Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries: The Newspaper Publishing Industry
The Newspaper Publishing Industry
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The Newspaper Publishing Industry
7 The newspaper publishing crisis has been felt harder in some countries than in others. From the largest European newspaper publishing countries, the newspaper publishing industry in Germany seems to be doing better than it is, for instance, in France and the UK. The French press has been hit harder and is less able to respond to the challenges of new technologies and increasing competition due to its outdated and monopolistic production and distribution systems. In contrast, the German press is doing comparatively well, and Germany is home to a number of well-established global publishing companies. As a whole, the European press is doing better than US newspaper publishers. One explanation for this is that European newspapers are on average less dependent on advertising revenues (on average for 50%). They generate a larger share of their revenues from sales and have a relatively large number of subscribers, whereas the US press relies on advertising for approximately 85% of its revenues. Technological innovations have accompanied newspapers’ history, from the invention of the printing press to the internet. Newspapers benefitted from improvements in printing processes, photography, communication technologies, word processing, publishing software and electronic management systems. At the same time, the introduction of new technologies also brought new competitors, first radio news, later TV news programmes and currently internet news providers, of which the latter seem to have had the most fundamental consequences so far for newspaper publishers. Over the last two decades, newspaper publishers have responded to the changing market environment in a variety of ways: for instance, by: Introducing new sections and (weekend) magazines which offer readers light entertainment and lifestyle information and offer advertisers extra, attractive advertising space. Changing the newspaper format: from broadsheet to Berliner, or tabloid format. Introducing free news papers. Launching websites and other online services such as email newsletters, RSS feeds, news apps, etc. Exploiting their brand name by offering extra products such as books, DVDs, wine or travels, related to for instance their book, film or lifestyle newspaper sections. In general: integrating their journalistic profile more strongly to their commercial potential. Newspapers have become major internet players. These days most newspapers have websites and offer a number of additional services to their readers. On the internet, newspaper publishers have to compete with broadcasters, citizen journalists and online-only news providers and have lost some of their readers and advertising revenues to these ‘new’ online news providers. There are many online-only news services which mainly publish news reports from news agencies and do not provide any original news content. Often this is complemented by user- generated content. Users take on increasingly active roles by producing or disseminating news through blogs and social networks like Facebook and Twitter. User roles vary from simply sharing news with friends through social networks to providing comments on news stories, contributing to stories from professional journalists and uploading pictures, to investigating and producing full news stories on blogs or sites for citizen journalism. In some cases, they share in the revenues, when their content is sold to other news providers or when their stories generate a lot of page views and thus advertising revenues. |
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