Bleak outlook for US newspapers
    By Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson    March 16, 2012  ft.com
  The headlines about the US newspaper industry have never been so bleak. 
   In recent weeks,  LinkedIn, the networking website, and the Council of Economic Advisers have reported that the press is  “America’s fastest-shrinking industry”, measured by  jobs lost;   the Newspaper Association of America has shown that advertising sales   have halved since 2005 and are now at 1984’s level; and the Pew  Research  Center has found that for every digital ad dollar they earned,  they  lost $7 in print ads.
  As  media from television to  billboards bounce back from the recession,  newsprint is being left  behind. Zenith Optimedia this week predicted  that internet advertising  would pass newspaper advertising next year  around the world – but in  the US, where internet penetration is high and  newspaper audiences are  shrinking, digital will overtake newspapers’  and magazines’ combined ad  sales this year,  eMarketer estimates.   “There’s no doubt we’re going out of business now,” one unnamed   executive told Pew’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, which   predicted a future of shrinking newsrooms, print  deliveries only a few days of the week and more  papers closing   altogether. A USC Annenberg School study reached the stark conclusion   that most printed US dailies would be gone in five years. 
    Departing executives and bankruptcy advisers have been among the few   people making good money from newspapers. The chief executives of   Gannett and the  New York Times left in recent months with packages worth $37m and $24m respectively, while advisers to Tribune’s Chapter 11 proceedings have  earned $233m.
   Yet the very pressures on print are also accelerating the pace of change in newspapers’ business models.
   On March 5, the Los Angeles Times introduced a  “membership programme”   that will limit online users to 15 free articles a month. After that,   readers must pay a subscription, which is more pricey for digital-only   access than for a bundle in which they keep taking the newspaper.
   The move followed  Gannett’s  announcement in February   that all 80 of its community newspapers will introduce digital   subscriptions, in a move the publisher expects to add $100m to operating   profit.
   Charging for news online had been seen by many as the  preserve of  specialist titles, notably financial news brands such as  the Financial  Times and the Wall Street Journal, but the model has been  adopted in  recent months by a string of local newspapers such as the  Minneapolis  Star Tribune to the Memphis Commercial Appeal.
   Publishers have focused particularly closely on the  New York Times, which began charging for online content a year ago and  counted 390,000 digital subscribers   by December. Barclays Capital estimated this month that digital   subscriptions could add $100m to the group’s annual circulation   revenues, more than offsetting an estimated $50m-$60m annual decline in   print advertising.
   By the end of this year, one in five US  newspapers will charge for  digital access, according to Ken Doctor, a  US news industry analyst.  Attitudes towards charging online have  undergone “a revolutionary change  in the last six months”, adds Steven  Brill, co-founder of  Press+, a company that has advised 258 media groups on charging for content and is owned by RR Donnelley, the communications company.
    Even the business magnate Warren Buffett, a long-time investor in the   Washington Post – which does not charge online – has backed digital   payments. Sitting in front of the printing presses at the Omaha   World-Herald, a local paper he bought last year, he  told CNBC last month: “You shouldn’t be giving away a product that you’re trying to sell.”
   By putting the same content online for free that they were charging for in print,  Berkshire Hathaway’s   chairman said newspapers had been competing against themselves. Now,  he  added, “you’re seeing throughout the industry a reaction to that   problem and an answer to it”.
   Advocates such as Press+ say that  publishers that have adopted  “metered” models allowing free access to a  limited number of articles  have not seen the loss in online  advertising revenues many feared. Such  models have “somewhat shored up  print” circulation, adds  Alan Mutter, a newspaper analyst and blogger.
    But the industry is far from agreeing on a single model. “Fifteen   years into the digital transition, executives still feel they are in the   early stages of figuring out how to proceed,” Pew found.
    Caroline Little, chief executive of the Newspaper Association of   America, says: “I don’t think there is one silver bullet. I think   paywalls are helping.” Her job is not to preserve print, she adds. “The   preservation of journalism is what’s important. Print will continue to   decline.”
   Newspapers were collaborating more to find solutions such as  Newsright,   an initiative to enable easy rights clearance for websites  republishing  news content online, Ms Little says. Others are sharing  costs, analyst  and blogger Mr Mutter says, pointing to the fact that  the Chicago  Tribune now prints and distributes the rival Chicago  Sun-Times. 
   Online advertising remains the core of most  newspapers’ digital  businesses, but growth has been anaemic compared  with digital native  companies. Mr Mutter notes that US newspapers’  digital advertising sales  were less than those of the “adolescent” but  targeted ads – which are  placed to reach a specific audience – on  Facebook in 2011. 
   Some, however, are bucking the trend, finding  success selling  targeted digital advertising or building consulting  businesses to help  confused local businesses navigate the intricacies  of search engine  optimisation, digital ad platforms and daily deal  sites. Tablet editions  and smartphone apps are also encouraging some to  charge for content on  mobile devices after years of giving content  away for free. 
   Warnings of newspapers’ demise were common three years ago, after the  closure of the Rocky Mountain News and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer’s decision to end its print edition, but few large newspapers have closed since. 
    That is thanks to the high margins many enjoyed in the decades where   they had a grip on classified and automotive advertising, Mr Mutter   says. He adds: “Most newspapers continue to be profitable, just not as   profitable as they used to be.” Their typical double-digit profit   margins “are quite good compared with  Walmart or  Amazon”, he says.
    According to Mr Buffett, newspapers also still have some unique   content to draw readers in, from sports to local politics. He added:   “Obituaries are a good thing. You’re not going to find out whether your   friends are alive or dead any place else.”  |