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Showing posts with label Bill Mickey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Mickey. Show all posts

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Managing Print Relativity and Profitability in Today's Digital Environment

'Print' used to be the sweet, young damsel that all the young, publishing studs lined up to ask for the next dance. The only girl at the dance under Momma's age, so to speak.

Not any more! Now there are a number of younger, publishing format damsels sitting side-by-side and taking up half of the ballroom floor.

BUT, Miss Print, although older, is still a beauty and in some demand!

Tonight's post is going to examine how to manage the reduced, but still viable, demand and profitability of the print format.

Most print outlets (including magazines and books) have been swinging toward digital and events as a more accessible, efficient and profitable means of reaching more people faster.

And this move is right - especially for those with the long term vision.

But, print is still producing acceptable (but declining) profits in many areas of the publishing universe --- Especially in the established brand market that was initially born out of the print format.

So, how to manage 'print' to make it the most profitable today?

Many publishing companies today have embarked on a digital/print format system that has reorganized its stable of print brands to a tiered value system. To wit (excerpted from tonight's research article):

"First-tier brands, identified by their high-value readers and customers, get the full multiplatform treatment: monthly print issues, a robust digital offering, events and marketing services. Second-tier brands will have the same mix, but with a reduced-frequency print magazine-bimonthly or quarterly. Third-tier brands, where there isn't enough revenue to support print, are digital and events only." 

"A digital-first operating structure supports print as a by-product, as opposed to having print as the core and supporting digital, which is the legacy model," says Peter Goldstone, CEO at Hanley Wood."
"As a result of that reorganization, Goldstone says that while the majority of capital investment has gone towards technology and data infrastructure, as well as new talent, print is getting some resources too. Only now, the company can better determine where to best allocate the funds."
Note by John: As I've said numerous times before, 'print' will never go away completely. It will be used in a vibrant, different, but reduced mission. 
More details, including some neat charts showing publishing ad and revenue losses as well as print investments, are presented in this informative article by Bill Mickey in FOLIO magazine:

Managing Print Profitably 

Deciding whether to contain costs, invest—or both—in legacy products in the age of digital.


It wasn't too long ago that print was considered the center of the wheel from which all other product platforms sprang out of. That's still the case for most traditional publishers, but the newer product platforms are where all the action is now. Companies are declaring "digital-first" or "mobile-first" strategies with brand spin-offs that are anything but print.
So where does that leave the print products, the very brands that gave credence to the digital products and events that are now commanding greater shares of the topline as the magazines plateau or even contract? For some, it means feeding print just enough sustenance to keep lending the other platforms the brand equity needed for audience growth-while the vast majority of the capital investment is poured back into everything but print.
You don't have to look very far to see the trends. According to ABM's most current BIN numbers through August 2013, year-to-date ad pages declined 7.5 percent. Comparing that to the same period from 2008, b-to-b print advertising has declined 37 percent in pages. Most b-to-b publishing leaders will tell you that they don't expect those pages to return.
On the consumer side, full-year numbers provided by PIB show a 34-percent decline in ad pages between 2008 and 2013. The MPA has moved, smartly, from cheerleading print to a focus on magazine brands' cross-platform audience and advertising footprint.
And that's the story most traditional publishing CEOs will tell you. The focus is not on print anymore, it's on total reach. More specifically, it's about growth in digital and events.
The Value of Print
Executives say that readers and advertisers still value print, but those groups are shrinking.
At IDG, which among the other tech-oriented publishers has been a canary in the coal mine with its strategy of managing print against other lines of business, there's been a push towards digital and events for years. In the IDG Enterprise division, which has brands such as Computerworld, Infoworld and CIO, print revenues are now "comfortably under 20 percent" of gross, says IDG Enterprise CEO Matt Yorke.
"Print to profit is definitely something IDG has been talking about for at least five years," he says. But looking at print's contribution to the overall revenue pie has become more complicated. There's the pure financial allocation, but there's also the less tangible strategic view.
"We also look at it strategically in terms of the equity that print brings to the brands. The value, for example, of having a print vehicle that supports robust digital and event offerings. And if so, where is that value derived and how do we do our best to quantify that? Are we prepared to look at it as a marketing expense? Or do we think a particular brand has reached the point where there's far more value in digital and events and having print is actually stopping us from doing other things-therefore there's a negative value?"
 
