where content, technology and people meet. (SM) Publishing and content technology executives use Shore to measure and understand their markets and competitors, define marketing strategies and implement successful content products and services using Shore's highly actionable insights into vendors, institutions, individuals and virtual communities.
ContentBlogger is the 2007 SIIA CODiE Award Winner for Best Media Blog
COMMENTARY:

Insights and headlines from Shore analysts on trends in enterprise and media content markets.
  Subscribe to our feed (?) or add to: MyYahoo  iGoogle/Google Reader  Bloglines  NewsGator  Rojo
Monday, November 16, 2009
I have to chuckle a bit at the recent Poynter Online email interview with Wikimedia Foundation's Jimmy Wales, in which he discusses an internal memo gleaned from Associated Press (PDF) by Nieman Journalism Lab. The AP memo, entitled "Protect, Point, Pay - An Associated Press Plan for Reclaiming News Content Online," covers a lot of ground already familiar to those following AP's efforts to put in premium packaging for news content. However, in addition to conjuring up long-standing concerns about Google and other major search engines as competitive forces, the memo also highlights AP's concern about the millions of topic-oriented pages in Wikipedia that are capturing traffic when people search for breaking news. At last the light bulb begins to go off in some minds that perhaps the issue is not so much search engines but that search engines are directing people towards the most popular destinations for specific topics. Hmm, perhaps this might have something to do with...the quality of the content that they find there?

The AP memo points out that Wikipedia articles are rich with links and structured content that drive people to other trusted information sources, a concept that the memo suggests could be adopted by the AP for its own content. As Wales points out wryly, though, "Creating authoritative canonical pages based on the latest from the AP sounds like a good idea they should have implemented years ago." In other words, after more than five years of Wikipedia building both its content and its brand as a "go-to" source for freshly updated topic-oriented content that dominates search engine results, it dawns on some folks in the news business that perhaps there's a business model in there somewhere. Layer in the growth of online portals that are aggregating links to top topics content more effectively, and one wonders just what people are going to be willing to pay for those carefully designed hNews objects that AP is hoping to use to "reclaim" the news business.

The answer to that wondering seems to come in part from a recent study on consumer attitudes towards premium news content by the Boston Group highlighted in The New York Times. The study indicates that fewer than half in the U.S. are willing to pay for news content online and that of those who would be willing to pay the preferred tariff weighs in at about $3 a month. This seems to line up with long-time assertions by Journalism Online's Gordon Crovitz, who claims that premium news sites can expect to be able to charge for about ten percent of their online content. I've noted oftentimes that a system for managing access to paid content is long overdue, but news organizations should take a hint from the payments being extracted from iPhone apps and recognize that online markets reward functionality and community input that meets personal needs more than it does deathless prose and a good network of inside contacts.

A topic-oriented Web site for news content sponsored by AP would be a good idea, but one wonders whether AP or any other news organization is up to the task of building both the content and the brand necessary to contend in search engine wars for their audience's attention. At the same time, AP's emphasis on "protective" content packaging as a means to establish fair licensing of AP content seems to miss the real revenue opportunity available to AP and other news organizations. When a publishing-enabled global audience is your most effective distribution mechanism, a strategy of "joint supplier negotiation" suggested by the AP memo is not likely to succeed.

What is needed for AP and other professional news organizations to succeed in online content licensing is a system that encourages the distribution of their content through the most efficient and popular channels available at any given moment. Instead of fighting your audience, empower and encourage your audiences to be distributors of your content - and help them to profit from it as well. Highly automated content licensing with a billing mechanism akin to mobile phone usage units - and that can help individuals to profit from AP content when it's appropriate - is the key to this concept, and should be the cornerstone of AP's premium content strategy.

With such a scheme in place, AP's members can focus on beating the competition at their own game by becoming the most effective agnostic aggregators of news content in any given market. Yes, news organizations will continue to staff up with their own editorial resources, but the news of today - and tomorrow - needs to collect the best content from whatever source that it comes from more effectively than the competition. You can have some exclusive content, to be sure, but exclusivity alone cannot power success.

