Top

Because life is too short to read boring newspapers…

October 3, 2008 by marek.miller 

Juan Antonio Giner of Innovation Media speaks about how media companies can make newspapers again a necessary product for everyone

Juan Antonio Giner

Juan Antonio Giner

Newspapers are content providers, and the content should be reinvented. The crisis of newspapers is the crisis of content. According to Juan Antonio Giner, 99% of what we produce is news – news of yesterday, and this is the real crisis of this industry. There are not enough exlusive news in the newspapers.

Does this mean the newspapers are going to be out business? yes – if they are in the old newspaper business. No – if they are able to change the content and adapt in the new information business. The speaker proved his point by bringing the recent change in the name of INMA – the organisation that is no longer International Newspaper Marketing Association but International Newsmedia Marketing Association.

In order to survive, newspapers have to:

  • diversify
  • converge
  • integrate (reorganize the offices)

What is needed to be kept unchanged are things newspaper should be good in: credibility, reporting, editing, design skills, presentation skills (visual, print) and profits.

A good marketing of “O Globo” (Brazil) is a great way of communicating the readers how the future of newspaper might look like. And this future is now:

A quote to remember: “On Line, On Time, Full Time”

Newspapers should not think in the category of readers only. It is hight time to obtain the new strategy, where readers, audiences, and communities come into play.

One of examples of such strategies is “The Economist” whose model is a 24/7 online operation plus a weekly print product. “The Economist” is an perfect example of the newspaper that delivers news in an advance, instead of repeating them from yesterday.

Another newspaper to follow is “Correio” (Brazil) which 6 months ago was facing bacruptcy. Now, after the implemented changes it is a 20/80 newspaper – 20% news, 80% stories. First section begins with news (24 hours section) the other sections contain stories. Each news story from the front is linked to the next pages, where readers can find stories. It is the newdynamics: when users have the news, they request stories. As theresult, the advertising income for “Correio” went 100% up.

Juan Antonio Giner presented a prototype of a new kind of high quality newspaper, that he called “a daily Economist”. It represents a 30/30 model – 30 seconds, 30 minutes. It was recommended with a catchy statement:

Goodbye long form, hello short form
Long is good, short is better
Long takes too long
Long is out
Short is in

Comments

2 Responses to “Because life is too short to read boring newspapers…”

  1. CS Monitor replaces daily print edition with its website | forum4editors.com on October 29th, 2008 11:35 am

    [...] Juan Antonio Giner of Innovation Media Consulting spoke about it at the INMA Outlook 2009: European conference in Vienna in [...]

  2. Ad campaigns: how newspapers go beyond print | forum4editors.com on July 28th, 2010 2:01 pm

    [...] many times at the INMA congresses all over the world. At the European conference in Vienna in 2008 Innovation’s consultant Juan Antonio Giner showed this campaign by another Brazilian daily O Globo (based in Rio de [...]

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!





More recent stories

alt text Digital trends for publishers – perspectives from Israel

During the Digital Innovators’ Summit in Berlin, Daniel Cohen, Partner, Gemini Fund briefly covered the Israel startup environment and some of the current trends he is seeing as it relates to new startups and innovation. Number of investments in... 

alt text Determining and monetizing the audiences

Audience is publishers’ most valuable asset – and they want to monetize this audience yourself, rather than letting others reap the benefits. Software services and private ad exchanges can help manage and safeguard your precious data and optimize... 

alt text Interactive advertising and marketing by Dow Jones and Serviceplan

Selling online advertising inventory at a decent rate is still a challenge. Publishers need to create attractive offerings and be pro-active in selling these. Participants of the Digital Innovators’ Summit in Berlin could listen to different industry... 

alt text Leveraging social media in newsmedia companies

The reach and scale of social media continues to grow, but how can publishers profit from this? In this session, publishers provided insights into their strategies and approaches to social media. Dan Hickey is the SVP, Digital Engagement, Meredith, USA What... 

alt text International digital growth strategies for Axel Springer

Growth can be pursued in a number of different ways, but one of the most challenging and lucrative ways is expanding business into other countries. Digital makes it easier to reach customers in other countries. Dr. Jens Müffelmann shared his strategies... 

alt text Developing new revenue streams – Digital Innovators’ Summit

New Revenue Streams were the topic of one of the sessions during the Digital Innovators’ Summit in Berlin. Integrating e-commerce into magazine sites, offering commerce deals with the publisher’s brand on a white label platform, and utilizing... 

alt text How to make content work – in Forbes, Sports Illustrated and nugg.ad

Delegates from Forbes, Sports Illustrated and nugg.ad spoke during the Digital Innovators’ Summit in Berlin about the core of the digital publishing business. Quality content remains at the heart of the digital publishing business. But how can it... 

Bottom