The flip side, adds Yorke, is looking at opportunities that might become available if print wasn't part of the equation. They could be taking those resources and investing in platforms that offer a higher path for growth.
Active Interest Media, an enthusiast publisher in the outdoors, home, horses and marine markets, has a more stable view of print, but that's likely going to change in the long term. Print is still relatively strong in niche enthusiast markets, says AIM's president and COO Andrew Clurman. Aside from the newsstand, which is extremely challenged right now, subscription and advertising revenues are positive.
"We haven't seen any discernible fall-off in subscription interest and renewals or the core metrics around reader engagement and satisfaction," he says. "And for the overall print mix, we have been flat to slightly up in pages on a global basis."
Accordingly, Clurman says the company is putting about 25 percent more capital towards traditional consumer marketing efforts-direct mail, email marketing and other promotions. But there needs to be a payoff on the other side. The investment isn't arbitrary or done simply to prop up print.
"We're doing that based on our estimation that we're actually going to get a return on that," he adds. "So I think that speaks to the power of print in our markets."
Print revenues overall are just under 50 percent at AIM, with events adding 45 percent to the top line.

Nevertheless, when taking a longer-term view of print AIM is hedging its bets. The outdoor group, for example, is moving much more quickly towards a digital mentality, at least from a customer perspective, where marketers have become very sophisticated with their own earned and owned media efforts. And as that digital favoritism creeps into other markets, print's growth curve becomes pressured. Even now, Active Interest Media has a very conservative outlook for print.
"We don't see print as a growth business for us," Clurman says. "Our strategy is to go find the premier legacy media brands in the special interest markets that we're in, and those are almost entirely print magazine brands. That's the gateway and it gives us access and credibility to do all the other stuff which is to surround the print brand with events, digital and services."
The Influence of Print
At the same time, print still holds a cross-platform influence. "If you let the print brand slip, then people in those markets, whether they're readers or advertisers, will think the brand has lost its luster. That has an impact on everything else we do," says Clurman.




      

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Magzter, Digital Newsstand, Provides Global Digital Distribution


Talk about publishing with adrenaline pumping deadlines --- That's magazine publishing with weekly and monthly drop dead dates. Think about writing AND publishing a complete book every week or month. I know, they have staffs (some not so much, though) but an awful lot has to continually come together. I'd say the magazine publishing environment is to the publishing industry as the emergency room environment is to the health care industry.

Publishing a DAILY newspaper is another story --- How about writing AND publishing a book every day?

Magazines, once on the decline and now rising again, owe new successes to adapting digital business models. Selling, distribution and paywalls have been problems, but, they are obviously being solved.

Magzter, a two year old digital magazine newsstand, is bursting at the seams in growth because they are providing what appears to be the most comprehensive global distribution.

IF ONLY the digital book publishing industry had a similar global distribution mechanism! They don't have such a thing, do they? I guess Amazon, and maybe even Apple, have international customers --- but, do they wait for the customers to come or do they actively distribute to these customers?

Magzter has offices in India, London, Singapore and New York and has been making its way across Asia and Europe.

Could digital book publishing learn and take away something from the digital newsstands' biz models?

This from Bill Mickey, Editor of FOLIO magazine:


Hearst Signs on with Digital Newsstand Magzter

All U.S. titles, plus some international editions will be available.

Magzter, one of a burgeoning sector of digital magazine newsstands, has been courting the North American market, recently signing Maxim and Newsweek. The company just landed another big fish in Hearst, which has put all of its U.S. titles, and some of its international ones, onto the platform.

The two-year-old Magzter has offices in India, London, Singapore and New York and has been making its way across Asia and Europe, more recently setting its sights on signing up magazines in the U.S. The service now claims about 7 million app downloads from a collection of 1,500 magazines from 600 publishers.

Global digital distribution is something publishers are clearly interested in—the original digital editions were often used to grow international subscriptions without the cost of shipping print—and the various digital newsstands have differing degrees of regional representation. Magzter says its highest concentration of downloads are in the U.S., India, UK, China and Singapore.

Available platforms are currently iOS, Android and Windows 8.

For thepublishers that are able to, distributing tablet editions through as many outlets as possible has been the over-riding strategy. "We absolutely have to be wherever digital magazines are being sold and we were impressed with some of the marketing plans and objectives shared with us by the Magzter team," says Chris Wilkes, vice president of Hearst Magazines' App Lab. "As the space develops further, we think we will see many additional niche players enter the space successfully and we will want to partner with many of them."


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