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Monday, October 6, 2014

Can Old School Publishers Win In The Digital Age? Yes, But...

Print Media's Digital Malpractice.

Old school publishers are STILL hung up on integrating and assimilating digital technology to best advantage. This has resulted in ever narrowing profits supplied mostly from the print side of their organizations.

In short --- old school publishers are leaving a bundle of money on the table! Let's talk about why and what can be done to correct old school publishing's dwindling profit margins.

Key excerpts from tonights resource article:

"While many believe that publishing is dead, there is more opportunity now than in Luce’s time.  While it took him decades to build his empire, Huffington Post and Bleacher Report created hundreds of millions of dollars of value in just a few short years.  The real problems old-line publishers face today are not ones of talent or even technology, but culture." 

"In the final analysis, the challenges of the publishing industry are not so much economic or technological as they are cultural.  It’s not technology that publishers need to conquer, but their own organizations."

"Every media market is different, but some principles are universal.  Perhaps the most significant of these has been the press-TV tradeoff, which is the starting point for understanding the media economics of any given place.  The stronger the TV ad market is, the weaker the press market will be and vice versa."

"The situation of the publishing business is by no means unique, eventually all business models fail.  Unfortunately, publishing executives who built their careers on selling ad pages and pushing rates are often unwilling to accept that the economics of digital are fundamentally different than print.  That has to change."

Greg Satell, a US based consultant who focuses on content marketing and digital innovation, contributed this to Forbes magazine:


How Old School Publishers Can Win In The Digital Age


Like many millennials today, Yale classmates Henry Luce and Briton Hadden left their jobs to create a startup.  They found newspapers dry, longwinded and boring and thought they could do better by presenting stories in a faster paced, more personality centered format.
In 1923 they launched Time magazine and it became a runaway success.  Hadden died of a freak infection in 1928, but Luce went on to create Fortune and Life in the 30’s and eventually build the greatest publishing empire the world has ever seen.
While many believe that publishing is dead, there is more opportunity now than in Luce’s time.  While it took him decades to build his empire, Huffington Post and Bleacher Report created hundreds of millions of dollars of value in just a few short years.  The real problems old-line publishers face today are not ones of talent or even technology, but culture.
How The Publishing Business Model Got Broken
Every media market is different, but some principles are universal.  Perhaps the most significant of these has been the press-TV tradeoff, which is the starting point for understanding the media economics of any given place.  The stronger the TV ad market is, the weaker the press market will be and vice versa.
The US has been unique in this regard.  Because its TV ad market is fragmented into 210 DMA’s, strong national broadcast advertising opportunities were historically rare.  Magazines, however, offered large, targeted national audiences and newspapers flourished with localized content.  That made publishing in the US a truly phenomenal business for a long time.
Yet digital technology changed the game entirely.  At first, because the Web was primarily used for direct response marketing, only newspapers were affected.  But with the arrival of more visually impactful tablets, magazines’ display advertising business has come under attack as well.  Profit margins, once in the mid-to-high 20’s, are now in the low teens.
The situation of the publishing business is by no means unique, eventually all business models fail.  Unfortunately, publishing executives who built their careers on selling ad pages and pushing rates are often unwilling to accept that the economics of digital are fundamentally different than print.  That has to change.
The Paywall Trap
The greatest challenge for publishers today is to create new business models.  Unfortunately, most haven’t even begun the process due to misplaced nostalgia for distribution revenue.  In that sense, paywalls represent the greatest threat to old-line publishers.
To see why, let’s look at what is considered a paywall success story: The New York Times.  According to its most recent annual report, circulation revenues increased by 3.7%, from $795 million to $824 million, but its advertising revenues fell by 6.3% from $712 million to $667 million, for a net loss of $15 million. That’s no way to grow a business.
A quick examination of the digital business alone shows what an enormous failure this is.  In 2012, digital made up about a quarter of the NY Times ad revenues or $170 million.  In 2013 US digital ad growth was 17%.  If the NY times achieved that growth, it would have earned about $200 million, but instead its digital ad revenues fell by 4.3%!
So what should have been a $30 million increase turned into a $5 million decline.  In a sense, this shouldn’t have been surprising.  Print and distribution has historically not been a profit center for print publishers, how do they expect to make money on it in the digital age when distribution is now essentially free?
The golden rule of media is that marketers will pay more for consumers than consumers will pay for content.  That doesn’t mean that digital subscription businesses can’t work, some can, but it does mean that paywalls are mostly a waste of time and effort that could be spent more productively elsewhere.
It’s Not The Technology, It’s The Culture
Most people assume that the problem with old-line publishers is that they don’t understand the new technology.  That may be true in some cases, but it’s mostly a red herring.  Many publishers have excellent technology teams and successful new players like Bleacher Report and Huffington Post rarely have particularly sophisticated platforms.

