Title: Executive%20Briefing
1The Newspaper Outlook Big Trends and Big Ideas
Worldwide
Executive Briefing
Earl J. Wilkinson Executive Director INMA
www.inma.org
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13Whats happening to your fathers newspaper?
14Source MediaedgeCIA
15Why Newspapers Matter
- A measure of a countrys freedom
- A measure of a countrys wealth-creation
capability - A measure of a countrys intellectual vitality
- A measure of a countrys aspirations (quality,
popular, depth, superficiality)
16Managing the Transition
Point A
Point B
Single print product Complex print
package Bigger is better
Internal focus Monologue/customers Monetize
monologue Journalism role news/no limits
Marketing non-existent High profit
margins (20)
Multi-media product Focused print
package Smaller is better
External focus
Dialogue/customers Monetize dialogue
Journalism role navigation/local
Marketing constant Medium profit
margins (10)
17History of Newspapers
1440 Gütenbergs Printing Press Invented in
Germany
1610-1650 Weekly Newspapers Developed in Europe
1690-1830 Politically challenging papers in
America
1850-1920 Development of newspaper professions
1910-Present Ownership consolidation
1400
1450
1500
1550
1600
1650
1700
1750
1800
1850
1900
1950
2000
2050
1470-1610 News Books and Sheets in
Italy
1641-1690 Notion of Press Freedom
Developed/England
1830s Penny/Pauper Press in U.S., England, France
1890s Yellow press, sensationalism, competition
18This Presentation
- Structural challenges transforming newspaper
industry - Link value creation to big trends at newspapers
- The transition from mono-media to integrated
multi-media - Creative ways newspapers are engaging with
audiences - Creative ways newspapers are engaging with
advertisers
19Global Newspaper Industry
11,207 daily newspapers circulating 500,000,000
copies each day
Europe Newspapers 2,398
North America Newspapers 1,577
Middle East Newspapers 272
Asia Newspapers 5,071
Africa Newspapers 400
South Pacific Newspapers 89
Latin America Newspapers 1,400
20Creation of Value
- Shareholders
- Readers
- Advertisers
- Employees
- Geographic communities
- Demographic communities
- Virtual communities
21Newspaper Market Caps
Publicly Traded Newspaper Companies
25
-21
Sources/Notes U.S. newspapers, Yahoo, 2005-2006
non-U.S. newspapers, Bloomberg (April 2007), 2006
22Value Disruptors
- Technology Creates alternative access points for
information, creating a concierge class for
news-feeding - Abundance Creates a disconnect between news and
success (relevance), especially among lower
middle class
23Technology and Abundance
- U.S. households have more television sets than
people - Threshold crossed in the past 3 years
- In this environment, is there really demand for
another newspaper section?
24Newspapers Amid Abundance Case Of Libération
- Upscale, legendary Paris tabloid
- Single-copy in nature
- Editors wanted to add value for readers
- Added 24-page supplement to 72-page daily format
- Top-flight journalism, highest quality
25Newspapers Amid Abundance Case Of Libération
- Circulation dropped 30
- Research conducted on what went wrong
- Answer Nothing, traditionally speaking
- Readers maintained high opinion of Libération
26Newspapers Amid Abundance Case Of Libération
- Circulation dropped 30
- Research conducted on what went wrong
- Answer Nothing, traditionally speaking
- Readers maintained high opinion of Libération
- Readers felt guilty about not being able to read
cover to cover (no time)
27Value Levers
Brand
Content
28(No Transcript)
29Complexity Accelerating
Source MediaedgeCIA
30Backvertising, Assvertising, Nailvertising
31Lipvertising, Teethvertising, Headvertising,
Fruitvertising
32Eggvertising?
