Welcome | View My Profile | Sign Out
MediaPost Home About MediaPost Privacy/Terms Media Kit Sitemap
Publications Home News
Online Media Daily Media Daily News Marketing Daily Mobile Marketing Daily Search Marketing Daily
Daily Feed> Email Daily Feed> Video Daily Feed> Social
Online Blogs
Online Spin Email Insider Search Insider Behavioral Insider Online Publishing Insider Mobile Insider Video Insider Gaming Insider Performance Insider Metrics Insider Social Media Insider Just An Online Minute Daily Online Examiner Raw Blog
Media Blogs
Research Brief Diane Mermigas:On Media TV Watch TV Board Magazine Rack Media Creativity Notes From the Digital Frontier Digital Outsider Mad Blog Red White and Blog
Marketing Blogs
Engage:Hispanics Engage:Kids 6-11 Engage:Moms Engage:Boomers Engage:Gen Y Engage:Teens Marketing:Green Marketing:Sports
Magazines
OMMA Magazine Media Magazine
Subscribe
Feedback Loop RSS Feeds Archives Subscribe
Dec 2 Search Insider Summit (Utah) Dec 6 Email Insider Summit (Utah) Jan 11 OMMA Agency of the Year (NYC) Jan 12 MEDIA Agency of the Year (NYC) Jan 26 OMMA Social (San Francisco) Jan 27 OMMA Performance (SF) Feb 24 OMMA Metrics Measurement (NYC) Feb 25 OMMA Behavioral (NYC) Mar 15 OMMA Global (San Francisco) Apr 14 Search Insider Summit (FL) Apr 18 Email Insider Summit (FL)
Recently Concluded Events
Nov 3 OMMA Adnets (NYC) Oct 30 OMMA Video (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile & Video (LA) Sep 23 Creative Media Awards (NYC) Sep 23 The Future Of Media (NYC) Sep 22 Online All Stars (NYC) Sep 21 OMMA Awards (NYC) Sep 21 MediaPost Live at Advertising Week All-Access (NYC) Sep 21 OMMA Global New York (NYC)
All MediaPost/OMMA Events Event Blogging Past Event Videos
Industry Events Calendar
2010 OMMA Agency of the Year 2010 MEDIA Agency of the Year
2009 Creative Media Awards 2009 OMMA Awards 2009 Digital Out-of-Home Awards 2009 Media Agency of the Year 2009 OMMA Agency of the Year
All Awards
Employment Situations Wanted Services Offered Post a Job
Briefs Reports Online
MediaPost Directories
Mobile Insiders Group
People Finder Edit My Profile View My Profile My Contacts My Calendar
HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
Print Newspapers Become Endangered Species As Online Publishing Climbs Food Chain
by Dakota Sullivan, Thursday, June 8, 2006, 3:00 PM

SHARE

TOOLS

RELATED ARTICLES

MOST READ

Every time a salesperson asks you to renew your newspaper subscription, do you find yourself thinking, "Is this even worth the $24.95 a year?" Sure, $24.95 isn't that much, but when up-to-the-minute news is a mouse click away--and free--why should you pay for a subscription to a print publication? Offline publishers are struggling with that very question themselves.

It's no secret that newspapers and other offline publications have rapidly dwindling readership, as more readers view their news online. Most newspapers have tried to make the move online with some success, but revenues gained have not been able to replace the money lost from offline subscriptions. Printed newspapers generate 20 to 100 times the revenue per user than do their online counterparts, largely due to subscription fees. Charging for content online has proven to be ineffective, leading to heavy reliance on ads to drive revenues, but ad revenue is restricted by readership and the amount of page content that can be created. With such limitations, how can offline publishers monetize the online channel and stay in operation for the coming years? The answer is: by using ad networks and behavioral targeting.

Let's fast-forward to a Saturday morning in the year 2012: You get out of bed, put on the coffee, but instead of stepping out on the front porch to pick up the paper, you sit down in front of your home computer and click on your local newspaper online. One by one, the offline publications that have been a part of your morning routine have faded out of existence. It's not because of environmental sanctions on paper production, or the astronomical cost of ink. Like most endangered species, these print publications have been driven to extinction by something higher on the food chain; in this case, it's online publications.

Although the Internet may have the potential to help newspapers stay alive, advertising revenues from publishers' Web sites must be maximized to sustain the company in the long term. Like with any medium, the challenge lies in the limited amount of ad space available: sell "X" impressions available at "Y" CPM and you get your maximum revenue. However, CPMs have already increased dramatically for many publishers. So it's time to turn to the other side of the equation: inventory.

