If you believe that most of everything people consume will be gotten through a smartphone or by discovering content via social media, then you’ve got to wonder what the value
of a slick Web site should be.
And that, apparently, is what’s bugging Conde Nast.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the publisher of some of America’s biggest and
best magazine titles will be scrapping the current version of The Scene, its online hub for video content from several of those publications. It will return with a mobile orientation, with items
presented as in a newsfeed, and which users can personalize.
The Scene, as it is now, is not being seen by many. That’s not totally surprising, though its difficulties would
have been hard to predict when it began in 2014.
There you’ve got all these fabulous titles--Vanity Fair, W, GQ, Allure and non-Conde Nast partners--all in one spot.
It seems tantalizing, but I have a feeling the publisher took all those titles and hid their video content behind a title that meant nothing much.
Everybody could name all the contributing
parties to the site, but what the heck was The Scene? Never heard of it. (And it seemed, to me, to always conjure up video clips of K-Tel “Hits of the '60s.”)
But the
idea sounded right, two years ago, when MediaPost’s Gavin
O’Malley called it “an aggressive move into video aggregation,” which, indeed, it was, by a company with a lot of stuff to aggregate.
The idea back then--way
back when Obama was president and Republicans fought his every move--was that consumers warming to online video would surely like land in one spot to find a lot of it from sources they liked.
That turned out to be true, but lately, the aggregating places became Facebook and Twitter, and the way people watched, increasingly, is through on a cell phone, not a even a laptop.
And after all, what’s to become of the PC?
Gartner, the info tech research company, reports that worldwide sales of PCs
declined 8% last year, the fourth year running of declines. In the mobile-first environment a lot of publishers are considering their new reality, and running a snappy Website might seem a
little old fashioned.
Yet, the
WSJ noted, while The Scene may not be happening, video viewing on some magazines’ dedicated Websites is going up. “Collectively, the number of
video views across Time Inc. properties on desktops jumped over the past year from 18 million views in December 2014 to 49 million last month” the
WSJ reported, citing comScore data,
and Conde Nast titles likewise, report big gains on desktops.
What this might mask is that social media and quick-hit smartphone-sized videos are drawing users to publishers’
Web sites. That’s just the way you’d think God intended it, with some interesting diversions.
pj@mediapost.com