Heard on the Web" Media Intelligence
Courtesy of BoSacks and The Precision Media Group 
America's Oldest e-newsletter est.1993


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BoSacks Speaks Out: I am sitting in my hotel room after a dinner with some publishing friends after the closure of the MPA-AMC convention. It is very late and I have over ten pages of notes and hours of thoughtful processes to absorb. The AMC was a non-stop media event directed at and to media professionals. I need a day or two to process what I heard and what I didn't hear.
 
But I will give you a 40,000 foot overview that is a total gut reaction, not only of this event, but of the last 14 events I have attended this year. I have been to production conventions, editorial conventions, circulation and distribution association conventions, and a dozen others. What I am about to tell you is not in any way a complaint, but rather just a simple observation.
 
We as an industry declare to anyone who will listen that 90% of our revenue is still print revenue. So I am wondering why is it that nowhere in any industry convention do we discuss the actual print product?  Something like, print efficiencies, best cover practices, how to create the best headlines, or secret newsstand success stories?  This is just a question for anyone who can or is willing to answer. If 90% of our revenue is derived from print, why don't we ever talk about that part of our business anymore? To me it seems a simple question.  Or have we so absolutely perfected the print process that it no longer requires any discussion whatsoever? 

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A perfection of means, and confusion of aims, seems to be our main problem.

Albert Einstein 

Frank Magazine Execs: We Can Do Better On native ads, video opportunities and tablets' promise

 By Lucia Moses

http://www.adweek.com/news/press/frank-magazine-execs-we-can-do-better-153353

 

 

Top magazine execs think they need to have fewer meetings, launch new products faster and better adapt their content to mobile devices to set themselves up for the future.

 

"Let's do a deck on that, let's have a meeting on how to have a meeting," said Joe Ripp, CEO of Time Inc. on the industry's tendency to navel gaze. "We need to move faster."

 

Speaking on a panel at the MPA-The Association of Magazine Media's annual conference Tuesday, the industry's bigwigs admitted that while tablets held out promise for magazines, they were in the early stages of building a significant business on the devices.

 

Tom Harty, president of Meredith's National Media Group, publisher of mass women's brands like Parents and Family Circle, said tablet editions make up just 2 to 3 percent of its business (slightly below the industry average). "Maybe it's our genre," he offered.

 

In the printed form, magazines are attractive for their covers and physical presence and as an impulse buy, but those qualities are lost on mobile devices, Cond� Nast President Bob Sauerberg admitted. "We all need to work to bring that home in the digital media."

 

Panelists said that their subscription business is healthy, even if the newsstand slide continues. But they also recognized the need to ramp up the consumer side of the ledger. Meredith's Harty said his company is testing various models to "get the consumer to give us more money" in view of the fact that "advertising is not growing."

 

Moving on to the buzzword of the day, native advertising, the executives said they were set up well to offer advertisers premium ads that are valued by readers as a complement to the online tonnage available via automated buys. Harty called magazines the "original native ad" format, pointing out that for some readers, the ads are the best part of the magazine.

 

At a time when other purveyors are playing fast and loose with the format, blurring the lines to make it mimic editorial, the magazine execs said it was important not to fool readers. And although the industry's own American Society of Magazine Editors recently put out guidelines addressing how native ads should be labeled, Hearst Magazines president David Carey warned that the industry shouldn't over regulate, either.

 

Overall, a theme of the panel was that magazines aren't living up to their revenue potential. Everyone's creating video based on their brands, but its contribution is still tiny. A growing portion of their online audience is coming through mobile devices, but, as Sauerberg put it, "We all have to get better at the smaller format."

 

TV is an opportunity in the magazine business, as evidenced by the recent launch of Esquire Network. But Hearst president Carey admitted that many consumers thought the new cable net existed before it even launched, suggesting the eponymous magazine's brand is bigger than its actual footprint.