33The Big Picture Chasing
Fragments
- Consumers Fragmenting Technology and abundance
disrupting information consumption - Advertisers Chasing Fragments Advertisers
shifting to multi-media - Newspapers Regrouping Newspaper business model
changing as a result - Fast Change Rewarded Companies changing faster
rewarded, those changing slower punished
34Circulations Down 8
Paid Dailies in Western Democracies During Past
Decade
35Usage, Engagement
- Engaged have become more engaged disengaged have
become more disengaged - No time to read
- Fast consumption looking at, not reading
- Simultaneous media use
- Place shifting (print newspaper at home, free
daily on train, internet at work, Blackberries in
transit)
5
Junkies
8
Loyalists
15
12
25
28
Specialists
Engagement
Upper Mass
30
26
Lower Mass
20
21
Disconnected
5
5
Source Urban Associates data on U.S. newspapers
36Free Dailies 1995
Launch of Metro in subway system of Stockholm,
Sweden
37Free Dailies 2008
169 free dailies, 30 million copies, 40 countries
38Lite Newspapers
Radical daily miniaturisation,
repackaging of traditional newspapers
39U.K. Qualities, Populars
40U.S. Mornings, Evenings
41U.S. Population vs. Daily
Newspaper Growth
Population up 118
- Readership Gaps
- Working women
- Single-parent households
- First-generation immigrants
Daily newspaper circulation up 33
42Circulation Winners, Losers
Circulations decrease, 1996-2006
Circulations increase,
1996-2006
Others unaudited, incomplete
43So Goes the Middle Class
- Circulation and readership trends are consistent
worldwide within ABC1 demographics - Print circulation performance mirrors the middle
class - If middle class grows, circulation grows
- If middle class stagnates, circulation stagnates
44What Readers Value
45What Readers Value
- Expectation of always on, customisation
- Looking for connector of ongoing conversation
- Sense of community from geography to interests
- Consuming more media, smaller bites
- Faster consumption looking at, not reading
- Value best at, not sort of good at
46News Diet Changing
Evening News Buffet, 1945-1970
600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200
1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900
2000 2100 2200 2300
47News Diet Changing
Morning News Buffet, 1970-2000
600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200
1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900
2000 2100 2200 2300
48News Diet Changing
Diabetic News Consumer, 2000-Present
600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200
1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900
2000 2100 2200 2300
49The Newspaper Macro View
- Diabetic News Consumer Consumers reading more
than ever before, but in smaller bites
throughout the day as technology allows - Search For Value Print newspaper content package
has been commoditised by internet, mobile,
readily available free print products - Acceleration, Not Discovery Trends been going on
since 1950, internet is simply accelerating
trends for all traditional media
50Advertiser View
- Chasing consumers anywhere they live and breathe
- Battle for attention spans
- Growing preference toward measurable media over
mass media as technology allows - Will continue to associate with media that
produce quality, exhibit creativity
51Newspaper USPs
- Unique local content and interaction
- Ability to create products that are digestible in
one sitting - Speed with which publishers impart news
- Content based on who an individual is and where
the individual is at the moment information
received - Value of the newspaper brand
- Ability to deliver simple, quantifiable local
response to advertisers
52Advertising Effectiveness
Ad Recognition by Readership Style
Full-Page Ad Recognition By Age
53Advertising Effectiveness
- U.K. Newspaper ads garner 2x attention as TV
commercials - Canada 76 use newspaper ads to track
availability, prices, offers
54The Hard Questions
- What is the quality of audience reached?
- What is that audiences engagement with the
medium? - What is the size of the mediums footprint on the
attention of readers? - How frequently do consumers touch the medium when
making buying decisions? - Do consumers trust the medium?
- How passionate is the consumer bond with the
medium?
55Advice from Advertisers
- Quality index of newspaper companys
multi-product portfolio - Bundle consumer research with consumer databases
and newspaper advertising for an overall
marketing value package - Return on investment
56Newspaper Story Evolving
- Increasingly, dealing with newsmedia companies,
not newspaper companies - Product lines diversifying online, mobile, TV
and print - Ways to reach consumers under newsmedia brand
proliferating - Can be great news for advertisers
- Can be great news for newspapers if we can
figure out the formula
57What are the value propositions for newspapers in
