The Mario Blog

08.10.2012—7am    Post #1490
Printed newspapers’ frequency: less may be best for some

TAKEAWAY:It’s a reality that digital publishing continues to rule the day, as it should, and, while the printed companion platform will be there, it will be published less than daily, perhaps only on weekends.

This is the weekend edition of TheMarioBlog and will be updated as needed. Next blog post is Monday, August 13. Update #2: Luxembourg, Friday, August 10, 16:20

TAKEAWAY:It’s a reality that digital publishing continues to rule the day, as it should, and, while the printed companion platform will be there, it will be published less than daily, perhaps only on weekends.

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Another US newspaper, this time The Oregonian, is in the news because its New Jersey-based owner, Advanced Publications, Inc., has announced that it is moving to a Web-based model and publishing schedules are likely to change at many of its newspapers.

A trend? More a sign of the times, in my view, and not to be generally applied in every case. However, a topic of discussion that should be in the radar of publishers already.

Frequently these days editors and publishers begin a workshop by asking if I foresee a day when their newspaper would not print daily. I believe that we will see more newspapers going to a three-day a week publishing schedule, but for which newspapers and in what countries may vary considerably.

For example, I cannot imagine many newspapers in India or Brazil, where readership of the printed product remains relatively strong, going that way anytime soon.

I also know that the impact of digital is robust, and, as we have seen with recent results announced by The New York Times, the various business models created to increase revenue in that area, are beginning to bear fruit.

So, the combination of a busier and more digitally minded media consumer, better business models and improved content available through mobile phones and online, plus the added cherry on top—-the popularity of the tablet for news consumption—all add up to a clear picture: while print may always be part of the media quartet, it may not necessarily resemble the daily printed daily newspaper as we know it today.

If I were to try to guess what the printed newspaper of the future might be like, especially in midsize to larger markets, and in the US specifically in the short term, it would be a weekend product—-rich and varied in its content, multi sections, emphasis on more analysis and features, and a fresh and loyal companion to its digital cousins, which would be there to carry the ball 24/7.

By the way, in a piece titled The Elite Newspaper of the Future , Philip Mayer, predicted that the newspaper of the future might be a smaller, less frequently published version packed with analysis and investigative reporting and aimed at well-educated news junkies

Possible models

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The perfect cocktail for a robust, informative and entertaining weekend newspaper

Two German newspapers come to mind as offering a combination of elements that would be a winning cocktail for a weekend-only newspaper: Die Zeit’s excellent analysis and interpretation on news and trends with the Bild am Sonntag’s (Sundays) colorful and very graphic coverage of everything under the sun, with a good dose of popular culture, entertainment and just plain fun for a real Sunday lean back experience. Mix and pour over colorful pages printed on better than normal stock.

This is the type of discussion that should already be taking place in most newsrooms today. For newspapers in the United States, it is not a matter of IF they go to a less frequent publication cycle but WHEN. Nonetheless, this would not be a bad preparatory exercise for newsrooms everywhere to be engaged in already.

Of special related interest:

For Newspapers, a Less than Daily Future 
http://www.ajr.org/article.asp?id=5342

First paragraph:

What will teeth extraction in the Old West and printing daily newspapers have in common in a few years? The public will see them both as archaic and unnecessary, according to media analyst Ken Doctor.

Our previous blog posts on the issue of frequency:

The question of frequency for newspapers
https://garciamedia.com/blog/articles/the_question_of_frequency_for_newspapers/

Never on Monday—-or Tuesday, or Wednesday: how newspapers redefine “daily”
https://garciamedia.com/blog/articles/never_on_monday—-or_tuesday_or_wednesday_how_newspapers_redefine_daily/

Weekend reads:

– UK: Two years after the tipping point, papers’ web readership is booming
http://paidcontent.org/2012/08/08/two-years-after-the-tipping-point-papers-web-readership-is-booming/

Knight report on training shows journalists want technology, multimedia, data skills
http://www.poynter.org/how-tos/journalism-education/184476/knight-report-on-training-shows-journalists-want-technology-multimedia-data-skills/

Best iPad keyboard: it’s time to finally ditch your laptop?
http://www.theverge.com/2012/8/9/3229047/best-ipad-keyboard

Marissa Mayer wants Yahoo to focus on product, not profit
http://www.theverge.com/2012/8/9/3229613/marissa-mayer-yahoo-ceo-search-email

Here is why the iPhone remains on the throne
http://wallstcheatsheet.com/stocks/heres-why-the-iphone-remains-king.html/?ref=YF

The iPad Design Lab: Storytelling in the Age of the Tablet

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Video walkthrough of the iPad prototype of iPad Design Lab

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Mario Garcia’s upcoming speaking engagements:

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WAN-IFRA World Editors Forum, Kiev, Ukraine, Sept. 2-5

http://www.wan-ifra.org/events/64th-world-newspaper-congress-19th-world-editors-forum

Cumbre Mundial de Diseño en Prensa 2012: Mexico City; September 24-26

http://www.cmdprensa.com/mx2012/

SND (Society of News Design) Cleveland; Oct. 11-13

http://cle.snd.org/

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