Spiegal Online
 
News Lab: Jeff Bezos Takes Washington Post into Digital  Future

 
By _Isabell Hülsen_ (http://www.spiegel.de/impressum/autor-10863.html)  
Feb 20, 2015
 
Jeff Bezos has come to offer his condolences to the Washington Post.  The 
CEO of Amazon boarded a plane in Seattle late in the evening to arrive on  
time for the funeral in Washington on this morning.
 
 
It is Oct. 29, a grey fall day, and the established Washington elites are  
gathered in front of the National Cathedral: senior politicians, publishers 
and  top journalists past and present. They have come to bury Ben Bradlee, a 
legend  in the journalism world. He was editor-in-chief when the Post 
uncovered  the Watergate scandal in the early 1970s, bringing down then 
President 
Richard  Nixon and securing a permanent spot for the paper in the American 
history books.   
The glorious past is being celebrated once again on this day. The service 
is  a festival of remembrance, commemorating the best days of the Post and  
its values as an independent, incorruptible and tenacious newspaper. 
Bezos, wearing an atypical tie, is standing at the entrance to the church,  
holding a smartphone to his ear. At the memorial ceremony, he looks a 
little  lost as he moves through the crowd. This is not his world, but the Post 
 
is now his newspaper. He bought the paper in August 2013, probably saving it 
 from demise in the process. With $250 million (€220 million) of his 
personal  fortune, the Amazon founder acquired the newspaper from its 
publishers, 
the  Graham family, which was at a loss over how to lead the once proud 
newspaper  into the digital future. 
The news of the deal hit the newspaper world like a thunderbolt, with the  
established narrative being that the New Economy had conquered Old Media. 
The  optimists saw Bezos as the digital savior of the ailing newspaper 
profession,  while for pessimists the acquisition signified the demise of 
journalism once and  for all. Even at the Post, no one was quite sure whether 
Bezos 
embodied  the future or simply the end of the paper's illustrious past. 
In front of the church, reporters with PostTV, the paper's video  service, 
held up a camera in front of Bezos. Unfortunately, he said, he had  never 
met Bradlee. But, he added, "What better future could you hope for than to  
have the DNA of Ben Bradlee embedded in your institution?" 
Many in the editorial offices saw the video and were enthusiastic about it. 
 Bezos's bow to Bradlee had given the Post journalists back a little peace  
of mind. "We are back in the game, we now have the resources to do big 
things  again", says Cory Haik, senior editor for digital news at the Post. 
Learning to Think Big  
Until a little over a year ago, the Post was a newspaper in a "we're  still 
here" twilight state. Circulation was declining, as were sales, more than  
400 jobs had been cut since 2003 and it was unclear whether the paper stood 
a  chance of surviving. The editorial staff clung to the fact that the Post  
was still a good newspaper and was still winning Pulitzer prizes -- in 
short,  that it was still the Washington Post. But that "we're still here"  
attitude was also tinged with an odor of decline. 
Since August 2013, a new calendar has begun for the 137-year-old newspaper: 
 B.B. -- before Bezos, and A.B. -- after Bezos. The Amazon CEO has injected 
new  energy into the editorial staff. Instead of simply bringing in cash to 
allow the  staff to continue the status quo, he plunged the Post into a 
period of  cultural change, determined that the paper would reinvent itself and 
escape the  confines of the printed page. 
Bezos wants the paper's editors and journalists to learn to think big. What 
 does a digital newspaper have to look like in 10 or 20 years to keep 
millions of  readers interested? He has given them time -- and a lot of money - 
to come up  with an answer. 
Not surprisingly, there is a hint of Amazon in the air at the Post  these 
days. Any experiment that promises to bring in millions of new readers is  
encouraged and paid for. Bezos reasons that once the Post has penetrated  into 
the lives of millions of Americans, profits will somehow materialize on  
their own. He applied the same rationale to turn Amazon into the world's 
largest  Internet retailer, revolutionizing consumption and, with the Kindle, 
the 
way we  read books. 
No Magic Pill To Solve Industry's Woes  
But what exactly is Bezos up to at the Washington Post? Is he trying  to 
turn the old world of newspaper publishers upside-down and provide them with  
an answer to the question on everyone's mind: How can journalism survive on 
the  Web? Or is the Post ultimately nothing but an exciting hobby for 
someone  who doesn't know what to do with all his money? 
Bezos's motives remain a mystery to those at the Post. "But it's  
ridiculous to believe that Jeff Bezos came here with a magic pill to solve all  
the 
media industry's problems within a year -- that's a preposterous notion. If  
he knew already what worked, we would not need any experiments," says 
Executive  Editor Marty Baron. 
Baron, with his mop of unruly grey hair and small, round eyes, wears the  
sleeves of his purple shirt rolled up. The glass wall of his office on the 
fifth  floor gives him a view of the giant newsroom, where hundreds of 
journalists  work. It's the same office that was used by Bradlee and his 
predecessors. Anyone  who has seen the 1976 film "All the President's Men," 
starring 
Robert Redford,  knows what it looks like inside the Washington Post.  
When Baron arrived at the Post in early 2013, the mood in the  editorial 
offices was gloomy. "The question was: How could we fulfill our  journalistic 
mission with fewer and fewer people and a declining budget," he  says.  
Customers or Readers?  
Shortly after the sale to Bezos, Baron and a small entourage flew to 
Seattle,  with a wish list in their pockets. The meeting took place in Bezos's 
home. But  instead of simply writing a check, the Amazon CEO had some 
questions. He wanted  Baron to explain the purpose of various projects to him. 