this new marketplace?
58What Is the Value Proposition?
59Music Industry
- Dominated by a single product (CD)
- Sales driven by 1-2 songs per CD, with 90 rarely
consumed - Value-added items included to boost sales song
lyrics, artist photographs, coupons - Artist-driven industry
- Studio-controlled industry
- An industry, historically, with high protective
walls around it
60U.S. CD Unit Sales
61Percent of Online Households That Download Music
Illegally
62Hit Albums
Gold, Platinum, Multi-Platinum, Diamond
63Music Industry Copes With Threats To Its Business
64Classifying Media By Threat Level,
Cultural Factors
65Music vs. Newspaper Industries
- Music
- Dominated by a single product (CD)
- Sales driven by 1-2 songs per CD, with 90 rarely
consumed - Value-added items included to boost sales song
lyrics, artist photographs, coupons - Artist-driven industry
- Studio-controlled industry
- An industry, historically, with protective walls
around it
- Newspaper
- Dominated by a single product (print newspaper)
- Sales driven by 1-2 stories per edition, with 90
of content skipped or skimmed - Value-added items included to boost sales
promotions, inserts, special sections - Journalist-driven industry
- Publisher-controlled industry
- An industry, historically, with protective walls
around it
66Music Industry Re-Imagining Its Value
Proposition
- Music industry abandoning single product
mentality - Re-imagining its marketspace
- Still wrestling with commodities, value-addeds,
and junk - IBM Slowness to change has cost music industry
US100 billion
67Moving from product focus to
marketspace focus
68Owning Space
- Procter Gamble Oral Care Selling different
things to the same customer (owning toothspace) - Amazon.com Selling different things to different
customers (owning internet retailspace) - IDG Selling the same thing to different
customers (owning knowledgespace) - Federal Express Selling more of the same thing
to the same customers (owning shippingspace)
69Newspaper Marketspace
Young
Old
Poor
Rich
701988 Newspaper Marketspace
Young
Print Daily Newspaper 75 household
penetration 23 advertising share
Old
Poor
Rich
712008 Newspaper Marketspace
Young
Print Daily Newspaper 48 household
penetration 15 advertising share
Old
Poor
Rich
722018 Newspaper Marketspace
Young
Print Daily Newspaper 35 household
penetration 12 advertising share
Old
Poor
Rich
732018 Newspaper Marketspace
Young
- The Newspaper Dream
- Single print product
- Keep the old and rich
- Attract the young and rich
- Flirt with the wannabe young and rich
- Monetize for advertisers
Print Daily Newspaper 35 household
penetration 12 advertising share
Old
Poor
Rich
742018 Newspaper Marketspace
Young
Print Daily Newspaper 35 household
penetration 12 advertising share
Old
Poor
Rich
75The push for marketspace
means multi-media
76Multi-Media Future
Television
Radio
Mobile
E-mail
Web
Publications
77Total Audience
Print
Web
Mobile
78Total Audience Aftonbladet, Sweden
79Unduplicated Audience
Print
Web
Mobile
80Unduplicated Reach
VG, Norway
Print Newspaper 1,356,000 daily
readers
Total Unduplicated
Daily Coverage
1,847,000 (47
of population)
Web Site 926,000 daily readers
Mobile/SMS 58,000 daily readers
81Duplicated Audience
Print
Web
Mobile
82Duplicated Reach Asahi Shimbun,
Japan
83Value Chain Has Changed
- Yesterday
- Create the biggest product
- Which draws the largest audience
- Which attracts the most advertisers
- Today
- Target a niche audience
- Create a product to serve tightly-defined
audience - Sell advertising around target audience
84Audience Value Proposition
- Today
- Size
- Scope
- Shape
- Quality
- Frequency
- Engagement
85Newspapers cannot be defined by the second
word paper. Theyve got to be defined
by the first word news.
Arthur Sulzberger Jr., The New York Times
86History of Newspapers
1440 Gütenbergs Printing Press Invented in
Germany
1610-1650 Weekly Newspapers Developed in Europe
1690-1830 Politically challenging papers in
America
1850-1920 Development of newspaper professions
1910-Present Ownership consolidation
1400
1450
1500
1550
1600
1650
1700
1750
1800
1850
1900
1950
2000
2050
1470-1610 News Books and Sheets in
Italy
1641-1690 Notion of Press Freedom
Developed/England
1830s Penny/Pauper Press in U.S., England, France
1890s Yellow press, sensationalism, competition
87you
CANT
do that
88Valentines Day Editions
Polands Gazeta Pomorska Male and Female
Versions of Newspaper
89Dagbladet on Playstation
90Words Matter
Slogan Celebrates Written Word, Importance of
Reading Newspaper
91Mozaic
Het Nieuwsblad Print Brand Campaign Using Reader
Photos
92Mozaic
Het Nieuwsblad Print Brand Campaign Using Reader
Photos
93Breast Cancer Awareness
Sydney Morning Herald Printed In Print to Draw
Awareness
94Drive-Through Classifieds
El Universal Creates Escape From Urban Chaos,
Generates Revenues
95Toward Magazines?