Enter behavioral targeting for publishers, a solution that creates an "extended audience" by following readers across an ad network of over 1,000 sites, giving publishers the ability to sell many more targeted ads. Historically, there has been a direct correlation between the size of a publication and the amount of money it can make. A 300-page issue of GQ brings in more revenue than a 25-page business journal. But with behavioral targeting, a publisher's online revenue is limited only by the strength of its brand.

An ad network with behavioral targeting offers a way for Web sites to serve ads to their readers as they surf other sites across the network, dramatically increasing ad inventory beyond the space on their own site and enabling advertisers to see more ad impressions from their target audiences. Furthermore, behavioral targeting allows publishers to grow revenue without creating additional content or building more infrastructure. Publishers negotiate and sell the ads directly, giving them control of their own destiny.

While the gradual loss of print newspapers is inevitable, newspaper publishers may avoid that fate if creative new ad models are explored. By creating new online revenue streams through behavioral targeting, newspapers can maintain the freedom and leadership they've always enjoyed. Print newspapers may be heading for the scrap heap. Their online counterparts however, may be preparing for their most lucrative season yet.

1 person recommends this article. 

12 comments on "Print Newspapers Become Endangered Species As Online Publishing Climbs Food Chain"

  1. Michael Andersen from The Daily News
    commented on: June 13, 2006 at 9:38 PM
    Several commenters assume that computers are going to remain big, expensive boxes on our desks, and navigation is going to keep being done by mouse. That can't be right--there's just too much money to be made in epaper for the technology not to develop.

    In 20 years, aren't we much more likely to be carrying $5 disposable computer screens into the bathtub and navigating with our thumbs over our municipal wi-fi connection? I think so. And when we're doing that, print is kaput.

  2. Roderick White from World Advertising Research Center
    commented on: June 12, 2006 at 7:22 AM
    My problem: without totally re-engineering my home media set-up, I can't read an online paper in the bath. What do I do about this?

  3. Sammy Papert from Belden Associates
    commented on: June 09, 2006 at 9:59 AM
    Dakota: You are NOT thinking big enough... First of all, in 2012 we'll fall out of bed and say something like "'net on" or "paper on" (even though we'll never be disconnected) and the daily newspaper feed from what was (and, is for the baby boomers)will appear. There's no other organization that can collect the local news and information papers can, so the future can and should be ok, if, they begin to migrate those skills to the web. Secondly, democracy needs whatever will pass for a free and vibrant press in 2012 and thereafter. It's vital. And, finally, the best of the newspapers will have established a one-to-one relationship with appropriate opt ins, that it won't be necessary to target behaviorally, since the users (not computers) will be getting very specific messages tailored for them. Thanks.

  4. Manikantan Padmanabhan from AC Nielsen
    commented on: June 09, 2006 at 3:49 AM
    I wonder how publishing is any different from so many other business that were trampled by the paradigm shift from offline--to--online. Tavel agents are one example music stores another.

    This is a very interesting article and I am keen to see how the publishers respond..another 2-3 years would confirm if the last nail on the coffin has been nailed or if the publishers manage to pop out of the deathbed and start new life. Like someone said..all it takes is a powerful new plan and who knows we might be witnessing a revolution. What more can i say!

  5. Phil Snyder from Snyder Advertising & PR, Inc
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 10:38 PM
    How will you read in the bath room?

  6. Paul Fischer from MediaCo, Inc.
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 6:37 PM
    The fact that subscription bases and lineagehave both shrunk is neither news,nor worth the time taken to read the article. I would think that a CMO would have utilized the essentials of Marketing---marketing facts, specifics, benchmarks, and analytics, rather than spamming a "novella" as an attempt to prove a point. Paul Fischer Marketing Consultant MediaCo Memphis TN

  7. Mark Hornung from Bernard Hodes Group
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 4:49 PM
    I would argue that the "gradual loss of print newspapers" is NOT inevitable. Sure, I use the Net to get news quickly. But I use the printed newspaper for analysis, opinion, and to relax. There is something satisfyingly tactile about sitting with the Sunday Times laying about around me, reading sections and glancing at others. You don't get the serendipitous discoveries with online as you do with print. Print will not die. It will change. As have radio and other media in the past when faced with a new challenge.

