett are true, then he must change his attitude or he will be remembered as the Chairman who sank Fairfax. The man has had great success in the past and I cannot see how at his age and with his bank account, he could not want more, than to make the changes needed in his own headspace to make this work.

You cannot be successful if you think that the newspaper market will get back to normal levels once the economy picks up; or if your only other idea is to wait for other Internet companies to succeed and then purchase them at inflated prices; or if you invest more in marketing and less in your journalistic talent; or think more tabloid news stories will appeal to the masses!

You have to understand that what is broken cannot be fixed in the same ways you have attempted to fix them in the past.

Yesterdays News

I love newspapers, I read them every single day. Actually, let me clarify, I read the news everyday, but I rarely buy newspapers.

The reason I do not buy newspapers is fairly simple, and is summed up in the following statement.

When was the last time a real news story broke in a newspaper, before it broke online?

You, like me cannot think of one recent event. If you are using an RSS reader (like me) and get your news delivered this way, you probably hear about the news before anyone in a newspaper newsroom hears about it. Even better Twitter (and the right accompanying application) will get it to you quicker.

Yesterdays News

Let us look at the first issue, news. The first time I really thought it was over for newspapers was when Saddam Hussein’s rein ended. I remember reading the headlines outside a newsagent in Hobart, Tasmania almost 24 hours after it happened, as if it just happened! Remember that statue coming down? This is the papers biggest problem, it cannot scoop news, so it tries to make up news.

Michael Jackson dies and for 2 weeks we have a different headline each day, each one trying to out do the previous. This is not news, it isn’t even interesting, you don’t create news – you find it – and you cannot find it unless you grow your journalists and give them the freedom and time to search for it.

The Classifieds

Once upon a time we read a newspaper to look for a job, a house, a car, a garage sale or a classified. You purchased the Trading Post to look for a bargain and you may have even looked at advertising for a coupon to take to Coles or Woollies.

Classifieds will never return, they will continue to shrink and someone will have to do the maths one day on whether it is worthwhile to run the wretched things in print.

Classifieds are now almost exclusively online, so there must be a conduit between the print version which should be about stories and statistics, to the online which should be the classifieds and even more statistics.

Subscriptions

The price of a daily newspaper is dirt cheap, yet fewer people are willing to pay for it. In Australia, I purchased Wired and Fast Company magazines each month. I loved these magazines, but air freighted and at $16 an issue it was ridiculous, but I still paid for it. Since I arrived in the USA and have an address here, I have subscribed to both magazines at a total cost of $19.80 for 24 issues!

Surely these companies lose money? I think you have already guessed why they do it. Their thinking is that they make the purchase so cheap that it makes common sense to just subscribe – even for the casual buyer, the losses on delivery are minimal and are offset by the increase in advertising revenues. Lifting your guaranteed monthly subscriptions, lifts your total guaranteed readership and impresses potential advertisers.

This is exactly what newspapers need to do. They can keep their newsstand price the same, but run promotions for $9.95 per annum where you can get the newspaper delivered to your door 7 days a week, 365 days a year. Anything more than $19.95 per annum is not an impulse buy and therefore will not work.

There are many ways you can offset this price, increases in advertisers, bundling other companies leaflets, flyers etc.

The Rockstar Journalists

We only have to look at the current stocks of young journalists to know just how sad a situation we are in. Gone are the days of journalists dedicating months to a story and cracking a scandal, the majority are now relegated to press releases or are so tied up covering so many stories, that they have no time to actual do any real beat reporting. Many journalists now have too many job titles and business cards that it is laughable.

Examples

  • Political Correspondent James Worthy
  • Youth with James ‘JimmyW’ Worthy
  • Yachting Expert James Worthy
  • Lawn Bowls with James Worthy
  • Ask James
  • Religious Affairs with Brother James

We are about to enter a new era of the rockstar journalist. These are the same journalists that we read today, but newspapers will be making them into rockstars. Even though the first stage will be shallow, I believe that the newspapers across the globe will need to get back to breeding stars, beat journalists and real local content.

Sure, we have some good journalists in the political arena, an almost endless supply of financial experts, plenty of celebrity style journalists and some that provide us with a running commentary on social issues from both sides such as Peter Fitzsimons and Miranda Devine, both of whom are excellent writers, but are more social commentators than true investigative journalists.

