Archive for the ‘Media’ Category

Options Still on the Table to Support the Future of Quality Journalism

June 7th, 2009 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Media, Public Relations, Technology

Simon Sharwood, a freelance journalist in Australia, recently blogged two out of his three ideas for new business models in print journalism. Both ideas are based on the concept of industry funding.

In the first, funding would come from industry associations and industry groups. In the second, the PR industry funds print journalism via a licensing system, which grants the license holder access to those journalists – similar to the registration of lobbyists.

newspaper-kiosk

Both concepts seem to create dependencies that would undermine journalistic independence and integrity, although the risk of this occurring in the second model could be minimised: “…to be a registered PR, one would stump up a fee that goes into an independently administered fund that is then redistributed to publishers with oversight to ensure it goes on wages” (Simon – in comments).

Putting aside the practical challenges of this model, some of which are discussed in the post, I doubt that the model would be sustainable. Funding from the PR industry would be a diminishing return as media relations become a smaller part of what PR agencies do.

Here’s where I come up with my alternative solve all solution.

I might need to get back to you on that but here are some other funding alternatives:

  • Newspapers earn not for profit status and the associated financial and tax breaks
  • Introduction of a subscription/ micro-payment system that covers multiple competing publications. Check out ViewPass, which would process payments and collect data to drive targeted advertising or trade content for information about the reader’s preferences and interest.
  • Newspapers regulate the re-use of content – in the same way that the music industry does.
  • Philanthropy may sustain some publications.

The subject is such an emotive and complex issue. I am definitely in the ‘newspapers are a good thing’ camp – but at the end of the day if the model ceases to work then we have to let ‘nature’ take its course.  Consolidation is inevitable but I think that the concept of a newspaper-less society is somewhat alarmist.

By the way, newspapers are flourishing in the developing world.  man-reading-newspaper

Ultimately, I see a small number of print publications containing analysis and opinion available internationally, nationally and in major cities. They’ll play a key role in holding institutions, business and Government to account and would be supported by the not-for-profit- funding model if advertising revenue alone was not sufficient.

I am positive that the pendulum will swing back from digital to traditional media and that things will balance themselves out.

Quality print journalism will survive even if the industry is vastly consolidated and readers will turn to the Web for breaking news, trade/niche content,  entertainment and video. I don’t personally have an issue with a micro-pay scheme – I’d be happy to pay a small amount for quality content from someone that ‘appreciated the technical nuances of the fields concerned’.

There continues to be considerable opportunity for the newspaper industry to reduce cost which makes this scenario seem feasible. Moody’s estimates that just 14% of newspaper operating costs are related to content creation. It’s not all doom and gloom – there are still workable options.

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The Hunt for Gollum: User Generated Content Builds on Hoolywood

May 17th, 2009 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Media

In the spirit of my recent post on RIP – A Remix Manifesto, check out this movie ‘made by fans for fans’ entitled, The Hunt for Gollum. This is not a mash-up, it is a low budget Lords of the Ring movie which has no affiliation with the Tolkein Estate or New Line Cinema. Here is a great example of the creative culture building on the past and I am assuming that there is no legal objection from Peter Jackson and co. I discovered this on Julian Cole’s blog.

How amazing is North Wales – I used to go there on holiday every year.

Trailer 2 – The Hunt For Gollum [2]
by HuntForGollum

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RIP A Remix Manifesto: Brett Gaylor Film Investigates Crazy Copyright Law in the Internet Age

May 14th, 2009 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Media, Social media, Technology

I went to the Popcorn Taxi screening of RIP: A Remix Manifesto last night, a film that explores issues relating to copyright law and creativity.It was awesome, very interesting and thought provoking.

(more…)

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Internet Ends Monopoly on Journalism and News Content Production Says Alan Kohler

April 2nd, 2009 by Daniel Young | 1 Comment | Filed in Media
Alan Kohler, Business Spectator

Alan Kohler, Business Spectator

Alan Kohler argued that the Internet has put an end to the cartel which existed between a small number of publishers in the era of print media as it eradicated the high barriers to entry such as printing presses and licenses (in the case of broadcasting).

Print is a highly ineffecient means of conveying news, he said, adding that the Government would be mad to support ‘public trust journalism’ via print publications. He viewed the recent increase in subsidies for print media legislated by Sarkozy as the latest example of ‘loopy French economics’.

Kohler – as an online publisher – strongly supports the trend towards digital media stating that the industry is in a transition mode. These points formed part of a panel discussion for the ABC’s Saturday Extra program on Radio National entitled, Quality Journalism: How Pays? Does it Matter?

Alan Kohler is the publisher of Business Spectator (online business and finance news) and The Eureka Report (subscription based investor news service). He said that the Business Spectator – founded 16 months ago – would ‘make a profit before too long’.

Philanthropic support and/or Government funding could help protect public interest journalism in Australia, according to Eric Beecher, publisher of Crikey.

The panel also included Wendy Bacon (Centre for Independent Journalism, UTS), John Hewson (Liberal Party Federal Leader, 19901-994) and Campbell Reid (Group Editorial Director, News Limited) with Geraldine Doogue, as moderator/presenter.

I have mixed feelings about the decline of newspapers. I agree that traditional mass media is effectively a monopoly but its also representative of national consciousness (imperfectly but as close as we know), it leads and sets the agenda. Digital media lets the audience set their personal agenda and that has inherent limitations (you don’t know what you don’t know).

I’d like to think that the power of the Internet to mobilize large numbers of people around campaigns and ideas will be effective in holding our institutions to account in the future but this still requires instigation, leadership. The danger is that we lose print media and have nothing to fill the void and each individual retreats into their own echo chamber of self determined media, opinion and content.

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Media Industry Luminary Predicts Closure of Two Major Australian Metro Broadsheet Newspapers

April 2nd, 2009 by Daniel Young | 1 Comment | Filed in Media
Crikey's Eric Beecher

Crikey's Eric Beecher

Eric Beecher (Publisher of Crikey) painted a dark future for the print versions of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age newspaper during a panel discussion for ABC Radio’s Saturday Extra program earlier today. The discussion ‘Quality Journalism: How to Pay for it? Does it Matter?’ focused on the future of print journalism in Australia, new business models and the concept of public trust journalism.

Pointing to the fact that few cities internationally are able to sustain two daily newspapers (many are struggling to sustain one), Beecher made the point that News Corporation with The Australian and its tabloid dailies in Melbourne and Sydney would take the opportunity to ‘wipe out’ the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. A ‘not unlikely scenario’, he said.

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