Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries: The Newspaper Publishing Industry
The Newspaper Publishing Industry
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newspaper publishing industry jrc69881
The Newspaper Publishing Industry
91 checking, explaining and interpreting news and information. In this context there is also debate on whether some forms of journalism are at risk and might therefore require a certain level of state support. Nielsen and Levy (2010) signal two simultaneous developments in how news publishers try to face the digital challenges. The first is one in which news publishers offer more exclusivity by introducing premium services and pay walls for exclusive or high value content. The recent take-off of mobile platforms and tablet computers and the gradual penetration of e-books provides publishers with more options to charge for a (personalized or premium) news offer and consumers seem to display more willingness to pay for news apps and e-papers than for online news services. The second development is one in which news publishers try to integrate professional journalism and user generated content by making the news more relevant for users and inviting them to contribute to news production and distribution. The internet offers many new opportunities for journalists and news publishers to strengthen the relation between their product and its users, especially by making the relationship more mutual and by exploiting all options for interactivity and user participation. According to Nielsen en Levy finding the right balance between exclusivity and participation is the main challenge for the news publishing sector. They see this challenge not just as an economic, but also as a social or democratic challenge. A business model that would rely too much on exclusivity by providing niche content to affluent elites may be commercially successful but ultimately fail to fulfil journalism's democratic functions and would therefore not be the best solution for the news publishing business as a whole. What kept the print model in place, is that it bundled different content categories and advertising, or as Shirkey puts it: “Newspapers, [as] a sheaf of unrelated content glued together with ads [….]” (Shirkey, 2011). One could argue that the popular newspaper categories, such as sport, entertainment, lifestyle, cartoons and the weekly cross word puzzle paid for the less popular but, at least from a social and democratic point of view, important news categories, such as foreign policies, financial and economic news and investigative journalism. Because now large parts of advertising have moved to the web, and news is also available in unbundled forms, the traditional print model has been severely undermined. Online, the economic and technological rationale for bundling weakens. The high margins which newspapers earned on print advertising can not be maintained online. While some news categories might still be sustained by advertising or consumer payments, others are unlikely to be able to survive without alternative funding models. Table 18 summarizes the opportunities and threats facing the EU newspaper publishing sector in the digital media environment. |
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