  8. Vince Saputo from Dare Associates
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 4:38 PM
    Dakota makes compelling points that are likely agreeable to most newspaper execs and being pursued by them in one form or another right this minute. However, at the risk of sounding like Fizziwig, wishing to preserve a certain way of life, I have to say that the readership erosion is not unanticipated and not likely to send newspapers to the scrap heap anytime soon. When launching CNN Ted Turner proclaimed that newspapers would be dead by 1988. Yes, newspapers have had to change due to CNN, and the dirth of online and offline outlets where people consume media. But hasn't CNN evolved with the advent of Fox News? Isn't broadcast radio changing to adapt to its satellite cousins? I bet HDTV or DLP is on the minds of every TV exec, don't you? My point is this: Behaviorial targeting is simply market segmentation wrapped in new age clothes. Daily newspapers have created sections and "communities" which their non-daily counterparts have been doing for generations. So, while I'm a proponent of knowing, understanding, and using all the online media available, and I'm aware the rising generation may not be enamoured by print (in any form) like I am, I'll still enjoy going to the porch in the morning and picking up the paper. That's a behavior I, and many like me, won't be breaking in this lifetime.

  9. GC Fadel from The Communication Organization
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 4:07 PM
    I agree, there are many ways to reach various consumers. It seems that patterns are not set in stone, they change. A marketer cannot rely on one way to go.

  10. GC Fadel from The Communication Organization
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 4:05 PM
    Actually, I am an newspaper online fan and booster. It is difficult to read online. Print is still the media of the masses. It will be for the rest of our lifetime. First of all online is not really free, I don't know why people keep saying it. It is part of a package we pay for. If we are lucky we can get to the spot we want to before a few ads pop up we didn't ask for a cover the editorial. This doesn't happen in print. Why the doom and gloom regarding print? Why does it need to be one or the other? What will happen when another device takes over, will it be the same thing? Television as we know it, print as we know it may change, it is not going away.

    GC

  11. Peter Barresi from Planet Out, Inc.
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 3:44 PM
    Hah Hah........

  12. Howard Hirshhorn from The Globe and Mail
    commented on: June 08, 2006 at 3:25 PM
    What a bunch of one-side over stated baloney. Newspapers are not going away so quickly and will still have a prominent place in the media landscape. Its becoming tiresome reading about newspaper demise from new age gurus. Sure I read this online, but its typical of the inaccurate one-sided kind of information so prevelant online.

Leave a Comment

You must be signed in to comment. Sign In

Do you have strong opinions and inside knowledge about the topic of this article -- and do you want to share your insights, observations and points of view regularly with the readers of MediaPost? To be considered as a MediaPost contributing writer, please send pertinent info about your credentials, plus several column ideas and one example of your writing on the topic, to pfine@mediapost.com. Please see our editorial guidelines here first.

DAKOTA SULLIVAN
  • Dakota Sullivan is CMO of BlueLithium, Inc.


AUTHORS

ARCHIVES

RECENT VIDEOS
Recent Online Publishing Insider Articles
Woe The Digital Sale: Why No Cherry-Picking?   
Question from the mailbag: Why can't I just cherry-pick placements that I need for my media...
The Day The News Died   
The bizarre concept that is newstainment has crept into the American lexicon and bombarded our TV...
Woe The Digital Sale: Getting In The Door   
From the mailbag: Hi, I'm a developer trying to gain traction in both the agency and...
The Problem With Selling Ice To Eskimos   
Throughout my career, I have always heard how a great salesperson can sell anything, but I...
Is Email Strategic? Or Dead?   
The recent WSJ article "Why Email No Longer Rules," by Jessica E. Vascellaro, made the case...
Woe The Digital Sale: Selling Media Buyers On Your Innovative Product   
Question from the mailbag: I represent a new, emerging media company and am making the rounds...
Flash-Forward   
My favorite new TV drama this fall centers around a global incident in which every person...
Don't Drop The Egg   
Every business and nearly every businessperson can be neatly put into one of three buckets. While...
Woe The Digital Sale: Going Over The Media Director's Head    
Question from the mailbag: I am now a VP-level media director. A premium site I have...
The Ad Network Cleanse    
I attended a formal gathering of the MPA (Magazine Publishers of America) here in New York...
>> Online Publishing Insider Archives 
ABOUT MEDIAPOST • MASTHEAD • MEDIA KIT • RSS FEEDS • PRIVACY/TERMS & CONDITIONS
©2009 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
1140 Broadway, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10001
tel. 212-204-2000, fax 212-204-2038, feedback@mediapost.com