Posts Tagged ‘Online’

‘Traditional media’ still top source of news

Friday, September 18th, 2009

They’re pulling up the rear, but newspapers are hanging in there among the traditional news sources that Americans turn to for major news, according to a First Amendment Center survey.

Television was the first source for major news stories for about half of all responding (49 percent), followed by the Internet at 15 percent, radio at 13 percent and newspapers at 10 percent – which places traditional news media (TV, radio and newspapers) as the first source for 72 percent of Americans,” the First Amendment Center says. “Twitter, e-mails and social-networking sites each were named by 1 percent of those responding.”

Seventy-one percent of survey respondents agreed with the necessity of a free press, but fewer knew the scope of the First Amendment. Just 4 percent of those questioned could name “petition” as one of the five freedoms in the First Amendment; 55 percent could only name freedom of speech, and fewer than 20 percent named the freedoms of religion, press and assembly.

Nearly one in five Americans (19 percent) saw the First Amendment as “going too far” in the rights it guarantees.

The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States says:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.


McClatchy going mobile with AP

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

McClatchy newspapers will contribute to AP Mobile, a multimedia news portal developed by the Associated Press that provides 24-hour access to international, national and local news.

AP Mobile offers applications for Blackberry, iPhone, Nokia devices and Android Market, and promises one soon for Palm Pre.

“Mobile is a key component of McClatchy’s overall digital strategy,” Christian Hendricks, McClatchy’s vice president, interactive media, said in a statement, according to Editor & Publisher.

In addition to AP’s own news, sports and entertainment, more than 1,000 AP members and other sources provide content for AP Mobile.

McClatchy’s Miami Herald and The Sacramento Bee  joined AP Mobile in 2008, and its El Nuevo Herald of Miami was the first Spanish-language daily to contribute to the U.S.-Spanish section of the mobile service.

You can lead a publisher to water, but …

Monday, September 14th, 2009

The Newspaper Association of America has asked for proposals on ways to easily charge for news on the Web, and has received responses from some of the world’s top tech companies, including IBM Corp., Microsoft Corp., Oracle Corp. and Google Inc.

“But,” says Associated Press Business Writer Andrew Vanacore, “building the infrastructure for charging readers is one part of the equation. The other part looks more challenging: getting publishers to make the leap and stop giving news out for free on the Web.”

Among the 11 proposals received, “Google proposed offering news organizations a version of its Google Checkout system, which is used for processing online payments. It would give readers a place to sign in to an account and then pay for media from a variety of sources without having to punch in their information over and over. And the company says it could offer publishers several pay methods, from basic subscriptions to so-called ‘micropayments’ on a per-article basis,” the AP report says.

“Publishers are nervous about scaring off readers. Charging for news online may open a new source of revenue for struggling newspapers but also could choke off Internet ad dollars by driving down traffic.

“‘This was supposed to be the year that newspapers started charging for online content,’ said Alan Mutter, a former newspaper editor who works as an industry consultant and blogger and submitted one of the 11 proposals. … ‘Based on what I’ve seen, I don’t get any sense that there is unanimity about charging or that they would know how to go about doing it.’”

Advertising declines charted

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

The Business Insider earlier this week, with its Chart of the Day, showed how brutal the first six months of 2009 have been for advertising.

Compared to the same period a year ago, U.S. ad spending declined 15.4 percent during the first half of the year, according to Neilsen figures.

The bar chart shows a decline of about 13 percent at local newspapers and about 23 percent at national newspapers.

Of 11 sectors, all are down except cable TV, which grew 1.5 percent year-over-year. Internet advertising was down 1 percent, the best performance among the rest. Business-to-business magazines fared worst, falling by more than 30 percent.

Atlanta offers automated ad campaigns

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

In a move that could threaten newspaper sales positions in addition to the few ad designers left,  The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has launched an automated newspaper advertising system aimed at small- and medium-sized businesses, Editor & Publisher reports.

MyAds is “a self-serve platform that helps advertisers target a campaign, create an ad through templates, plan a buy starting at $350 for a week, and track the ads.”

For now it is for online ads only, but by year’s end it is to be used to create print and direct mail advertising, E&P says.

Miami paper targets blogger

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

The Miami Herald, a McClatchy newspaper, says a local blogger who used two photos from the newspaper in an August 18 post is stealing from the paper.