The Power of Canadas Globe and Mail Front Pages
96Place Classifieds At Newsstands
Gazeta do Povo Generating Revenue by
Democratising Access Points
97Podcasts, Bluecasts
Londons City AM Taking Technology Further
98Weight Club
Aftonbladet Generates Millions From 200,000 Paid
Club Subscribers
99Social Networking
Bakersfield Californian MySpace Meets Yellow
Pages
100Hyper-Local Content
Bluffton Today Free Home Delivery, Local-Only
News
101Expressen TV
Online Video YouTube Style With Quality News,
Sports, Entertainment
102Las Ultimas Noticias
103South Africa Daily Sun
- Popular newspaper aimed at aspiring black at
the beginning of upward social mobility - Audience 75 has never read a newspaper before
- Short stories, heavy graphics (maps)
- Founded in 2002 today, circulation nearly
500,000 and growing as company expands nationally
104When Pigs Fly
- Like most urban dailies, circulation declined for
years - Contributes to overall bad image of newspapers
- Knight Ridder sells to owner who believes in
marketing
- Cynics said circulation would grow again in
Philadelphia when pigs fly - Increases marketing budget from US300,000 in
2005-06 to US14,000,000 in 2006-07
105(No Transcript)
106you
CANT
do that
107Islam File Koran Giveaway
- Promote 15-part pullout supplements in De
Standaard on Islam - Gave away free Korans to coincide with special
report - Involve readers in community discussions,
important in Belgium because of Danish cartoons
unrest - Single-copy sales up 138 on day of Koran
giveaway
108Free Prince CD
- The Mail on Sunday aimed to create buzz among
young readers and retail outlets - Free Prince CD
- Sold out 2.8 million copies, including 600,000
new readers - Largest promotional uplift for a U.K. Sunday
national daily
109Wednesdays Stand Out For Media Buyers
- Promotional campaign by Mid Day for clients and
media agencies at Hard Rock Café - Mid Day brand Making Workdays Fun
- Media Nites promoted via print, radio, and online
110Online Template For Students To Produce Newspaper
- Ekstra Bladet creates The Newsroom,
internet-based editorial platforms where schools
produce their own newspaper - Only known application of its kind in the world
- Develop writing skills, participate in editorial
meetings, lay out newspaper - Ekstra Bladet colour prints copies and delivers
to schools (100 newspapers so far)
111Search Engine Marketing Campaign Drives Traffic
- Houston Chronicle search engine marketing service
that optimises traffic volume to an advertisers
web site or physical site, as well as quality of
sales leads - Campaign enhances Chronicles position as local
online advertising resource - 260 growth in customers
- 317 growth in Chron.com SEM revenue
112Ask Readers for Suggestions On Slogans
Promoting Elections
- 10,000 ideas from Gazeta Wyborcza readers
- Printed 4 versions of the front page with 4
different headline/ slogans, available at
newsstand - I dont migrate, I vote
- Put yours
- Only a monkey doesnt vote
- Vote, you (old) prick
- Circulation up by 20,000
- Strong public relations
113Contest Photo/Video Uploads
- Dallas Morning News launches microsite for high
school sports - Encourages students, parents, fans to upload
photos and videos - Daily cash prizes for best photos
- School with most uploads win US10,000 cash prize
for high school prom - 129,004 photos, 5,497 videos uploaded
114Lead India
- Launched campaign on Indian Independence Day in
2007 by The Times of India - Country advancing in spite of (not because of)
its politicians - Encourages everyday people to become leaders
- Multi-media campaign showing India as half
full, not half empty - Wrapping The Times of India in this future
115MediaLab for Advertisers
- Philadelphia Inquirer created MediaLab to show
advertisers the power of newspaper advertsing - Shopping channel QVC was shown power of print in
national image campaign - Benefited Inquirer and other newspapers
116Stunt All Eyes on (ST701)
- Miss Singapore lives in a glass house for a week
- Lives on materials that can be accessed through
Straits Times ST701 micro-site - Keeps regular blog
- Ancillary contests
- ST701 web site traffic up 50 over 7-day period
- Generated lots of buzz
117you
CANT
do that
118Advertising Experiments
Frances 20 Minutes
Scented Advertising
119Advertising Experiments
Germanys Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung Transparent Cover
120Advertising Experiments
China Double Panorama
121Advertising Experiments
Finlands Helsingin
Sanomat Substitute Front Page
122Advertising Experiments
Germanys Handelsblatt
Spadea
123(No Transcript)
124Irregular Ads
125Irregular Ads
126Irregular Ads
127Irregular Ads
128Irregular Ads
129Irregular Ads
130Folha Origami
131Giant Folha
132 Vertical Giant Folha
133Giant Folha
Horizontal Giant Folha
134Folha Top Cover
135Folha Belt
136you
CANT
do that
137Conclusions
1381903
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142Source MediaedgeCIA
143Is the Sky Falling?
- Circulation down
- Print advertising down
- Number of journalists down
- Media ownership consolidation is up
144Re-Arranging Clouds
- Circulation down
- Total audience across media platforms is up
- Print advertising down
- Advertising across newspaper-branded platforms is
up - Access to readers who bring us advertising is
growing - Number of journalists down
- Number of journalist roles is up
- Media ownership consolidation is up
- Stock buy-back programmes are up
145Newspaper Value Propositions
- Newspapers re-imagining their value proposition
- Audience development
- Value for advertisers
- Provided technological alternatives, consumers
choosing to consume news on many platforms - Advertisers chasing consumers across platforms
- Newspapers creating new platforms, reinventing
themselves as multi-media companies - (Im)patiently waiting for business models to
emerge
146INMA Harvester of Ideas
Constantly In Search of Global Best Practices
- Know your value proposition and sell it dont
equivocate - About positioning your brand amid technology,
abundance - Change is a constant moving forward
- Old practices are dying, new practices are
created - The newspaper will never be the same
147Not Your Fathers Newspaper
148If you would like a copy of this presentation,
please give me your business card at the break
Executive Briefing
The Newspaper Outlook Big Trends and Big Ideas
Worldwide
Earl J. Wilkinson Executive Director INMA
www.inma.org