Saturday, December 20, 2008

Print phase-out?

From Jim Romenesko's site at Poynter Online:

Oregon paper will halt Monday delivery
"Klamath Falls Herald and News
Beginning Jan. 5, the Herald and News will put many of its Monday features into the Sunday paper. Publisher Heidi Wright says the Monday edition is being killed to avoid staff cuts and rate increases"

Hard to fault a paper for doing this as newsprint and other costs increase. But how will the readers take it. The start of a new work week for many newspaper readers -- including my wife -- requires reading the latest news in print. Reading it in Sunday's edition won't be quite the same.

But it is one step that may begin to gradually move readers to online editions. That's a good thing.

Monday, December 15, 2008

A glimpse of the future?

I'm not really sure this is what news organizations will look like in the future, or whether this is just a temporary arrangement until something more permanent comes along. But it does show that there is creative thinking taking place and new templates are developing.

From The New York Times Dec. 14:


"Politico, the upstart news source from Washington, and Reuters, the venerable wire service, have joined forces to offer articles to newspapers and sell advertising on the papers’ Web sites, the latest step in the rising competition among electronic news media to fill the void left by the shrinking print business.

Politico recently began offering papers a limited number of free articles, and beginning this week the papers that sign onto that service, the Politico Network, will also see the stream of daily output from Reuters, and choose up to 10 articles and 10 photographs each day to use in print or on the Web.

Politico would gain the right to sell ads on the newspapers’ Web pages containing the Politico and Reuters articles — though not the printed pages — and would share the revenue with the papers.

At the same time, Reuters will begin carrying most of Politico’s work on its news wires."

Home delivery on the way out?

From the Wall Street Journal, Dec. 13:

"Detroit Media Partnership L.P., which operates the Detroit Free Press and the Detroit News, is expected to announce next week that it will cease home delivery of the papers' print editions on most days of the week, according to people familiar with the company's thinking.

Detroit Media has not made a final decision, these people said. But the leading scenario set to be unveiled Tuesday calls for the Free Press, the 20th largest U.S. newspaper by weekday circulation, and the News to end home delivery on all but the most lucrative days -- Thursday, Friday and Sunday. On the other days, the company would sell single copies of abbreviated print editions at newsstands and direct readers to the papers' expanded digital editions.

The Free Press, owned by Gannett Co., and the News, owned by MediaNews Group, are operated by Detroit Media under a so-called joint operating agreement."

There's no better way to save newsprint costs than to stop printing altogether.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Out of Control

Today's distressing but hardly unexpected news:

The Tribune Co., owner of the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times and other papers is preparing for bankruptcy. According to several news sources, it has hired an investment bank and legal firm with experience in bankruptcy.

This comes on the heels of last week's announcement that the Rocky Mountain News is for sale, but the deadline for the sale and the fact that the paper is losing money big time make it seem unlikely that such a sale will occur. If not, the paper is expected to close.

As someone who has read both the Rocky Mountain News and the Denver Post for 30 years or more -- and I prefer the Rocky -- it is troubling news. But anyone who pays attention to journalism's problems has wondered how a moderately sized city like Denver has managed to maintain two competing daily papers for so long. Most cities went to a single paper long ago.

There's been talk for several years that one of the papers would close -- or perhaps stop putting ink on paper and become an entirely online product. I hope the Rocky finds a way to continue online, at least. As Colorado's oldest newspaper -- and according to one news story I read, perhaps the state's oldest continuously operating business -- it would be a shame to see it go.

As for the Tribune Co., it has been on the ropes for a long time. Most people I talked to doubted whether a real estate guy like Sam Zell could turn it around when he bought it a couple years ago. Apparently he couldn't, at least not in this economy.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Some papers did well in 2007

Despite all the dismal news in the newspaper industry, here's evidence that some mid-sized papers did very well in 2007: From the Gannett Blog (an independent blog by a former Gannett editor Jim Hopkins, Nov. 28:


"We've always heard that Gannett newspapers racked up double-digit profit margins, even as bad times engulfed the industry. But I've never seen actual numbers until now, because Corporate keeps the performance of individual businesses a well-guarded secret.

"I've recently had an opportunity to review margins for most of GCI's U.S. newspapers as of a year ago (USA Today isn't included).

"The numbers are startling -- especially now, with Gannett poised to lay off perhaps thousands of newspaper workers next week in another bid to boost the company's flagging stock. Every newspaper except Detroit's was profitable a year ago -- although some, just barely so.

"The Green Bay Press-Gazette was the star. It had the single-highest profit margin: 42.5%. In other words, Green Bay kept 43 cents of every dollar it took in. The paper's total ad revenue over the three quarters: $25 million. The report doesn't disclose circulation revenue for any paper. Applied only to ad revenue, then, Green Bay made around $10.6 million in profits during the period. (Will Green Bay lay off workers next week? We'll find out.)"

2008 has been worse than 2007, so the numbers may not look as great at the end of this year. Still, with a 42 percent profit margin, there's a lot of room for some reduction.