This can be seen clearly in how information providers in the financial industry are required to aggregate content from as many different sources as possible to help information-hungry decision makers. Over time you may develop unique assets, but the fundamental game is giving people what they want, where they want it, when they want it. If you yell at your markets for wanting to play a different game, don't be surprised by the blank stares that you get before they go to pay attention to people who listen more effectively.

I do hope for the sake of professional news producers that AP does come up with an effective content distribution strategy, and there are some hopeful outlines in the AP memo to that effect. But the largest thing that needs to change in the AP strategy is their attitude, which still treats the Web as an object of fear and scorn. More than 1.4 billion people around the world seem to feel otherwise about electronic content, people who both consume and contribute value to the news gathering and distribution process. It's time for the AP to recognize that their mission needs to embrace those 1.4 billion people more effectively if they are to value their brand and their content enough to consider seriously the prospect of regular payments for it.

Labels: , , , , , , ,


By John Blossom - posted at 9:04 AM
permanent link to this entry        bookmark this entry:  AddThis Social Bookmark Tool
  3 comments (click to view or to add your own) 
 
Thursday, April 09, 2009

The Associated Press Building in New York City...

There's been a whirlwind of announcements, commentary and downright bad blood beginning to steam up around the Associated Press' moves to position news content from its own reporters and its member organizations more effectively in the online environment. The latest developments in the war for news organization survival were kicked off by the AP board's announcement that it would be moving aggressively to identify and to challenge Web site publishers that were using unlicensed AP content illegally. The "why" of this move, largely ignored by media reports, is contained in the rest of the announcement: AP is introducing a new schedule of lower fees for its member news organizations that will make it easier for them to participate in AP distribution and news use. Faced with having to respond to the revenue crunches experienced by most news organizations this year, AP has no choice but to ensure that their online revenue streams from organizations consuming AP content can be captured as effectively as possible.

From the perspective of public relations, any constructive aspects of the latest AP moves appear to have been lost in a sea of furor rising up from bloggers, Twitters and other online voices. TechCrunch viewed AP's moves as being akin to the RIAA's moves to prosecute consumers for downloading relatively meager quantitites of music on to their PCs - legal moves that have backfired in many ways both from a legal and public relations perspective for the music pubishing industry. TechCrunch also highlighted a cease-and-desist order sent by AP to a Web site using AP-posted video from YouTube in an embedded video player. Of course YouTube videos are made for embedding in other Web sites, and the site that happened to be using it was that of WTNQ-FM, already an AP affiliate member. Google CEO Eric Schmidt commented in the wake of these PR fiascos by AP that it's a good idea not to "piss off your customers"- especially those who are doing their very best to abide by fair use policies for the reuse of copyrighted content. AP could certainly take some lessons from Google's efforts to get publishers to swallow some of their own bitter pills with much kinder and gentler approaches to public and professional-level communications.

The question is, though, what is really the most effective path towards revenue growth for AP at this time - and are they handling the rollout of new strategies in a way that will help those new revenue streams to materialize? From the looks of things, AP is still struggling to find answers to that question. Certainly pursuing legal enforcement against blatant content pirates is one possible route, and it's not without its merits. Data published by Attributor indicates that nearly half of the Web sites taking content from major publishers are copying more than 90 pecent of the original text of articles. Knocking out parasite Web sites that copy unattributed content strictly for the purpose of sucking up ad revenues that would go otherwise to the original publishers would do the bottom lines of all online publishers a great favor. It's a shame that AP's initial efforts along this vein have resulted in embarassing misfires - it's an important goal that should not be sidelined by a mishandling of the policies built on top of the underlying copy detection technologies.

But the larger concern is whether AP is really "getting" how to make money in the online publishing environment. The AP board announcement included a statement indicating AP's intent to build a search portal that would feature only content from "authoritative" news sources. While this is a constructive goal of sorts, we've had such search engines for years already. The Topix search engine focuses primarily on traditional media sources, and, for that matter, Yahoo! News and other major portal news services have focused on aggregating and searching mainstream news even longer. Both are good efforts in their own ways, but they're not floating the boat for most online news publishing revenues and they're not growing in any significant way. Why would yet another search portal wind up being the solution to news publishers' concerns?

