Newspapers in the
information business? Not so much
By Rob Carrigan
I don’t know how many times in
the last year I’ve heard someone with their feet mired in the traditional
ink-on-paper newspaper business try to argue that he is really in the
information business.
Some of those characters even
believe it. But the cement around their ankles and thought processes keeps them
slogging away with the old models and methods while the world changes quickly
around them.
Tim McGuire, editor and senior
vice president of the (Minneapolis) Star Tribune, is quoted on the subject in
“The Art of Leadership in News Organizations” by Shelby Coffey III.
“Many people have heard the
old story about railroads and how they should have realized they were in the
transportation business in the same way newspapers ought to realize they are in
the information business,” according to McGuire. “I heard someone else say a few
years ago that in fact the railroad people knew they needed to be in the
transportation business. They just loved the railroads so much they couldn’t
make the change. There is a lot of that in our business.”
Indeed there is.
Under attack
From adapted news cycles,
changing views in objective journalism, and generally trying to come up with new
ways of paying the bills, traditional newspapers quite correctly feel like the
business is under attack.
And what is the natural
reaction when under attack? Usually, hunker down in a hole and keep your head
down. But if it doesn’t look like that is going to work, maybe it is time to try
a counter-attack, or, alternatively, come out of the hole with all guns blazing.
In a world of instant feedback
and precise, automated ad targeting — a lot of us waited far too long before
coming out of that hole with guns blazing.
It is a bit like the scene in
“Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” where the whole Bolivian army is waiting.
“The losers are likely to be
those companies that try to make money by pouring old-media wine into the new
Web bottles,” notes Business 2.0 magazine in its March edition. “The winners
will be the players that invent new ways to tap into what the Web brings to the
party; instant feedback, instant analysis, and the collective wisdom of a
billion users.”
Advertisers and the agencies
that represent them have become much more savvy in finding out what works and
what doesn’t — in a very short amount of time — and they vote with their
wallets.
We have gone way past the days
when someone could say, “Half of my advertising works like a charm and half does
me absolutely no good, but the trouble is, I’m not sure which half is which.”
For example, ad agency Ogilvy
& Mather now uses a software optimizer that runs 5,000 to 10,000 calculations
every time it evaluates how well an ad campaign is working.
Dynamic results
With that data, the agency is
able to pull non-performing ads right away or adapt the campaigns on the fly.
And some advertising vendors on the Web have gone to a pay-for-performance
program in which publishers only get paid for advertising if it sells product or
creates verifiable results in the form of leads or an order.
Imagine if newspapers went to
such a system.
The unfortunate truth of the
matter is that newspapers, with a few exceptions, don’t even do a very good job
of keeping track of their own vast stores of information, much less data
tracking readers and how they use the information provided.
For that reason, I think a lot
of the rhetoric about being in the information business is perhaps just wishful
thinking.
Rob
Carrigan is publisher of the Tri-Lakes Tribune and Gleneagle Black Forest
Tribune, both ASP Westward LP weeklies in Colorado. He can be reached by e-mail
at rcarrigan@ccnewspapers.com.