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Media

Steve Rosenbaum did a great interview with Columbia’s Ana Seave that was published on MediaBizBloggers earlier this week.

Seave is one of the key contributors to The Curse of the Mogul, required reading for anyone in the media business who wants to dig into the critical issues facing media companies and their business models.

Seave’s thought a lot about content, cost, quality and digital. Media brands can create increased loyalty with their readers, she believes, by enriching their experience of content. A key element of that is curation, Seave explains:

I think that the actual idea of curation and aggregation and packaging stuff and being the in between, between the content production and getting it to a consumer is exactly the right place to be. I think that video is really the future of the Internet as well. The text business is where I come from and where I live and it’s easy to search, and so forth and so on, but YouTube as I understand it is the second largest search engine. What is that about? That means that people who are younger than me think of things in video and it is really, really important for all media companies to be in pictures at this point. So, that’s the reason why I am interested in Curation, I have a lot of faith in this space and I think it’s gonna go really far, and it’s gonna be in the right place with the right technology. (LINK: http://bit.ly/cPDkae)

The combination of curation and wholly-original content goes at the core of the cost issue for a publisher. One of the fundamental challenges of transitioning a print content model to the web is that the value of the ad inventory online doesn’t support that same content costs as the value of the print ad page.

Ultimately, content costs are a by-product of hours of labor. By shifting talented content professionals to a mode where they are able to identify and share good content — thereby extending the brand “voice, as Seave calls it — as well as create that content, the business is able to increase the ad inventory attributable to the content costs.

This is the kind of thinking that is both relevant to the digital market and attacks the puzzle of costs.

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Real estate advertising is set to rebound in 2010, after a devastating decline in 2009, and traditional media such as newspapers and print catalogs will be a surprising beneficiary, according to a forecast released this month by Borrell Associates, a long-time observer of the local advertising market.

Borrell has been in the business of analyzing local advertising trends since the 1980’s. I actually competed with Gordon at Communications Trends, Inc. in the late 1980’s, when both our companies began to look at the emerging competitive trends in the yellow pages industry. Gordon’s work is solid, and his firm has been on target more often than not with their forecasts. He accurately forecast the scale of the shift to online in the real estate business, for instance.

As a result, I was particularly interested in seeing his firm’s forecast of real estate advertising for the next year. There are three big take-aways from the analysis and surrounding discussion: An over-correction in ad spending disproportionately hit traditional print media; the share shift between print and online is essentially over, with a slight correction back to print in the year ahead; and a new secular shift is underway moving real estate marketing dollars out of media and into other promotional spend.

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Overall, advertising by real estate agents and brokers is set to increase 2.7% in 2010 to $8 billion, following a 19% decline to $7.8 billion in 2009, according to Borrell. Newspapers and other print (including home catalogs) are set to have strong rebounds in 2010, following dramatic declines in 2009. In fact, in 2010 traditional print media will recover a small percentage of the share that it lost to online media over the past several years.

In a webinar discussing the forecast, the Borrell team addressed the factors driving the recovery of print. Agents and brokers recognize that the Internet has become a free source of distribution, but that investing in internet media provides only a minimal lift in business activity. Print advertising remains the most effective way to stand out in a local market and drive leads, Borrell’s research with agents and brokers shows, and in the next a number of realtors will return to using print in order to help drive their market presence.

Since we publish The Real Estate Book, the forecast obviously was music to our ears. But more importantly, it was confirming to what we’ve been hearing from a lot of our customers and consistent with what our internal research was showing. While print advertising doesn’t deliver the total market, like the Internet does, it does deliver a responsive market, giving our customers market recognition, brand awareness and a valuable source of leads.

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To reinforce their observation that the market shift between print and online is essentially complete, Borrell presented a projection through 2014 of the relative share for both media across all real-estated related ad spending, including realtors, financial services, multi-family and commercial.

A third market shift is occurring, Borrell cautioned.

Within online real estate advertising, money iis moving into marketing activity that do not rely on a media company to bring buyers and sellers together. Thanks to the proliferation of inexpensive database marketing tools and techniques, real estate advertisers are developing direct, one-on-one relationships with their prospects and customers through e-mail marketing, social networking and various promotions and public relations efforts.

You can order the full report, with detailed forecasts of each category, a demographic analysis of the home shopping consumer and local observations and projections, here.

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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 [...]

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Good reads for Jan. 27, 2010

January 27, 2010

PaidContent digs in, with characteristic thoroughness, on the startling fact that Newsday has sold only 35 online paid sub. Interesting read with some comments from Newsday.
The Congressional Budget Office see the economy at a worst point in terms of jobs and debt, with stabilization and improvement occurring over the next two years. Brad [...]

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Thinking about how Social Media gets defined and what it means

January 7, 2010

Brian Solis wrote a reflective post today that strayed from his typical forward-looking perspective to reflect on how the term “Social Media” has morphed to encompass all kinds of web activity.
He harkens back to a definition of social media that was developed by a group of leading thinkers a couple of years ago. That [...]

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Hey, smart folks: Help this young lady out!

January 4, 2010

Think it’s tough navigating your career, particularly if you’re in media or marketing? Imagine what it would be like to be in school, training for a job you’ve always wanted, only to realize that that job is vanishing before your very eyes.
One enterprising young student is in the middle of trying to sort out [...]

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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 [...]

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