"The 
discussions we had  with him were mostly about: How do we draw large numbers 
of customers?" says  Baron. Baron often uses the word "customers" instead of 
"readers" these days,  and it isn't quite clear whether this is intentional 
or simply the result of his  biweekly telephone conversations with Bezos. 
Before the trip to Seattle, the  Post team had worked up some numbers on the 
costs of various proposals,  and how much revenue each program could 
potentially generate. "We put down  numbers because we did not want to have 
nothing, but we told Bezos right from  the beginning that these forecasts were 
based on nothing but guesswork on our  part," says Baron. Apparently Bezos 
didn't care.  
One of the first ideas to get implemented was the "Morning Mix" on the  
website, a collection of the most important stories from social networks and  
online media like BuzzFeed and the Huffington Post, which a Post team  edits 
and rewrites daily. As banal as it seems, the new feature is a departure  
from a long-held doctrine: The website is the sovereign territory of Post  
journalists, and anything that hasn't been reported by staff doesn't make it  
onto the site. Since May, anyone from ordinary people to politicians and  
academics can publish highly opinionated articles in a category called  
"PostEverything." Both ideas were controversial," says Fredrick Kunkle, a  
14-year 
veteran editor at the Post. "But we understood that we have to  open up to 
gain more readers online." 
Unchained Ambitions  
The spirit of optimism under Bezos has even convinced the skeptics. After  
years of almost weekly farewell parties in the newsroom, the paper is now 
hiring  larger numbers of journalists once again. About 100 new staffers were 
added last  year, mostly experienced bloggers and multimedia journalists, 
but also classic  journalists like Pulitzer Prize winner Amy Ellis Nut. 
Popular political blogs on  the website, like "Wonkblog" and "The Fix," have 
been 
expanded. "The optimism is  infectious," says Kunkle. 
The editorial department, accustomed to thinking in smaller and smaller  
terms, has been overcome by a feeling that the sky is the limit. The website's 
 user numbers are growing, with 42 million users in September, a 47-percent 
 increase over last year. Potential numbers on the order of 100 million or 
more  are being talked about in the newsroom. They are fictitious numbers 
with no  basis in reality, and yet they say a lot about the new thrill of the 
chase among  "Posties," the insider term for journalists at the Post. "Bezos 
has  unchained our ambitions, the feeling is that nothing can stop the Post 
 now," says Kunkle. 
A look back at 2003 helps to explain what this means. The Post, the  
largest newspaper in the US capital, launched its first website on June 19,  
1996. 
Steve Coll, the head of the newsroom at the time, sensed that the Internet  
would give the Post the chance to pull away from its fixation on  
Washington. An "aggressive Internet strategy" could help the Post become  the 
nation's top newspaper, a national and even global publication. On May 20,  
2004, 
Coll, supported by 40 department heads and managers at the Post,  presented 
his concept to publisher Don Graham. It was called "Beyond  Washington." 
How the Post Almost Lost It  
The meeting at a luxury hotel on Chesapeake Bay ended in a traumatic  
situation for the Post that can still be felt today. Graham rejected the  idea, 
which might have cost him $15 million. Graham, 58 at the time, was not  
opposed to the Internet and had invested a lot of money in the website. But he  
wanted the Post to hold onto its leading position in the capital, a  monopoly 
that had been an important moneymaker for the Graham publishing dynasty  
for decades. He wanted the Post to write about Washington, even online,  but n
ot about the rest of the world. 
The editorial department was speechless. "Don machine-gunned the room,"  
journalist Dave Kindred quotes a colleague in his book "Morning Miracle" on 
the  Post 's struggle to survive. The Internet was the medium of  
possibilities -- and from then on the Post editors felt as if they were  
incarcerated. 
After that, the publisher's official slogan, that the Post was a paper "for 
 and about Washington," became the perfect cover for a new cost-cutting 
program.  National offices were closed and correspondents were recalled. The 
Watergate  triumphalism gave way to what the New Republic called a  "Post 
apocalypse." "The feeling was: We had surrendered," says  Kunkle. 
At some point during that period, larger-than-life photos of the  Post's 
heroes that had been hanging in the lobby on 15th Street for 30  years were 
removed, photos of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, who had exposed  the 
Watergate scandal, Ben Bradlee and publisher Katharine Graham. In a stroke  of 
irony, the photos were replaced with a flat-screen TV. 
A Second Chance  
This helps to explain why Bezos's liberating effect on the Post is  both 
monetary and psychological. "The web gives us a second chance to be a truly  
national and international paper and even more: the preferred destination of  
American readers," says Executive Editor Baron. And this time Bezos, an 
Internet  titan, is giving them the chance to take advantage of that 
opportunity. 
For the last several months, the Post has been running its "Partner  
Program," an ambitious attempt to gain millions of new readers outside  
Washington 
in one fell swoop. Under the program, subscribers to hundreds of US  
regional newspapers, from the Honolulu Star Advertiser to the Dallas  Morning 
News, can gain full access to the Post's website and all of  its apps -- for 
free. 
But don't steps like that undermine the paper's own pay wall on the 
Internet?  Not a problem. All that counts now is size, size and size. Not even 
the 
partner  newspapers are paying the Post anything for the program. And more  
partners are expected to follow. For instance, millions of subscribers to 
the  Netflix online video service and the LinkedIn career network could 
