(Linke to Report:  http://stateofthemedia.org/)



http://www.cjr.org/the_news_frontier/the_news_industry_is_no_longer.php

Behind the News, The News Frontier — March 14, 2011 01:07 AM

“The News Industry Is No Longer In Control Of Its Destiny”

And other findings of the Pew State of the Media Report

By Lauren Kirchner

Today the Pew Research Center for Excellence in Journalism released its annual 
“State of the Media” report, and it’s a mixed bag of good and bad news. 
According to the report, there are signs that the industry is beginning to 
recover “after two dreadful years”: hiring has picked up, as has revenue, and 
layoffs have slowed down somewhat.

At the same time, though, there is a nagging structural problem that only 
appears to be getting worse. As news organizations increasingly—and 
inevitably—come to depend on partnerships with third-party companies to stretch 
their newsrooms’ technological capacity, they also, unfortunately, lose control 
of vital audience data.

The report mentions social networks like Facebook and news aggregators like 
Google, upon which many news outlets depend to expand their readership and grow 
traffic. But the harshest language seems to be reserved for Apple, which, when 
hosting a news organization’s app on the iPhone or iPad, both keeps 30 percent 
of the revenue from the sale and also does not share the data about these 
sales. An excerpt from the report:

That data may be the most important commodity of all. In a media world where 
consumers decide what news they want to get and how they want to get it, the 
future will belong to those who understand the public’s changing behavior and 
can target content and advertising to snugly fit the interests of each user. 
That knowledge—and the expertise in gathering it—increasingly resides with 
technology companies outside journalism.

In the 20th century, the news media thrived by being the intermediary others 
needed to reach customers. In the 21st, increasingly there is a new 
intermediary: Software programmers, content aggregators and device makers 
control access to the public. The news industry, late to adapt and culturally 
more tied to content creation than engineering, finds itself more a follower 
than leader shaping its business.

There is evidence, however, that this structure won’t last. Outsourcing the 
distribution duties and the technical know-how seems unavoidable in this age, 
but news organizations probably won’t tolerate being in the dark about their 
own customers:

News companies are trying to push back. One new effort involves online 
publishers starting their own ad exchanges, rather than having middlemen to do 
it for them. NBC, CBS and Forbes are among those launching their own, tired of 
sharing revenue and having third parties take their audience data.

Pew also highlights some significant “firsts” across the online news universe, 
indicating that the move from print to web has reached an important tipping 
point. They are:

1) “Original reporting job hires at major online only news sites for the first 
time matched or exceeded the job losses in newspapers.”

2) “For the first time, more people said they got news from the web than 
newspapers.”

3) “When the final tally is in, online ad revenue in 2010 is projected to 
surpass print newspaper ad revenue for the first time.”

A big caveat to that last point, though: although web audience and revenue both 
surpassed newspaper audience and revenue for the first time ever, that didn’t 
necessarily help news websites: “by far the largest share of that online ad 
revenue goes to non-news sources, particularly to aggregators.”

Pew’s entire report is available on its website, and is chock full of useful 
statistics about readers’ habits, circulation numbers, revenue, and hiring 
trends. CJR previously wrote about the 2010 State of the Media report here, 
Pew’s interactive feature about this past year of news here, and its warning 
about the “Twitter echo chamber” here—a warning that it probably wouldn’t hurt 
to revisit every few months or so, knowing us tweet-happy journos.

http://www.cjr.org/the_news_frontier/the_news_industry_is_no_longer.php
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