The future that AP needs to embrace can be summed up in a fairly simple phrase: get news content that people really want to read to where it can make money. In broad concept that's pretty much what AP's mission has been all along, but in insisting that that mission cannot be expanded or altered significantly in light of how news is created today is holding back both AP and its member organizations from surviving and thriving in online news markets. Media organizations need to become better at aggregating sources of news more agnostically: if someone is streaming live video via Qik from their mobile phone at the site of a plane crash, then AP should be the natural source to which news organizations would turn to find such content as breaking news, not "i-reports." The idea of "authoritative" news need not always be synonymous with editorial and news-gathering methods that grew up in the era of printing presses. With today's publishing technologies editorial values can be implemented in many ways that can expedite the most compelling information getting to the right audiences at the right time.

This recognition that its own members need better agnostic aggregation of news sources is key to AP supporting the economic performance of those news organizations. Thomson Reuters CEO noted recently at a conference, "Why does The New York Times need to have 600-700 journalists? Why not 30 journalists with 30 apprentices?" In other words, if the economics of news have shifted permanently, why try to justify subsidizing jobs that need to move elsewhere in the news economy simply because you want only specific people in specific organizations producing news a specific way? With billions of people around the world equipped with real-time news publishing tools, including increasingly successful independent journalists, the world's attention span has permanently embraced this "Content Nation" as a source of information that they trust. That's a fact that will simply never go away. Trying to make it go away is about at pointless as anyone who tried to sift the tea thrown overboard in Boston Harbor back in 1775. Even if you could do it, who would want to drink it?

Instead of arguing with people who are both consumers and sources of news, AP needs to take a deep breath and think about how they can power the profits of today's news organizations using whatever content - news, metadata, links, video, anything - will help them to make money. In some instances this may mean new members and approaches to membership, in other instances it may mean playing a very different role with existing members and in how they participate in its editorial efforts. This can be a hard thing for any organization with a venerated history as rich as AP's to do, and I know that they are trying their best to move in that direction. But if they were able to leave the confines of Rockefeller Center behind to set up shop in dot-com West Side digs, one would hope that AP could help to carry both its traditions of excellence and of innovation to new levels of performance in the news industry that take it in directions that others have yet to dare to imagine. The time to dream a new dream at AP has come. I do hope that they start to envision and to realize that dream aggressively some time soon, both for its own sake and for the sake of its members.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


By John Blossom - posted at 11:37 AM
permanent link to this entry        bookmark this entry:  AddThis Social Bookmark Tool
  3 comments (click to view or to add your own) 
 
Monday, October 20, 2008
Editor & Publisher notes along with many others the announcement by the Tribune Company that it has given its two-year notice to discontinue receiving content from the Associated Press. The E&P article cites the recent rate hikes from AP as a key factor in its decision, but other accounts also highlight concerns raised by other newspapers subscribing to the service regarding AP's cutting back on local coverage and its efforts to create a more competitive position for its own content through non-newspaper outlets that compete directly or indirectly with member outlets. Whatever the exact reasons in these instances, the pullout echoes sentiments surfacing in some of Shore's private research that indicates a growing dissatisfaction with AP as a source of content.

Although some of the growing rebellion against AP services no doubt is fired by cost, content and competition from the membership-driven service, there is another key factor that is driving newspapers to reconsider AP as a source of content: the marketplace. In local newspapers and media outlets there is a dwindling interest in national news as a revenue driver, as 24x7 online and broadcast sources diminish the need of local residents to turn to their hometown papers for this view of the world. There is more money to be had by many of these papers by building up deeper and more engaged local content and by building special interest sections for holidays and other event-driven interests that will attract local advertisers more effectively. Put simply, with dwindling budgets to cover world and national events many papers are making the choice to rally their limited resources around locally focused content and advertisers.

