Posts tagged as:

iPhone

The single content brand that I’ve had the longest relationship in my life is The New York Times.

55C5799A-FF3C-41C9-96A6-C6080D9335D1.jpgEven though I grew up in New England, a highlight of the week was when my dad went and got the Sunday papers — the Boston Globe, the Providence Journal and The New York Times.

Five decades later, the New York Times is still a key element of my daily information routine.

I’m typing this post up in the small cottage my wife and I use for our Connecticut office. There’s snow everywhere, and I can see to the end of the driveway out my window. There’s a block of blue plastic propped up against the snow. It’s today’s copy of the Times.

Someone will probably bring it in later. But I’ve already had three interactions with my favorite newspaper.

photo.jpgThe first was around 6am when I woke up and browsed the national and business stories on my iPhone. (I use the mobile browser version of the paper; their iPhone app is overly busy and slow.)

About an hour ago, I stopped for a cup of coffee and went to NYTimes.com to check out the sports and arts headlines. I read a couple of stories and then shifted over to my RSS reader (I’m a fan of the Firefox add-in Feedly.) I caught up on some of the economics writers that I like to follow.

The New York Times doesn’t have to worry about my loyalty to the brand. It stands out for its quality and its breadth.

But the New York Times does need to worry about its economics.

The change in how I access the Times is a good example of how its business model has shifted. Its audience is no longer a cohesive entity which it can leverage for commercial benefit. The audience has fragmented into distribution channels that don’t offer the same advertising payback.

As a consumer, I’m still paying a lot to get to the Times. I spend more than $1000 a year on my internet access and more than $1000 a year on my wireless access. I’m paying for the distribution pipe.The New York Times - Breaking News, World News & Multimedia.png

How does the NY Times turn its brand equity with me into money? The brand doesn’t have a consumer problem and it doesn’t have a content problem. The problem is in the relative economics of distribution and advertising in the new channels that I am reliant on.

There’s not a lot of advertising on the pages I’m encountering during my interactions with the Times. And the advertising that is there is nowhere near as lucrative as the advertising in the print version of the paper.

This is a shift from being a MEDIA brand to being a CONTENT brand.

When you’re a content brand, you need to be able to extract a significant amount of your profit from the value of your content. That payment will come either directly from the consumer or from the distribution pipe (think of Premium versus Basic cable channels.)

But in this ubiquitous information world with broad redistribution of content, the distribution pipes aren’t looking to pay to subsidize content creation.

And, if the New York Times wasn’t available on my iPhone or on the web, would I change carriers? Nope. I like the content and I’ve got a long-term relationship with the brand, but I don’t think that would be enough to change my communications and internet infrastructure.

This is a problem that challenges the economics of paying people to create quality content.

Interestingly, I think it’s where the content curation discussion becomes most relevant.

A brand like the New York Times, which has tremendous reach and authority, needs to find ways to expand and deepen its relationship with its consumer across the wireless and wired web. Curating content, building applications, creating micro-communities, turning its top journalists into entrepreneurial brands, picking and choosing where to invest money in highly differentiated and traditional reporting…this is the mix of content, focus and activity that can make the digital connections into increasingly profitable areas.

Here’s how the head of the NY Times is looking at it. The key business focus is finding ways to recover the content costs. I think there’s a bigger web to spin, which will help to support the cost of original content in a different way.

Share

{ 0 comments }

What does the mobile internet look like?

by drm on February 12, 2010

The terms mobile internet and applications are pretty much abstractions unless you are right in the middle of it.

If you’re not one of the 10 million people or so who’ve moved to the iPhone, let me give you a brief tour of Let me show you what it means.

IMG_0025.PNGIMG_0026.PNGIMG_0027.PNGIMG_0028.PNGThe four images to the right are snapshots of the screens on my iPhone.

The way the iPhone is designed is that the icons on the bottom grey bar appear on each of your screens. The information at the very top band gives you basic information about your phone — the connections, the time and your battery life.