“The Herald’s lawyer alleges that I am stealing Herald content,” says Bill, a photographer from Miami Beach who writes the Random Pixels blog. “He also alleges that I derive income from ads on my blog and that using Herald content helps drive traffic to my blog.”

The letter from Herald attorney Ian Ballon (posted here and here) alleges that the blog has run full articles from the Herald as well as large photos, which is a violation of Fair Use. The paper does not object to “short excerpts” from articles, “thumbnail reproductions of photographs” or “continued commentary on the paper, including criticism,”  the letter says.

Random Pixels had a wrap-up of the argument so far with comments from other Florida  lawyers suggesting this is a waste of The Herald’s time and money (plus a claim that the blog actually drives traffic to the newspaper’s site and that the controversy is increasing traffic at the blog). The blogger denies running full Herald articles.

News Corp. leads talks of pay-for-content

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Executives from Ruport Murdoch’s News Corp. have been meeting with other publishers about forming a consortium to charge for news content online, says the L.A. Times’ Company Town blog.

Publishers contacted include New York Times Co., Washington Post Co., Hearst Corp. and Tribune Co., publisher of the Los Angeles Times. News Corp.’s holdings include Wall Street Journal Online, which boasts more than 1 million paying subscribers.

“News Corp.’s solution is the latest proposal to publishers seeking to wring money from Internet readers to offset double-digit drops in print and online revenue,” the blog says. “Steve Brill’s Journalism Online initiative garnered attention this spring when it announced plans to create the tools to allow publishers to collect fees for digital distribution, and recently announced that more than 500 newspapers had joined.”

Publications like the WSJ and Financial Times have succeeded with a paid-for-content model in part, the blog says, because financial traders need the timely information they provide. Whether readers will pay for general news, sports and entertainment content is a different matter. “It’s probably going to be small dollars,” said Edward Atorino, media analyst at Benchmark Co. “For a big media company, it’s going to add a little bit to a giant pile.”

CareerBuilder jumps into social media

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

CareerBuilder, the online jobs board, has revealed the launch of BrightFuse.com, a social networking site based on users’ professions.

Like LinkedIn, which debuted in 2003 and claims more than 45 million members, BrightFuse allows users to “highlight their talent through customizable profiles that reflect their backgrounds, skills and specialties. In addition to basic personal and professional information, workers can add recommendations from contacts, community activities, Twitter updates, RSS feeds to a blog or Web site, and much more to their profiles,” says a release from the company.

The August 19 release notes the official launch of BrightFuse and says it has 1.6 million members, while the site’s About page says it has been in operation since February 2008.

CareerBuilder is owned by The McClatchy Company, Gannett Co., Inc., Tribune Company and Microsoft Corp.

Media Jobs Daily searched BrightFuse for CareerBuilder employees and found only a few perfunctory profiles. “Do you really need another networking site? Apparently not even CareerBuilder thinks so.”

“One thing BrightFuse seems to offer, unlike LinkedIn, is that it’s free to search by company,” Media Jobs Daily says. “(LinkedIn users need to subscribe to view the full names of people who work for a certain company.) This feature may make the service more attractive to recruiters – if anyone gets on the site and uses the dang thing.”

The next threat: digital coupons

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

The Sunday newspaper still dominates, but a new study of coupon usage by Scarborough Research finds that virtual coupons in the form of text messages and e-mail are becoming more popular, says Media Daily News.

Scarborough says 8.6 million households get coupons via text messages or e-mail, equaling about 8 percent of U.S. households; 7 percent get their coupons from Web sites. That’s a long way from the 51 percent of households that get coupons from the Sunday newspaper, or the 35 percent that rely on in-store coupons but, says Media Daily News, “The demographic characteristics of digital coupon users are also quite attractive. Consumers who get coupons via e-mail or text messages are 51 percent more likely than the mainstream population to be college graduates (or hold a post-graduate degree) and also skew younger.”

The survey also found that digital couponing is more popular in college towns.

Flickering light ahead for local TV

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Revenue for television stations, most of which is from advertising, will grow 5.2 percent to $18.5 billion in 2010, thanks in part to political advertising and the Olympics, says the L.A. Times’ Company Town blog, quoting industry research firm SNL Kagan. Local TV stations are also collecting more money from cable re-broadcast fees.

But in the long run, the Times says, they’ll need to counter falling revenue as programs and viewers move online by developing their own programs and by exploiting digital-spectrum channels.