Archive | August, 2009

Newspaper Society Thinks Free Papers Hurt Local Newspapers

The Newspaper Society is concerned that councils are damaging their local newspaper industries with freely available council newspapers.

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Newspapers Not the Only Publications Suffering in Downturn

In a somewhat shocking turn of events, Condé Nast, the publisher of magazines such as Vogue and GQ, has to find ways to cut back on expenses due to falling advertising revenues.

Management consultants McKinsey & Co have been retained to provide guidance for cost-cutting measures that can keep Condé Nast profitable in the recession. As its magazines are known as the high-end publications of their respective markets, it is somewhat surreal to think of publications like Vanity Fair having to tone down their expenses. Much of the success of these businesses has been based on living and reporting on the high life, so it will certainly be a challenge for McKinsey & Co to define what constitutes unnecessary expenditure.

This news is particularly interesting when compared to the falling advertising revenue coming in to newspapers. Many have speculated that it’s the news element of print newspapers that has caused it to suffer with the rise of Internet news sources, so papers are devoting more of their pages to lifestyle sections and the like, in order to appeal to those after more timeless content. This strategy may be ill-advised, however, if magazines are set to fare just as badly in the future as newspapers feel they are faring now.

People may not yet be entirely used to the idea of blogs acting like columns, but they are becoming more comfortable with reading opinion pieces online. Online magazines have often been failures in the past, with people somewhat unwilling to pay for online content, but there are some examples of successful online magazines. Newspapers may need to focus more on building better business models for the online realm rather than trying to simply retool their dying print editions.

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ASA Reprimands Express Newspapers

The Advertising Standards Authority has expressed extreme concern with advertising tactics of Express Newspapers. Apparently some advertorials have been disguised as features, which the ASA believes is an attempt to circumvent advertising code practices.

In its findings, the ASA noticed that some articles about products were featured on the same page as advertisements for the products, while being unusually favourable. They found that the articles read as “always and uniquely favourable to the product featured in the accompanying ads and contained claims that have been or would be likely to be prohibited in advertisements.”

Additionally, the ASA found that the Daily Express has run almost identical articles on a select group of products on multiple occasions. The Daily Express has been instructed to clearly label advertorials and to refrain from ever again making the claims made in those allegedly suspect articles already published.

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Google Expands Newspaper Archives

Google announced last year its project to digitise old newspapers and make them searchable, with reportedly millions of articles available when it launched. It has now apparently quadrupled the number of newspapers in that archive, adding articles from the Halifax Gazette, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, the Village Voice, the Manila Standard and The Nation.

Included in this new swathe of digitized newspapers is the 2 June, 1753 edition of the Halifax Gazette. News reported in that edition includes an earthquake in Antigua, the loss of a French Sloop, counterfeit coinage in Boston, and a calling to muster of a local militia in Halifax, Nova Scotia. It really is remarkable to read these older newspapers, though some knowledge of older forms of English is necessary.

This expansion of the archives could see newspapers complaining more about Google profiting off of their content. They may be providing a public service by archiving the newspapers, but Google still makes money from AdSense clicks, with contextual advertisements served to readers as they browse the archived newspapers. As much of the content is quite old, however, newspapers may simply view the archive as a helpful research tool for historians as well as journalists.

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The Observer in Strife

The Observer, the world’s oldest Sunday newspaper and the sister publication of The Guardian, may be in trouble with the Guardian Media Group (GMG) considering closing it down.

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