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The NY Times

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.

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Aggregation, Media & Money

by drm on 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 structured?

Let’s look at my media consumption this weekend and the relative economic benefits that were enjoyed as a result of that consumption.

I watched television. My two primary experiences were watching sports — NFL football and the NY Knicks basketball — and Nick Jr. (which is the sadly re-branded Noggin.) The programming was high quality and consistent.

Everyone involved was paid, one way or the other. I pay Cablevision for access, and Cablevision pays a fee to Nickelodeon and the networks. Advertisers and sponsors help to underwrite the cost of the production. I got exposed to ads. I noticed several. Brands were imprinted on my consciousness.

http://ww1.prweb.com/prfiles/2009/08/11/1896944/NewspaperStack001.jpgI read a lot this weekend too. On Sunday, I went through the newspapers. We get the NY Times, the Wall Street Journal, the NY Post and the Daily New delivered to the house. I skimmed through the papers, looked at some of the car advertising, noticed a couple of sales. The weekend is the only time during the week I read the papers in the morning; during the week I skim them at night.

We pay for the newspaper delivery. We all know what is happening to newspaper advertising.

I spent time catching up on a backlog of web reading — some New Yorker articles, some longer articles on different web sites I follow, some blogs, some not.

I also did some browsing for Christmas gifts and some specific searching for some web development tools.

All of the last two categories of activity, which accounted for the bulk of my media consumption, happened on my laptop or my iPhone.

http://geek.net/nycpanel/files/5412/5269/0995/media.pngMy exposure to the direct source of the content was negligible.

Most of the the time on the laptop was spent using Feedly, a Firefox extension. On the iPhone I tend towards sources that have mobile interfaces.

Only occasionally did I turn into a unique visitor — someone who could be leveraged for the benefit of marketing purposes.

No one got paid anything for almost all of that media consumption.

I agree with much of the basic premises outlined in the argument that information is quickly unleashed on the web. What puzzled me over the weekend was how my interaction with the information could be turned into an economic benefit for anyone who is creating information.

When the web disrupts traditional business models and creates opportunities for entrepreneurs, that is a good thing. In the case of media creation, I don’t see the model where a individual is directly benefiting from my displaced consumption of content.

Aggregation tools that force individuals to access the content from the site of the content creator as potentially powered for creating economic benefit to the content creator. Aggregation tools that deliver the content wholesale to the individual are not.

http://www.typewritermuseum.org/collection/kbrd_writers/_ill/natport1.jpgI see this with the RSS subscribers to this site. I have elected to deliver all of the media — graphics, text and rich media — in the RSS feed. This obviates the need of anyone to come directly to my site.

Why do I do that? Because I want it to be as convenient as possible.

But how does a content creator — someone who makes their life work learning how to gather, organize and distribute high-quality information or entertainment — get paid?

Look again at this hypothesis about the future of the web site from Jeff Jarvis.

So imagine this future without pages and sites, this future that’s all built on process over product. If you’re what used to be a content-creation – if you’re Stephen Fry, post-media – you’re all about insinuating yourself into that stream. If you’re about content curation – formerly known as editing – then you’re all about prioritizing streams for people; that’s how you add value now.

There are only two ways to pay the bills with editorial content you create:  Either people are going to give you money to use your content or people are going to give you money to talk to the audience you have for the content.  In order to have a professional class of content creators, the system is going to have to provide for one of those two kinds of payments.

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The potent message of the Education divide in employment

August 8, 2009

The employment news on Friday was heartening and assorted media outlets are heralding the beginning of the end for the recession. The New York Times on its front cover this morning made the first stab at a hagiography of the Great Recession, lauding the Washington brains that have pulled our country back from the [...]

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The Debt Paradox means that you can’t solve the problem by re-enacting the problem

March 23, 2009

How does more debt solve a debt crisis, critics ask

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