eventually  receive a free digital subscription to the Post. "We want to widen 
the 
 funnel and give as many people access to the Washington Post as possible,  
so that more and more people come down that funnel of engagement," says 
General  Manager Steve Hills. 
'Financial Responsibility'  
But how and when is this frenzied attempt to expand supposed to pay off? 
The  question alone seems to contradict the new zeitgeist at the Post. The  
word profit has already been changed to "financial responsibility," which  
essentially means that even under Bezos, the Post cannot simply throw  money 
out the window. "It's a big bet," says Hills, who reasons that once people  
have come to value the Post, they will eventually be willing to pay for  it. 
"Jeff wants us to produce things that customers love. Not things, where we  
have pre-calculated that for every dollar we put in, we get two back," says 
 Shailesh Prakash, chief information officer for the Post for more than  
three years. The native Indian has a roundish face and a warm smile. The  
air-conditioning keeps his brightly lit office at a chilly 15 degrees Celsius  
(60 degrees Fahrenheit), and there isn't a single piece of paper on his  
desk. 
In the late 1990s, Prakash worked for Sun Microsystems, one of the hippest  
places in Silicon Valley at the time, and later at Microsoft. Don Graham 
brought  him to the Post. "Don was looking for somebody to use technology to 
drive  and disrupt the industry," says Prakash. Under pressure from shrinking 
profits,  Graham had recognized that the Post needed a change in its 
digital  culture, but it was too late, because the funds were no longer there. 
"In 
an  environment where you need to reduce cost, you can't take a lot of 
risks," says  Prakash. 
When Bezos turned up at the Post, says Prakash, an engineer by training, it 
 was as if a "demigod" had appeared. The Amazon CEO doesn't intervene  
journalistically, and he isn't interested in how the business is managed,  
either. But he is excited about every technical project. During his biweekly  
teleconferences with senior staff at the Post, the man whose main job is to run 
 Amazon, a $75-billion company, wants to discuss "why our site is not as 
fast as  Google or why some of our apps are not as beautiful as the most 
beautiful games  app," says Prakash. In recent months, Bezos has invested a lot 
of his energy in  the new Washington Post app. "He is our most active beta 
tester," says  Prakash -- not surprisingly, since the app will be installed 
automatically on  millions of Amazon's Kindle tablets in the future. Publicly 
traded giant Amazon  is expected to provide the Post, Bezos's personal toy, 
with millions of  new readers, along with an exclusive product for its 
Kindle users. Kindle  customers will receive six months of the digital version 
of 
the Post for  free, and another six months will cost them only $1. Versions 
for the iPad and  Android devices, at about $4 a month, are expected to be 
released this year. 
A Laboratory for the Newspaper World  
Under his leadership, Bezos wants the Post to become a Silicon Valley  
laboratory for the newspaper world. Prakash has moved 19 IT specialists and  
developers from their individual offices into the newsroom, so that they can  
develop new ideas with journalists and editors --from interactive graphics to 
 fast data analyses. The goal is to embed up to 100 developers, and Prakash 
 intends to create 25 new jobs to complete the task. He is currently 
receiving  large numbers of applications. "A lot of people want to be part of 
this 
story,"  he says, "because they firmly believe that with Jeff on board we 
have front-row  seats to a turnaround." 
A few months ago, Prakash launched a think tank in New York that is  
developing blueprints for a digital newspaper to be introduced in five or six  
years. Other labs will likely be added in Seattle, Austin and other technology  
centers. "When you want to become a technology hub that rivals Silicon 
Valley,  you can't force everyone to come to Washington, DC," says Prakash. 
Prakash and his engineers want to provide the journalists "with data on how 
 their stories are performing." Although the pressure to make money with 
every  new idea has diminished since Bezos's arrival, the power of numbers is 
stronger  than ever. Everything possible is now being measured and 
calculated. Which  articles on the website are read the most or liked on 
Facebook? 
Which terms are  people searching for on Google at the moment? Which articles 
on the website  should become bigger or smaller, based on this search data? 
A dedicated  editorial team devotes its efforts to what is happening in 
social networks.  Journalists will soon be able to use software that will 
automatically inform  them, during the writing process, how many people are 
currently discussing a  politician on Instagram or Tumblr, which will provide 
them 
with tips on how to  attract more attention with their articles online. 
In blind tests, readers are now presented with articles from the 
competition,  to determine which stories are more popular among men reading the 
New 
York  Times, for example, than the Post, or vice-versa, and which articles  
are especially appealing to young readers on sites like BuzzFeed and the  
Huffington Post. 
"In the past, we would make our own comparisons as journalists, but we 
never  measured whether consumers felt the same way," says Baron. "Bezos makes 
sure  that we are not just doing things because this is what we are 
interested in. The  question is rather: What are other people interested in, 
what is 
the world  interested in." 
'We Are Not Going To Be BuzzFeed'  
Baron is a veteran journalist, not someone who could be accused of 
confusing  journalism with the hunt for clicks and likes. But how far can a 
newspaper like  the Post go in the race for readers without betraying itself? 
Does a 
 newspaper that has judged its relevance more by what is in the public 
interest  and less by what the masses want risk sacrificing its virtues in the 
quest for  greater circulation and growth?
 