I am talking about beat journalists, a breed who follow a lead for months/years, who give us real gritty local and national impact stories and every now and then crack a conspiracy – journalists that know it is a mortal sin to end any scandal with the word ‘gate’.

A newspaper should provoke a discussion in the workplace and around the nations dinner tables and only beat journalism can do that!

Newspapers are facing slow death and I think only the true beat journalist can save them. Michael Moore has some interesting comments on the death of newspapers. It comes in at 21 minute mark if you want to jump straight to it.

Design

Jacek Utko, is a newspaper designer, he has had some great success in lifting circulation. Newspapers are boring and they need a re-design, it will not make all the difference, but it is all part of the new solution. You can also read an interview with Jacek here.

Watch this February 2009 Ted Talk by Jacek.

Distribution

I currently live in Boston, where you have the Boston Globe and the Boston Herald, each one of these companies have their own set of delivery trucks. The cost of delivering newspapers does not have to be so high. Come together, open your network up to other local newspapers and periodicals, where you actually make money from the distribution.

Do Newspapers still matter?

I love newspapers, I think they can still survive, they will never thrive like before, that is because the classifieds ‘rivers of gold’ (jobs, cars, houses) are lost forever to the web, but they have a real relevance to a cities identity. It will be a sad day if this is lost and the blame for this will lie squarely with the owners of these media groups – who still seem to think that it is their right to control the media and not simply a time limited privilege!

Summary

It is a tough sell. I cannot see many newspapers surviving if the boardrooms just think that everything will be fine once the economy picks up. Everything from the people to design, subscriptions, distribution must change.

Next week in part two, I will talk about the future of online newspapers and provide soe great examples of what we can expect in the next generation.

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5 Comments

  • Rachael Lord
    Posted October 16, 2009 at 12:43 pm 0Likes

    Very interesting article. Look forward to seeing the next one

  • Craig
    Posted October 16, 2009 at 2:23 pm 0Likes

    It’s a very interesting discussion. I think it is not a product issue, but an implementation issue. I am pretty sure at board level they still think their dead tree products are worth much more than their digital products, how wrong they are. They need to totally reverse this thinking and restructure their businesses accordingly or they will just not survive. How many newspapers have gone bust in the US in the last year? Lots! I think many people assume newspapers such as The Age and SMH will be around forever. Don’t be so sure.

    I think they are facing a similar problem to record companies. Several years ago all we heard was record companies complaining about how people only want to steal music now. They have been proven wrong by Apple iTunes Store, it is now the biggest music retailer in the world. The problem wasn’t that people wanted to steal music, it was that people want an easy way to purchase and get it digitally. Buying a physically CD is slow and inconvenient.

    Once newspapers revert there dead tree products to niche products, possibly special order subscription only, and put digital first, they may have a chance. But 100 years of company culture is hard to change.

  • Peter Ricci
    Posted October 17, 2009 at 11:07 pm 0Likes

    Craig, great feedback. I really struggled with this article – because it is not my strong suit – but for me to get to the next article – I had to start here. I really cannot see smaller newspapers surviving and I would hate to be trying to sell advertising in these things – what I nightmare of a job, trying to peddle something that you really cannot truly believe in.

  • Robert Simeon
    Posted October 19, 2009 at 12:00 pm 0Likes

    Interesting banter going on between the ABC and News Ltd over paid content http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/business/story/0,,26227186-13243,00.html

    The real read on paid content was found when Google posted a 27 per cent rise in third-quarter earnings by reporting that consumers clicked on more search ads and that advertsiers were paying more to place their ads. Why? because the advertisers are paying on results – therein lies the clue!

    http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/business/story/0,28124,26217324-5017996,00.html

    Go the Google Monster!

  • Robert Simeon
    Posted October 19, 2009 at 12:37 pm 0Likes

    Then Michael Pascoe nails Rupert in the SMH business site “The hypocrisy of being Murdoch” – well worth reading. Personally, paid content will not ever work (in my opinion) Pascoe nails it here – oh well looks like Rupert is back to the drawing board. Maybe he should just retire his ageing bones? http://www.smh.com.au/business/the-hypocrisy-of-being-murdoch-20091019-h41i.html

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