The Newspaper Publishing Industry
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3.
Transition to digital and online
3.1 Introduction
The news sector is undergoing significant changes (e.g. OECD, 2010; Boczkowski, 2005,
(Pleijter & Deuze, 2003; Pavlik, 2000). The economic foundation for the traditional
newspaper businesses is collapsing and the gathering and distribution of news has become
more widely dispersed (Downie Jr. & Schudson, 2009).
The market developments described in Chapter 2 have shown how digitization and the
internet have affected newspaper publishing markets. In this chapter these developments are
discussed from the perspective of their impact on the value chain; i.e. on the production,
aggregation, distribution and consumption of content. Digitization has affected all links in the
value chain and have made the value chain increasingly complex. Digitization and the internet
have also fundamentally disrupted traditional business models. Consequently newspaper
publishers are experimenting with a number of (new) business models, trying to exploit the
strengths of their product and brand in competition with an increasing number of online news
providers. Another new phenomenon is the increasing importance of news aggregators and
social networks that has been made possible by the digitization of information and the new
ways of distributing and sharing news that these enable. Especially noteworthy are the
changes in user roles that have become apparent in recent years. News consumers have taken
on much more active and participative roles. Changes are visible in every aspect of the value
creation process, leading to what some researchers have labelled a ‘new media logic’ (e.g.
(Oblak, 2005) or a new media ecosystem.
3.2
From value chain to value network in the news industry
Traditional news production can be schematically presented as a linear value chain of content
creation, production, distribution and consumption (see Figure 17).
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