 
A former editor says that the staff at the Post is currently so  enthused 
about growth that the paper risks forgetting to define its readership.  What 
should distinguish the Post from other newspapers with global  relevance, 
like the New York Times and the Guardian? Or does the  Post intend to deliver 
everything to everyone in the future, just like  Amazon?  
"We are not going to be BuzzFeed, but we can look at BuzzFeed and say: They 
 are doing that smartly, and then apply it to our mission. We do not have 
to do  frivolous stuff," says Baron, pointing to one of the Post's last major 
 Exposés. The paper recently uncovered security breaches at the White House 
and,  in doing so, contributed to the firing of President Barack Obama's 
chief of  security. It was a classic Post story: from Washington, but for a 
global  readership. "We continue to do really important stories and serious 
subjects,  but we have to do it in a way that works on the web," he says.  
Despite all the euphoria at the Post, "there is a lot of concern about  how 
we as reporters and employees will be treated in this new Post" says  
editor Fredrick Kunkle. He's a representative of the journalists' union, and he 
 
has already learned that Amazon's CEO is no fan of unions. In September, 
when  the Post trimmed company pensions, 40 editors protested outside the  
building against the new owner's plans. The step was not absolutely 
economically 
 necessary, because Graham left Bezos with a generous $300 million pension 
fund.  It was probably more of a signal, as if Bezos were saying: This is my 
world  now.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to