On the tablet platform, magazine brands are caught between the Web and a hard-copy place. Publishers' instincts led them towards repurposing print, or at least leveraging the design and layout
strengths of print on the tablet in ways that seemed elusive on the Web. At the same time, these publishers want to make the tablet edition seem more than repurposed. And so we get new design
gymnastics from
Wired, Popular Science and
Vanity Fair that use the X and Y axes to rethink page navigation, and some cool instances of touch and feel interactivity with objects on
the page. But the real challenge for magazines on the iPad is what to do about the Web. The greatest strength of digital platforms is connectivity, and yet for many print publishers the tablet
platform promises a return to a more controlled, lean-back experience that is not dependent on real-time data.
The first wave of magazine apps made little if any use of the Web. Some
magazine-branded apps like Time and Entertainment Weekly had an internal browser that linked to the brand's Web page. The Men's Health app did pull in some select
material from the Web. And most apps allowed sharing. But figuring out a way to blend the more static elements of a formal app layout with live data is the next big challenge.
Sports
Illustrated gets us there in part with today's release of its long-awaited iPad app. Late last year SI whet our appetite for tablet-ized magazines with its dazzling video demo of
what a touch-driven magazine would be. This version is not quite as impressive as the demo (no drag-and-drop personalized content elements or fully integrated live feeds of data), but it is taking
worthwhile steps forward. I have only had a few hours to tinker with it, so I won't try to capture all of the cool aspects.
It's very nice to have a full image page come to life as
a slide show that you flip through within a given frame, or to see embedded video that actually adds to the story. There are some pages that let you pop up different images in a frame when you tap
thumbnails. And some of the custom ads for Sprint and Gatorade do a good job of blending multiple screens and video. I think the strongest argument magazines can make for their in-app ad units is that
they give a client a mini-site in the form of a page insert.
I think the basic tactic here is to pour on the added value rather than dazzle the user with a reimagined magazine. I gather
that magazine publishers are hearing the complaints from consumers about paying a full issue price each week or month for the iPad version, when print subscriptions are a fraction of the cost. If
magazine are going to repurpose themselves on any level for the medium, they will have to make a better argument for their superior value. SI answers the charge by adding a special section,
loading up on great images with animated interactivity and letting you slip easily from the more contemplative column-and-feature-driven magazine sensibility to the latest stats and
scores.
But I am most interested in the ways in which SI is trying to balance the design and layout needs of a lean-back magazine with the live sports
data its audience craves. The magazine does this in a few ways. First, on some pages there are tabs for "Live News" and "Truth and Rumors," which will bring up live content from
the Web in a specially formatted in-app window that is also contextually relevant to the app page you are on. On most pages, keeping your finger depressed on the page brings up the "Wheel"
that not only accesses the content-sharing tools but also brings you to related photos or articles from the current issue.
SI is playing with a very real problem for tablet app
developers: How much should an app feel distinct from the Web experience, which is after all only an icon away? I have asked several magazine app designers whether they aren't competing with their
own Web sites on the platform. They usually tell me that they expect two different kinds of content consumption modes on the tablet, one more amenable to consumption in an app and the other more
lean-forward and interactive on the Web. Maybe, but I wouldn't count on people's media usage to neatly follow the contours of publishers' business models.
The browser
overlay approach SI takes here is one way to demarcate an in-app experience from Web feeds. I am not sure this was deliberate on SI's part, so much as a stop gap towards a
further evolution. I imagine that formatting the placement of live data within the ever-changing layout of a weekly magazine is a hassle. But I suspect we will see Web and app merge more over time.
Publishers could retain the fidelity of their original printed layouts with embedded widgets that pull in scores or headlines. My guess is that the tension between static layout and live
feed within a tablet app environment is only beginning, and likely will be resolved differently for different publications and audiences. The answer for sports and news will be different from
fashion and service content. But I think the sooner designers get beyond the need to preserve the printed page at all costs, the sooner we will find multiple answers.