Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries: The Newspaper Publishing Industry
Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries
Download 1.37 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
newspaper publishing industry jrc69881
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Changes in the value chain and new business models
Statistical, Ecosystems and Competitiveness Analysis of the Media and Content Industries
8 Online there are also many services which aggregate news from other sources, offer their users various ways to personalize the ranking and categorization of the news and combine this with linking the service to user’s profiles in social networks. Examples of such services, especially developed for use on mobile devices, are Pulse, Flipboard and Zite. Changes in the value chain and new business models The internet and digitization have affected the value chain of news production, aggregation, distribution and consumption in fundamental ways. While most newspapers have launched websites, and offer RSS feeds, blogs and apps for mobile devices, they still also need to bear the costs for their physical product. In this respect online-only news providers have a competitive advantage. At the same time, there are only few companies which have succeeded in developing viable online business models for their news services. Due to the huge quantity of news and information available on the internet, few people are willing to pay for online news services. Revenues from advertising on news sites are growing, but are still low compared to revenues from print advertising. One reason for this is that the prices for online advertising are relatively low. This can be explained by the abundance of advertising space available, the fragmentation of readers and the short time online readers spend on any particular webpage. In addition, established measurements for internet news consumption, which are accepted by all stakeholders, are still lacking. Successful pay models are scarce as well. Some newspaper publishers have experimented briefly with the pay-wall model and then left, as sales and subscriptions revenues could not compensate the vast loss of advertising revenues due to the loss of readers after the introduction of a pay-wall. Lately new attempts have been made by newspaper publishers to re-introduce pay-walls for premium content, for instance by the New York Times, a number of Murdoch’s newspapers, The Berliner Morgenpost, the Hamburger Abendblatt and Le Figaro. Other pay-models combine subscription on print and online editions or offer subscriptions to news offers for news apps on the iPad and other tablet computers. Recently, newspaper publishers have welcomed the iPad, tablet computers and new generations of eReaders as these devices make digital newspapers more attractive to read and could persuade consumers to pay for digital content. There are also providers which offer subscriptions to selections of news and other content from different sources. It is still too early to determine the success of these models. Most successful so far in business terms are aggregation services like Google News, or services which manage to engage large amounts of readers with low cost user-generated news and blogs, such as the Huffington Post. News aggregators provide links to news headlines from other sources, which can be ranked and categorized according to the users’ preferences. This practice has led to much controversy between online news aggregators and legacy news publishers. Legacy news publishers think they should be remunerated by aggregators for deep linking to their websites, while the online news aggregators argue that the news publishers benefit from the traffic they generate to their sites, implying that their aggregation services are mutually beneficial. News services like the Huffington Post have been able to monetize on local versions of the online news service, with active and engaged readerships and clever search engine optimization techniques, generating both traffic and advertising revenues. So far, these models have proven to be successful mainly for the largest players. Though smaller players do manage to generate some revenues, they are often not enough to run a viable news service. Consumers benefit from the increased availability of ‘free’ news and the options to tailor news consumption according to their own preferences. There is some concern, however, as to |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling