2020-03-01 AdNews

(Martin Jones) #1

Thisshiftinwherebrandsare
advertisinghastranslatedinto
massredundanciesinnewsrooms
acrosstheglobe,andoftencom-
pleteclosures.A senatecommit-
teewastold 3000 journalismjobs
had beenlostfrom2012-2017,
representingonequarterofall
Australian journalism jobs.
During 10 yearsfrom2008,15%,
or106,localandregionalnews-
papersshutinAustralia,leaving
21 localgovernments without
coverage from a single local
paper.Andthere’slittleincen-
tive,orresources,fromnational
titles,suchasTheAustralianor
TheGuardian, tocovercommu-
nitynewswhenthey’revyingfor
massreachtosurvive.
Newsmediacompanieshave
respondedtothesurgefrombig
tech,inpart,bypubliclycalling
for themto be reinedit.The
ACCC’sinquirythatlookedinto
thisimpactdigitalplatformsare
havingonAustralianjournalism
had 23 recommendations,from
betterbargainingpowersforpub-
lishers, to tax relief for readers


It waspartly
publisherstaking
theirtime,partly
consumerattitudes
needingtocatch
up,andpartly
developments
intheadmarket
thathavebeen
welldocumented,
necessitatedthat
publisherstake
it moreandmore
seriously.

DavidEisman,Nine
Entertainment Co.

whosubscribe.However,expertssaythewatchdogislimitedinits
powertohelpnewsmediacompanies.
“TheactualreportwasprettyonpointinthatGoogleandFacebook,
orsocialmediagenerally,aren'tcreatingnewsthatsomehowdiminishes
theabilityoftheseothercompaniestocreatenews,”saysLotz.
“Theproblemis theycreateda bettermechanismofadvertising,they
innovatedandthat'snotsomethingtheACCCcandoa lotabout.Inmany
cases,whatthisrevealsinAustralia,andeverywherearoundtheworld,
isthatadvertisingwasnevera verygoodwaytosupportthekindof
journalismpeoplewant.Whenwewringourhandsandsayweneed
betternews,advertisingisn'tthewaytogetthat.
“Soinmanywaysthesenewformsofadvertisinghavereallyput
thepressureonnewsorganisationstorevitalisetheirbusinessesand
trytofigureouthowtodothat.”
Thesolutionfrompublishershasbeentoturntosubscriberstohelp
replacelostadvertisingrevenueandfundtheirjournalism.
A studyfromtheUniversityofCanberrafoundthatgettingpeople
topayfornewsisstillanuphillbattle.ItsDigitalNewsReportfound
that14%ofAustraliansarewillingtopayfornews,comparedtothe
globalaverageof13%.
Newspublishersalsohavetheaddedcompetitionofentertainment
platformssuchasNetf lix, with34%ofAustralianspreferring to
subscribetovideo-streamingservicesratherthanonlinenews.
Buttherearepositivesigns,withlegacymediacompaniessuchasThe
NewYorkTimespullingoffsuccessfultransformations.InFebruary,the
companyhit5.25millionsubscribers,with4.4millionbeingdigital-only.
“Mostpublishersareputtingemphasisonreaderrevenue,notso
muchadvertising,andbuildingmoredirectrelationswiththeirread-
ers,”saysMyllylahti.
“TheNewYorkTimes, forexample,hasa recordnumberofdigital
subscriptionsandtheymadethetransformationaheadofschedule.
Ifpeoplearepayingforsomething,theyexpectsomesortofquality,
andthat’sexactlywhatisencouragingpublisherstodoa betterjob.”
InFairfaxMedia’sfinalfinancialreportbeforeitstakeoverbyNine,
itsthen-chairmanNickFalloonnotedthatwhilethisnewrevenuemodel
wouldbesustainable,it wouldn’tprovidetheso-called“riversofgold”
thecompanyoncesaw.
“Ourthreepublishingbusinesses—AustralianMetroMedia,ACM
andStuffinNewZealand— areunderpinnedbya newrevenuemodel
whichismultifacetedandmoveswellbeyondthetraditionalreliance
onadvertising,printsubscriptionsandcirculation,”notedFalloon.
“Itleveragespremiumbrands,qualityjournalismandaudiences
ofgreatscale.Whilethismodelhaslowerrevenuethaninthepast,it
ismoresustainableandvaluable,featuringmultiplebusinessmodels
andrevenuestreams.”
Bytheearly2010s,erectingsuccessfulpaywallsbecamethefocus
fornewspublishers,withthemainhurdlebeingreaders’attitudes,says
Nine’sdirectorofsubscriptionsandgrowthDavidEisman.
“Itwaspartlypublisherstakingtheirtime,partlyconsumerattitudes
needing to catch up, and partly developments in the ad market that

Averagedailypaid
printcirculation
forTheAustralian

PaidsubscribersforThe
AustralianandTheWeekend
Australian (print and digital)
2019 83,684 164,
2018 88,581 135,
2017 99,000 127,

Figure 3:


Agenda

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