The four icons at the bottom access the basic functions of the device: the phone, your e-mail, your web browser and your media library.

You are able to download and install, through Apples App Store, different applications that enhance the utility of your device. There’s no real limit to the number of applications that you can install.

The first page of my iPhone apps have the ones that I use most frequently. My calendar, the camera, the photos database, and a bunch of different content applications. My key social media apps are on the front page — Facebook, Twitter and CubeTree, a social media platform we are testing within the company. I also have the Kindle app, because I have ended up using my iPhone as my primary eReader, and a couple of branded news sources: Bloomberg and ESPN. Foursquare and Yelp are on the front page because I’ve been testing both apps recently.

To get to the second page, you simply drag your finger across the screen from right to left and the new page comes up.

On the second page, you begin to see some of the flexibility of this device.

I have a couple of games installed on this screen, which are primarily used by my 4-year old. I’ve got three applications associated with my social media activity: Ego, which accesses my Google analytics, Twitter and Feedburner data on a real-time basis; Statistics, which shows the stats of my WordPress blogs, and a WordPress app that allows me to create blog posts and edit comments on the moves. There’s my Amazon cart, for shopping; my ApartmentFinder app, and some other basic components of the iPhone system.

Move to the third screen and you see some less frequently used tools. A flight tracking applications. A mind-mapping applications. An applications that tells me the schedule of MetroNorth trains. A movie finding applications. Some game.

The fourth screen has the same variety. A TV Guide app. The local news channel app, which allows me to get quick access to school closings and weather. A ski report app, which I recommend to any one who skis — you get the real scoop on snow conditions from the updates people leave. And, finally, an application that turns my iPhone into a remote for our Apple TV in the library.

There you have: a peek into the world of applications. Some of these applications cost money — the most expensive is probably Madden. I’ve downloaded and then deleted dozens more.

My web experience through the filter of applications is dramatically different than my web experience on my laptop. I am probably more brand-loyal in my app usage. I am definitely exposed to less advertising. And, my usage of Google is down, because I know exactly where I’m going for a bunch of different things. When I need to search, I’ll use the Google box in my Safari browser on the iPhone. But, I’m seeing a lot less of Googles advertising.

It’s a different ecosystem than what we’ve traditionally thought about for the experience of web content.

Share

{ 3 comments }

The mobile internet, consumer usage and implications for media and marketing brands

February 12, 2010

We believe more users will likely connect to the Internet via mobile devices than desktop PCs within the next 5 years.
The Mobile Internet Report
Morgan Stanley
Apple’s launch of the iPad last month provides a catalyst to look at the implications that the broadly-defined term Mobile Computing has for the interplay of Media and Marketing. Clearly [...]

Share
3 comments Read the full article →

10 years past, 10 years forward

December 23, 2009

10 doesn’t sound like a big number, but when you start looking back over a decade, 10 years of an ever-expanding and innovating world, 10 years feels huge and unwieldy.
At the beginning of this past decade (the first decade of the 21th Century…how cool!) I was working with an Internet company called Themestream, started by [...]

Share
4 comments Read the full article →

Aggregation, Media & Money

December 7, 2009

What do you do when the costs of creating, delivering and consumer content are wholly disaggregated? Is the system rational enough to transfer the economic benefits from the consumer to the creator? Or do all of the participants in the chain need to work together to ensure that an underlying economic rationale properly [...]

Share
0 comments Read the full article →

The Book of Basketball works really well on the Kindle iPhone app

November 29, 2009

I just finished reading The Book of Basketball. Apparently, it’s a mammoth work, some 700 pages long. I didn’t have any sense of its heft — I read it on my iPhone using the Kindle reader — although I was well aware of how substantial and significant the book was.
One thing that I [...]

Share
6 comments Read the full article →

What do you do when ads work?

January 13, 2009

Advertising works when it pays for itself, not when it makes you feel smart.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
Share
0 comments Read the full article →