Bridging the gap: newspapers must invest much more heavily in their Web sites.
Palser, Barb
The message from young adults to newspapers is unequivocal:
We're just not that into you. We know you're trying to change,
but you'll always be bulky, messy and old by the time you hit the
stoop. We're seeing the Internet now. Sorry.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
For anyone still in denial, Merrill Brown's recent report to
the Carnegie Corp. of New York on the news habits of 18- to 34-year-olds
will be an eye-opener. Among that group, the Internet solidly leads
other media in categories such as frequency and ease of use. Newspapers,
Brown explains, "have no clear strengths and are the least
preferred choice for local, national and international news." They
rank dead last in categories such as timeliness, usefulness and
entertainment value. Not surprisingly, young adults plan to spend even
more time with online news in the future.
Meanwhile, many newspaper executives continue to operate as though
a major revolution in communication technology can be stemmed by better
marketing. They keep saying things like "Profits are up" and
"People will always read newspapers" and "The Web just
isn't a viable business platform." They're investing in
front page redesigns and freebie tabloids meant to hook 'em young.
(The commuter tabloids have achieved some success because they're
free and fit people's lives, a lot like the Internet.) Let's
not even touch the circulation-pumping ploys. After all is done, one
basic problem remains: Newspapers are printed on paper.
The excuse newspapers give for clinging to print like a life raft
is that it's the most profitable product they've got. True,
many advertisers still accept diminishing returns (growing costs,
shrinking circulation) in a medium they know over a much larger audience
in a medium they don't. But why is that? Because newspapers keep
telling them print is their only option. For a while that worked, but
now advertisers are following the audiences. Researchers project online
ad spending in the United States will grow 20 percent or more in 2005
for the third year in a row.
Maybe it only appears that newspaper executives are in denial about
all of this. Maybe they're trying to sustain enough revenue from
print to fund a smooth bridge to the future. That would make a lot of
sense. But if that were true, wouldn't there be some evidence of
bridge-building?
Every paper has a Web site, but spending on content and development
is still paltry. In its annual report on the state of the news media,
the Project for Excellence in Journalism found that despite growing
audiences, news organizations are reluctant to invest in the Web and
"have imposed more cutbacks in their Internet operations than in
their old media." Instead of investing forward, news managers are
still fixated on figuring out how to get a generation of young people to
subscribe to the print edition. If that's the question burning in
their brains, they still don't get it.
And if they're waiting for their Web operations to be
profitable before they take them seriously, they really don't get
it. One of the worst strategic mistakes in the early history of online
news wasn't failing to charge for content; it was handing out
virtually free ad space, or not bothering to sell advertising at all.
News managers say they've tried to lead advertisers to the Web, but
many of them still don't value their own Web sites enough to make a
convincing pitch. If they'd applied the same bravado to developing
online business models as they do to denying the demise of print,
they'd be a lot further along today.
They also need to invest seriously in new-media staff, research and
product development. It will take a boatload of resources and brainpower to figure out how to thrive among indigenous Internet companies such as
Google and Yahoo! that are light-years ahead in terms of understanding
what users and advertisers want. If newspapers started investing in new
media instead of throwing money down the print pit, they'd be doing
themselves a tremendous favor.
A few resource-rich organizations do seem to be bridging the
gap--holding the old model while reaching for the new. In the April/May
issue of AJR, Rachel Smolkin wrote about the Washington Post's
efforts to create a more usable print edition and reach the commuter
audience with a mini metro publication. At the same time, the Post is an
almost perfect model of new-media innovation, with its growing network
of media properties (including Newsweek and Slate) and substantial
editorial force. The site prides itself on its flush roster of online
discussions with prominent guests and its ability to send multimedia
reporters to Iraq and Afghanistan. Washingtonpost.com won 29 of 90
awards at the 2004 White House News Photographers Video Awards
competition.
Even for an outfit like the Post, the transition from old media to
new could be craggy. For companies that don't have the foresight or
resources to focus on both at the same time, it might be impossible. To
lose some of our venerable newsrooms that way would be unfortunate.
Mainstream media have many larger issues to work out--trust,
transparency and newsgathering resources to name a few--but it'd be
a shame to die over ink and paper.
Barb Palser is director of content for Internet Broadcasting
Systems Inc.
Her e-mail address is barb@ibsys.com.