The other key factor in the challenge to AP, though, is that there is an increasing reservoir of options for media outlets that want high-quality editorial to insert into their publications. Link exchanges, content swaps and other cooperative online publishing options enable the online editions of local papers to insert content from other newspapers and media outlets into their own sites and to host their own content elsewhere at partner sites. In other words, when revenue isn't all about what happens on your own Web site but also about driving more traffic to inventory from relationships with online publishing partners there are more options for local publishers to drive up both page inventory and audience engagement. AP delivers content inventory, but not the kind of inventory that's most likely to engage the audiences that value a local newspaper brand in a way that will drive the highest revenues.

While some newspapers seem to question the refocusing of AP's content on more analysis and opinion pieces as an additional point of concern, in general the real issue for most publishers confronting their rising AP charges is that as good as AP news can be it's not what will drive their profits moving forward in most instances. While AP has spent a great deal of legal and marketing effort to shore up the value of the AP brand through copyright protection and brand positioning, it has in many ways failed to identify how a cooperative news distribution service can help its members to generate more revenues cost-effectively. With their members cutting their own collaborative content deals left and right, oftentimes with providers of unique online sources of content, the power of the Web to make these deals work without AP's infrastructure is the chief challenge to AP's future.

All of this argues for a selloff of AP in the next couple of years to an owner that can take advantage of its extensive network of reporters and stringers to package its core assets more effectively to a broader base of clients beyond dwindling newspaper properties. News Corp would be the most likely taker, in part because of Rupert Murdoch's designs already in place to provide better global marketing for Dow Jones resources (already aligned closely with AP in financial markets), though others such as Google continue to be bandied about. The missed opportunity in this, of course, is the opportunity to redefine AP as a new kind of distribution channel for high-quality content based on a new generation of news producers and to enable it to include a cross-platform network of news enthusiasts who will add value to its brand based on their enthusiasm for commenting on news content. If everyone wants to do content swaps and link exchanges, for example, why isn't AP positioned as a channel designed to make that easier?

On this note I think that one of the great missed opportunities for AP has been its failure to adopt a strategy for embracing social media more effectively. While an acquisition of a player such as Newsvine would not have stanched the bleeding based on its core asset issues it would have at least started to position AP as a service that could center communities around key news assets. If audience engagement is the key to online publishing profits, catchy headlines and great ledes are not necessarily going to help your members as much as giving people a good reason to stay on a page - something that good social media can help to do very effectively.

AP's pricing will help to define for its members what AP needs to do to cover costs for existing editorial operations, but that's little more than an opening argument when AP members are looking for concluding remarks as to how AP will help them to drive revenues more effectively. It's probably best at this time for AP to seek a parent aggressively that will help them to maintain their core editorial assets while enabling them to invest in a broader array of content assets and services that will bolster their value over time. By all indications current AP members will not be the ones to sponsor that investment, so it's most definitely time to go find buyers to make those investments while there's still a good opportunity to do so.

Labels: , , , , , ,


By John Blossom - posted at 12:11 PM
permanent link to this entry        bookmark this entry:  AddThis Social Bookmark Tool
  2 comments (click to view or to add your own) 
 

To top of page To Top of Page

COMMENTARY: INDEX
CONTENTBLOGGER
INDUSTRY EVENTS
CONTENT NATION

Read ShoreLines, our free weekly email newsletter.

Sample issue
Follow us on Twitter
Get headline-only feed
Buzz news comments
RECENT ENTRIES
READ CONTENT NATION

Learn how to thrive and to survive as social media changes our work, our lives and our future.
Buy the book
Read it online
Read our social media blog
WEBLOGS: ARCHIVES
 
 

shorename.gif (1190 bytes)
[HOME] [US] [SERVICES] [COMMENTARY] [RESEARCH] [EVENTS] [PRESS] [CONTACT]
Copyright © 1997-2009 Shore Communications Inc.  All Rights Reserved - Click Here to Read Terms of Use
Corporate Privacy Policy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?