The real barrier to success lies in publishers’ organizational culture, which has for far too long been dominated by the “Chinese wall” that was originally instituted to separate the business and journalistic sides of the enterprise.  While the “separation of church and state” certainly played an important role in preserving integrity, it also had costs.
As I noted in an earlier post on innovation failure at the NY Times, the Chinese wall has made it almost impossible to innovate.  To see what I mean, look at these two quotes from the NY Times innovation report
We heard from editors who said the fear of impropriety meant that they actively avoided communicating with business colleagues altogether.
The fear that a single stray word can derail a conversation is keenly felt, particularly on the business side.
No business can function that way and expect to compete in the rabidly competitive digital environment.  Business model innovation is a highly collaborative process.  It requires people to work very closely together and establish trustful relationships.  That can’t happen if people with different skill sets don’t talk to each other.
So that, in a nutshell, is the state of old line publishers today.  On the one hand, you have business side people with little real understanding of the product and on the other you have journalists who want to ply their craft as if the business never existed.  No wonder there are problems!
A New World Of Digital Opportunity
The publishing industry has clearly failed to adapt.  Samir Husni, Director of the Magazine Innovation Center, estimates that magazine publishers today earn less than 3% of their revenue from digital.  While the NY Times earnings report suggests that newspapers fare somewhat better, they still earn the majority of revenues from print.
You would think that with such a paltry digital effort the old-line publishers would be going out of business, but they continue to profit and grow, albeit moderately.  They are even launching successful new print titles like All RecipesHGTV and Food Network.  Magazine giant Hearst recently reported its best month ever.
That old-line publishers continue to survive is testament to how good they are at plying their basic craft.  Editors know what their readers want and journalists are skilled at delivering it powerfully.   Combining the publishing expertise of industry incumbents with the digital savvy of the new upstarts has the potential to be a great business.
There is no clear path to prosperity, but here are some suggestions:
Tear Down The Chinese Walls:  I noted this above, but it is important enough to mention it again.  There are well established techniques for innovating business models, but all of them require intense integration and collaboration.  While concerns about preserving integrity are real and important, there are other ways of addressing them.
Take TV Money:  For decades, publishers have been whining about how much money goes to TV.  Now, with online video booming, they have an opportunity to compete with broadcasters on an equal playing field.  It is unconscionable that so few are seizing it.
Spin Out Brands:  New brands are much cheaper to launch on the Internet than in print and easier to get to profitability.  Some publishers, like Atlantic Media have been aggressively pushing out satellite digital brands.  Most however have not.
It’s worth mentioning here that some publishers have ample assets to create new digital brands at negligible cost.  Surely, The New York Times, with its abundant archive of book and movie reviews, could launch competitors to Goodreads and IMDb.  Again, so many opportunities available, but so few taken.

E-Books: Another way that digital publishers are creating incremental revenues is by repackaging existing assets to create short e-books.  Politico, for example, created a 2012 election guide.  Others sell pregnancy and vacation guides.
Create a business model innovation process:  The ideas I outlined above merely scratch the surface.  In truth, there are unlimited opportunities in publishing today, but business models need to adapt and evolve.

There is no mystery about innovating business models.  People like Steve BlankEric Ries and Alex Osterwalder have laid out clear principles that work.  I’ve also written a basic guide for innovating business models as well as one that applies to the media industry specifically.
In the final analysis, the challenges of the publishing industry are not so much economic or technological as they are cultural.  It’s not technology that publishers need to conquer, but their own organizations.





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