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The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

By David Weir | Jul 4, 2009

Sometimes the comments thread behind one of my posts raises points that deserve more than a simple response from me — they deserve a full airing and perhaps a debate. Last week’s “Posner Advises Press to Commit Business Suicide,” drew a bunch of comments, especially from people who felt I’d misinterpreted Judge Richard Posner’s suggestion that copyright law might have to be extended “to bar online access to copyrighted materials without the copyright holder’s consent, or to bar linking to or paraphrasing copyrighted materials without the copyright holder’s consent.”

To me that sounds like advising news organizations to refuse to take part in the opportunity the Internet provides to reach a far larger audience than they could ever hope to attract on their own. I appreciate how hard it has proved to monetize this growing traffic, but to me, this is a good kind of problem to have, as opposed to the opposite problem (low traffic.)

My Bnet colleague Erik Sherman sees it from a different perspective: “I’d argue that most people are satisfied with a headline and maybe the first sentence in a story. I know Google is responsible for many visitors to news sites, but what percentage of Google users go to any site for a given story? I suspect it’s pretty small, in which case the time value of news for most people is provided by Google and they want nothing else.”

I thought it would be useful to try and follow up on Erik’s idea and try to explore this issue of clickthroughs from headlines, so I asked Richard Gingras, former senior consultant to Google News and now CEO of Salon for his reaction. Here is what he had to say:

“I don’t know the specific stats but I do know that typical click-throughs on a page of headlines, be it Google News or the [New York Times], are statistically very small.  Of course all that can vary based on the structure and approach of the headline and attached snippet or deck.  I’ve learned enough by my own efforts that a clever tease will yield a click that an informative headline and deck won’t.  Of course, Google News uses the source headline, tease or not.

“I’ve heard the concern many times. It’s another one of those wrong questions.  The future of news monetization won’t be based on the transient viewership of headlines and snippets. You need engagement to create the value.  Thus, the notion that most people are satisfied with a headline, and thus Google News is stealing value, is a canard.  I’d rather flip the argument on its head.  A headline and a link of a publisher’s story, a Salon story, ANYWHERE off my site is an advertisment for my content!!  The truth is if I could pay Google News a reasonable fee to be there on a more frequent basis I would!”

This gets back to my original interpretation of Posner’s copyright extention concept. I actually called it the “dumbest” idea ever, albeit from a very smart man. The context for that call is that those of us in media face a new distribution challenge, one in which we have virtually no control over how our work travels, or how our brands evolve.

We are now sharing those assets with the crowd.

But why is that a bad thing? If users choose to post links to our creations at Twitter, Facebook, StumbleUpon, or anywhere else in social media; or if algorithms “choose” to link to us from Google News, Yahoo, or any other aggregator, why is that a bad thing?

To me, eyeballs are eyeballs; readers are readers. I don’t even accept the conventional media wisdom that there are “good” (i.e., high CPM readers) and “bad.” That’s part of the old media model that is being swept away like sand castles by the tide.

Why? Because as valuable as niches can be in the short run (who wouldn’t want access to that lucrative demographic of dentists who are software freaks?), the old household-income metric is increasingly meaningless in a world where people have access to a wide variety of networked resources and channels to influence the behavior of others.

A low-income consumer with a big trust fund probably is a better reader from an e-commerce perspective than a high-income consumer with a huge mortgage and credit card debts.  An extremely low-income visitor from India who has influence over a large network of early technology adopters probably is more valuable than a high-income exec in the high rise next door with exactly three followers on Twitter.

I’m sorry, but virtually every idea media execs have been trained to embrace is now dead wrong on its face. Sharing your content is the right thing to so, as Gingras expresses much more eloquently than I could.  This industry, media, is filled with charlatans who mouth cliches but don’t have a clue how to build a business when their own world is evaporating right before their eyes.

BTW, none of this discussion pertains to Erik Sherman. He is approaching the problem orthoginally, and this post does not presume an either-or outcome. He is very right in his concerns for how content providers are supposed to survive. Therefore, he has a more generous interpretation of Posner’s position than I do. Rather, both Sherman and Gingras are “right” — we all need to both protect creativity and extend it across all possible channels.

The way to do that is not through extending the reach of the law, however, but through standards and conventions over proper online linking behavior. Those of us in this space can solve this thing by being reasonable, without any lawyers or judges having any role at all.

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

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  •  
    1

    rajesh_rs

    07/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    It is true that not many of my friends from India who are MBAs or otherwise are in management positions (I am Indian) read Bnet, but it should be interesting to see actual figures of readership. I too agree with the "eyeballs are eyeballs" theory. Social media and sharing websites only enhance the whole process of finding and sharing information, and I second the opinion that getting your content out there is key to garnering greater viewership. Having said that, content matters too. Not merely the headlines. There may be sites out there that deal with similar headlines that BNET has but may have dissimilar content - some of these sites may be posting more relevant information than the tidbits of information and insights that BNET posts, while others may analyze ideas from rather more practical, bolts-and-nuts perspectives. Either way, people flock to the websites of their personal choice. Having said all this I think I have felt at times that there was more information in each post - somehow, having to navigate to interesting sounding articles becomes less rewarding when there is little more than common-sense information or intuitive information.

  •  
    2

    MinnesodaMan

    07/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    David,

    I just get goosepimples reading your brilliant analysis! But then I remember you are one of millions of blogger dudes who pretend they know what they are talking about....

    Why don't you admit you have no idea what will happen if print and tv journalists are left at the mercy of content stealing bloggers who suggest all they need to do is run banner ads? Who looks at banner ads?????

  •  
    3

    pm83

    07/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    Posner did bring up some good points. Where do you draw the line on content sharing? Newspapers and magazines should be treated the same way Television and music is treated. If the infraction for utilizing news articles was $10,000 a pop there would be more respect for the journalists and their employers. People will never do what they do not need to do. If you do not make them click through they never will and the figures will always support your arguement.

  •  
    4

    hotweir

    07/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    I'm going to continue to explore this question of the value of links today by examining a specific case study with real data. We can debate these questions endlessly but without hard metrics, it becomes too abstract for my taste. Thank you, however, for your comments.

  •  
    5

    james_clements

    07/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    You say you don't buy the conventional wisdom on good eyeballs and bad, yet you lay out three perfect examples. So maybe the high-income, highly leveraged reader isn't a "good" one for e-commerce anymore, the other two certainly are.

    There will always be "good" eyeballs and "bad," it's just that there's a shift in who's those are.

  •  
    6

    abel.henry

    07/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    Good stuff all around... It's better for these arguments to rage
    around me then just in my head. Thanks guys for confirming
    some of my own theories and challenging others.

  •  
    7

    hotweir

    07/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    James, what I was attempting to say was that media execs who try to pre-determine their audience by limiting which eyeballs they want to reach are caught up in conventional thinking at an unconventional time in our industry. I'm specifically thinking of people in the U.S., for example, who have told me, "We don't want those international visitors; they're worth nothing to us or our business." To which I say: "Hogwash!"

  •  
    8

    hotweir

    07/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Bleeding Edge of Media Business Models

    Thanks, Abel, and for the record, my main goal is to start conversations like this with my posts -- I like posting most about topics that raise questions I cannot really answer myself. I figure if I'm lucky the crowd that shows up may help me figure out some of those answers.

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