Newsflash Signup

Buy now at Zavvi.com
Capcom

The media is facing a 'profound structural revolution'

Bookmark with Social network

"The end of the economic crisis will not be the end of the crisis for analogue media. You are facing a deep, profound structural revolution and have to be prepared for a new world."

These were the words of  Maurice Levy (pictured), chief executive and chairman of Publicis Groupe, one of the world's biggest ad agencies. He was speaking to a glum audience of magazine types at the FIPP 2009 World Magazine Congress in London.

He also said, "Who can believe, honestly, that young people, who we call the digital natives, are going to ditch their computers, their iPods, their mobile phones, and go back to print?"

Well, nobody, which is why print is desperately trying to move its operations to the web. Unfortunately, they cannot find ways to charge for their content online. Oh, there were plenty of marginal or just plain bad ideas about how this might be attempted at FIPP. But don't sweat it. because charging consumers for magazine and newspaper-style editorial content is over.

All that is required is for online advertising revenues to match cover-price and print advertising revenues, and the publishers can sail on into the future pretty much as-is. because, the web, it's like a magazine but on a screen, right?

Unfortunately, again, this is never going to happen. Online advertising revenues are going to fall so far south of where they need to be, for most of these companies, that the most likely outcome is severe contraction or annihilation.

The magazine people are right about one thing. Content is king. And they are traditionally very strong at creating content. In order to build editorial brands online, you need content. However, content is expensive. And readers are fickle.

Readers will come read your lovely content, you'll enjoy a rise in traffic, and then the readers will fuck off to whoever else is giving away great content today. The retention you get is not worth the expense of the content. Even those web editorial properties that are so good that they retain loyal readers will struggle, because they cannot match advertising revenues against costs.

In the past - in the relatively recent past - the retention was worth the expense. Investing in content was the road to growth. But now there is way more content available, and much of it costs almost nothing to produce. When the likes of IGN and Gamespot were being birthed, there was no Facebook, Google News, N4G, VG247, Digg, YouTube, Twitter, MySpace. There were no blogs. There were no podcasts.

Those were the days when companies with good sense were investing in online content. Those days are gone. Investing in content now, is mostly an uphill battle to protect against audience or market-share contraction.

If you were to launch a solid, decent online editorial property today, it would be extremely difficult  for your editorial investment to bring in any ROI in advertising revenue. The money you need to spend on content will never attract enough of an audience which will never attract enough advertising revenue.

Most good, new online properties today are about user-content, or pulling someone else's content, or is extremely cheap to produce, or is a personal blog.

Oh, and by the way, all this is happening against a backdrop of plunging marketing interest in interruptive display advertising - anywhere. Not just in print and on TV, but even online. Marketers want something new.

There are revenue alternatives for the old guard. As Levy says, "Each company, each title, each media will have to find its own model." But these alternatives are theoretical, or they just haven't been dreamed up yet.

We are talking here about companies that have completely failed to provide a single brand worth dick in the Internet age. None of the big magazine or newspaper groups have launched a single web property that was something other than an online version of their print products. Levy wanted to know how this could be...the magazine people looked at their shoes.

Content is king. But the king is avaricious and cruel.

Content is not king, and never has been

posted by Nicholas Lovell May 13, 2009 at 3:49 pm
1
Nicholas Lovell

Content is not king. It never has been. It has always been distribution that matters.

BSkyB is worth £8 billion because it controls premium TV distribution in the UK. Facebook merits a premium valuation (but maybe not the high figures bandied around) because 61 million Americans use it every month. National newspapers had value because they had a de facto oligopoly in their domestic markets.

Even Hollywood studios are distributors first and foremost.

It is possible to make money from content for a long time. But any savvy investor will tell you that distribution is where the real money is made.

And in a web world, distribution means "building something that millions of people will want to use". Like YouTube. Or Steam. Or Miniclip.

I'm not sure that magazine types *ever* understood this.

  • + 0 
  • - 0 
  • 0

Apply Online For a Credit Cards

posted by JaneRadriges Jun 13, 2009 at 4:39 pm
2
JaneRadriges

The best information i have found exactly here. Keep going Thank you

  • + 0 
  • - 0 
  • 0

My cool Blogs!

posted by cepkiptFlinee Sep 04, 2009 at 7:10 pm
3
  • + 0 
  • - 0 
  • 0

Fabian Bornscheuer - thats me!

posted by fluespede Sep 16, 2009 at 8:15 am
4
fluespede

Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren,

als Finanzkaufmann kenne ich http://gomopa.net seit über 10 Jahren! Schon sehr oft konnte mir dieses Forum erhebliche Hilfe leisten, ja ich muss sagen sehr viel Hilfe, z.B. wenn ich mich über die Seriosität verschiedener Anbieter des Grau- und Finanzmarktes erkundigte.
Was mir an Gomopa.net besonders gefällt ist die harte Art mit der gegen Abzocker vorgegangen wird. Im deutschsprachigen Raum habe ich noch kein zweites Forum gefunden, dass ein dermaßen klares Deutsch spricht!
Daher steht der Server auch nicht in Deutschland, ein besonders wichtiger Punkt, wie ich finde.
Für jeden Finanzdienstleister, aber auch für jeden Anleger, finde ich Gomopa.net genial! Mag sein, dass die Community des Forums ab und zu den nötigen Stil vermissen lässt, aber das zeigt lediglich die Art des Marktes auf dem dieses Forum agiert!
Aber das ist es was ich brauche!
Auf Gomopa.net finden Sie mehr Wissenswertes, als die meisten Kanzleien von Rechtsanwaelten und Steuerberatern bieten können und Gomopa.net fasst Themen an, an die sich sonst Niemand herantraut.
Außerdem reden die Tacheles.
Das alles laesst nur ein Fazit zu: Wenn es Gomopa.net nicht gebe, es müsste erfunden werden! Genial und eine Datenbank die ich nicht mehr missen möchte!

Ich hab auch einen heissen Tipp bekommen was Service angeht, ich habe die Rufnummer der Servicehotline bekommen, die mich direkt mit den Insidern von Gomopa.net verbinden.
Einfach genial!
Versuch es gleich mal aus!

Tel.: 0900/5466672

Oder melde dich gleich hier an:

https://gomopa.net/F...p?page=Register

Mit freundlichem Gruss
Frank Steinmeisner

  • + 0 
  • - 0 
  • 0

can somebody help please

posted by symn Sep 23, 2009 at 3:12 pm
5
symn

Please help my comp got a virus!

_____________________
#1 wow paladin guide , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmaPuVvat-s reviews fap turbo , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwrbG1hJFEw unlock iphone 3gs , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwoxWMIyhRU unlock iphone , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQ9ld5h-qYE

  • + 0 
  • - 0 
  • 0

Leave a Comment

Capcom
MCV

ABOUT US

MCV is the leading trade news and community site for all professionals working within the UK and international video games market. It reaches everyone from store manager to CEO, covering the entire industry. MCV is published by Intent Media, which specialises in entertainment, leisure and technology markets

Intent media, Company number 03641099