 

Meanwhile, being removed from a TV company might be better for Time Inc. Ripp said the company had a big untapped opportunity to ramp up its video once out from under the thumb of Time Warner, flicking at the failed synergies there. "Synergy at Time Warner was an elusive word," he said. "It's often more easy to work with someone else than it is to work with a sister company."

Magazine industry chief rails against USPS

By Keith J. KellyOctober 22, 2013 | 3:28pm

http://nypost.com/2013/10/22/magazine-industry-chief-rails-against-usps/

 

Mary Berner, the grenade-tossing CEO of the MPA the Association of Magazine Media, tossed one at the US Postal Service at the opening of the American Magazine Media Conference in New York on Tuesday.

 

"I'm not pissed anymore about where we are and where we are headed as an industry," she said. "I still get aggravated by the inability of lawmakers to fix the US Postal Service as opposed to making us and other mailers subsidize its refusal to make the hard choices that every other business in this country has made."

 

The magazine industry is bracing for an emergency, or "exigent," rate hike as the cash-strapped USPS scrambles to raise prices to offset falling mail volume.

"I mean, who thinks raising rates on its best customers is a remotely sane idea for a business whose revenue is already in free fall?" Berner said.

 

"It's like raising prices on shoe laces when everyone is using Velcro. How about incentivizing us to mail more instead of ensuring that we will mail less?"

While the post office was at the top of her hit list, Berner didn't stop there in a wide-ranging rant.

 

"The security desk in MPA's building lobby never fails to piss me off when they bust me for not having my ID (you'd think that we work at CIA headquarters)," she said.

 

Berner said when one looks at all the platforms that magazines are presented on, "consumers are decidedly not abandoning magazines.

 

"The fact is magazine media audiences have been growing steadily, with the combined print/tablet audience up nearly 3 percent year over year and tablet audiences alone growing 84 percent over the same period."

 

The executive said on the iTunes Apple store, the top 15 grossing lifestyle apps belong to magazines and 44 or the top 50 lifestyle apps are also magazine related.

"We have an engaged and growing audience, the most coveted fundamental of them all."

Odor Prompts Brief Evacuation of American Magazine Conference

Organizers Blame Flash Fire at a Nearby Construction Site

By: Michael Sebastian

http://adage.com/article/adages/american-magazine-conference-briefly-evacuated/244907/

 

 

The American Magazine Conference was interrupted briefly on Wednesday after an odd smell filled the conference hall in New York, prompting organizers to ask everyone to leave the building in the middle of a session.

 

The evacuation didn't last long, called off while some people were still lined up at the stairwells to exit, but a 30-minute break followed while windows were thrown open to air out the space.

 

A flash fire at a nearby construction site had created the odor, organizers said.

 

The conference restarted with Mary Berner, president and CEO of the Magazine Publishers Association, joking that Conde Nast President Bob Sauerberg "would do anything to avoid being on a panel."

 

Mr. Sauerberg is slated to join the leaders of Hearst Magazines, Meredith Corporation, Rodale and Time Inc., for the conference's closing session Wednesday. Speakers and events so far have included Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, Alec Baldwin in conversation with New Yorker Editor David Remnick, and a panel on the subject of native advertising.


 

bo"The Industry that Vents Together Stays Together"  
Responses to all Articles and Bo-Rants are greatly encouraged and may be included in " BoSacks Readers Speak Out"  =======================================
All news items and the various opinions expressed in this newsletter are not necessarily the opinion of, nor in agreement with the opinions of BoSacks. They are just interesting thoughts and other opinions that BoSacks thinks you should know about.  
After all, as the Japanese proverb goes: 
"If you believe everything you read, perhaps you better not read." 

"Heard on the Web" Media Intelligence:  
Courtesy of  The Precision Media Group.   
Print, Publishing and Media Consultants 
193 Brookwood Drive, Charlottesville VA 22902
Contact - Robert M. Sacks  917-566-7437
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