I have just read my nth story about how newspaper/newsmagazine companies are trying to adapt to the digital world, and as usual, there was discussion of the metered model that allows non-subscribers
to read a certain number of stories per month for free before hitting a paywall. After that you pay or you don't read. Maybe.
There are a couple of points to be made about the metered model that I
have yet to see addressed by newspaper execs, all of whom seem to put very brave faces on their digital futures. But there is no mistaking the abject fear in their voices for sincerity.
I have
yet to be totally prevented from seeing a story behind a paywall from a publication or Web site that I don't subscribe to. Most of the time, you just have to Google the headline and up comes a
version. Probably not on the parent Web site, but nonetheless, the whole story has been scrapped and made available elsewhere.
Or if you ask enough friends, one or more will be happy to send
you stories that they have access to and you don't. I also know folks who exchange sign-on passwords, which seem to work just fine (I am told). And if you are willing to wait, most stories emerge from
behind paywalls eventually, since publishers realize that they are sacrificing an enormous amount of traffic by keeping their best stuff in a permanent vault.
But paywalls also have an effect
on which journalists get scoops and which don't. I have a number of clients who have redirected truly breaking news away from sites with paywalls because they know those sites limit the exposure
sought in placing the stories.
Saying this is perhaps putting one's head in the lion's mouth, since journalists SWEAR they can live and work very comfortably without any input from inbound
sources (or their PR reps) -- but we all know this to be nonsense. Yes, reporters can do without misguided or utterly self-serving pitches -- as Bob Garfield not so gently pointed out in his column this week -- but they depend on sources (including -- god forbid -- PR reps) for
tips on what might break next. One wonders if journalists whose stuff is behind paywalls know they are at a severe disadvantage -- often last in line for a hot tip.
But perhaps breaking news
is no longer the point. Traditional media execs look at pure-play link baiters like BuzzFeed and drool at their traffic and interplay on social media, then scoff that without VC money these
link-baiters could not survive. Hmmm, they used to say that about Vice, too. Meanwhile, they edge their own publications closer to link-baiting with moronically shorter postings with classic link bait
headlines like "5 Things You...." Nevertheless, their bread and butter is breaking news -- and thanks to paywalls, they aren’t always getting it.