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Neil Perkin


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August 17, 2012

Comments

Tim

Marvellous post Neil and glad you struggled with it!

I keep coming back to Monocle as an exemplar in the new market. The revenue streams from high end advertisers create one revenue stream and could possibly alienate some readers. However the creation of fresh journalistic content means you never know quite where they will take you next.

Couple this with their radio broad and podcasts on Monocle 24 and you have a refreshing resource to challenge your thoughts and feelings on your views of how the world works. The Entrepreneurs is a case in point. It underpins David Hepworth's point about Editors that "they'll be picked for their ability to note where the interest is and minister to it". It is something we all have to do now.

Zahid Hussain Khalid

Is it really true? Innovation can bring life back to not only magazines but newspapers too. The question is: Are the media owners ready to take the initiative?

Marketing without innovative initiatives is like fishing in a dry river. Media are marketing are victims of discount and rebate culture introduced by media houses. Now the focus has shifted from print to electronic and social media. Marketing people don't know how to integrate the three to retain there share and generate additional business too.

The topic is interesting and debatable. Marketing will never die unless we let it die due to our professional incompetence and indifference.

Allen G. Bunyan.

There are to my knowledge 24 hours (slightly less actually) in any given day,how that time is spent affects "magazines" or for that matter any printed media directly.Pray for the day when a solar anomaly wipes out everything disseminated digitally then perhaps people will find the time and money to spend on rag's and mag's.

Paul Squires

Totally agree about content being a dataset that is open to interrogation. The more in which content, from the perspective of the publisher, is viewed in this way, the greater the opportunities for scale and reach.

However, as you say, the challenge is predominantly cultural, and actually very simple: building and retaining a sustainable readership has been the objective of
publishers since day 1. The openness of the Internet challenges that, meaning that publishers must look at their utility value, and how their brand relates to it. The Guard$

We're practising this belief in our own little way with our magazine - it's Creative Commons-licenced and our bigger articles are on GitHub (http://www.imperica.com/github) for anyone to interrogate and use. GitHub gives us an out-of-the-box API that allows free and open access to our content - just as the network effect intended.

Chris Moisan

Great, balanced post Neil. My only additional comment is that perhaps the giant publishing empires may fall and with them the old economy print magazine infrastructure but perhaps we'll see leaner- meaner more targeted specialist magazine sector. The sort you get to devour if you've ever subscribed to the brilliant service from http://www.stackmagazines.com/ [btw - if you ever fall out of love with magazines or fear their demise, subscribe to Stacks and prepare to fall in love again!]

neilperkin

Thanks for the recommendation Chris

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