Archive for the ‘Print media’ Category

A little local difficulty – the decline of regional papers

January 25th, 2010 by Ian

Less than half a century ago, newspaper publishers still divided their power base between London and the regions. The provinces were considered just as important as the capital, and the nationals all had fully staffed operations in northern cities, particularly Manchester.

Fast forward a few decades and the regionals have undergone cataclysmic decline. Even the biggest groups are cutting jobs left, right and centre – or at least have plans to. Some might argue that mourning the demise of local journalism is a bit like crying over spilt milk. Speaking from the harsh experience of traipsing round grim town centres scouting for stories (at one point I remember scrawling ‘news’ ideas on the back of a pastie wrapper), I agree to some extent that the information provided to the dwindling local readership can often be paltry fare.

But this is about more than funerals and flower shows. Local papers remain a breeding ground where some of the best budding journalists cut their teeth, and in those pockets of the UK where true communities continue to exist, engagement with local news teams is still important to people.

From a PR point of view, the regional print and online titles remain a vital outlet to ensure London-based clients’ messages extend beyond the M25. So I was outraged to hear from a friend in the North-west that his publisher intends to axe sub-editors in favour of multi-skilling reporters, who will ‘write stories directly onto template pages and create print and online headlines, reducing the need for sub-editors’

This raises the terrifying prospect of PR. If stories being posted are unchecked by green (or simply talentless) reporters – who knows how many client wrangles this potential drop in standards might cause?

Image graciously borrowed from SMLXL’s post on the death of local newspapers

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Will the new London Weekly be what the capital is looking for?

January 20th, 2010 by Clare Ridley

Whether your allegiance was London Lite or Thelondonpaper, the journey home for many Londoners has become less colourful since the closure of both long-standing freesheets.

I, for one, used to quite enjoy reading Thelondonpaper.  Finding out about Sarah Harding or a Geldof’s nightly exploits became rather addictive reading after a long day in the office.  However, in the five months since tlp closed, I haven’t quite found anything to fill the gap, so I’m intrigued to find out what the mysterious forthcoming London Weekly has to offer.

A quick trawl of its site reveals a rudimentary selection of news stories, but it’s the celebrity ticker at the top that gets my attention.  Calling itself ‘fresh press’, London Weekly is a great idea for those of us hungry for the latest celebrity news.   Unfortunately, further investigation leaves me expecting more after being directed to the ‘news’ that the Gallagher brothers still aren’t speaking to each other.

The London Weekly_1263975425314 (Small)

So what more can we learn?  Alas, not much.  There’s no launch date on the site, though other sources claim it will hit our streets on 1 February.  It’s certainly ambitious, aiming to give away 250k copies a week on Fridays and Saturdays outside Tube and railway stations with regional editions planned by 2012.   Other than that, we’re left none the wiser.

The challenge for any freesheet is that they need to be all things to all people.   Metro’s concise mix of news, sport and celebrity has been a nationwide success story. Yet despite their best efforts, the giants of UK newspaper publishing, Associated and News International, couldn’t crack the London market.  The newly free Evening Standard is having a good stab at it, but has anyone managed to pick up a copy after 6.30pm?  A free paper backed by five private equity investors might provide what Londoners are looking for, but at the moment, they’re not giving much away.

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Snow Joke

January 12th, 2010 by Lizzy

There is no denying that the recent adverse weather conditions have really caught the attention of the nation.  Since well before Christmas we have been subjected to news on the weather and weather on the news.  Few of us don’t know the story of the woman who went out to get her Christmas turkey and has only just made it back.

Last week – and I mention this as it is quite likely that you missed it – there was a threat to the Labour leadership.  The opposition spent much of the week trying to get rid of the Prime Minister and it got covered for one day before we were back to some chap talking about the economic impact of us all bunking off to make snowmen while the sun doesn’t shine.

What we are dealing with here is, in many ways, the perfect story – at least from the newsroom perspective. We love the heart-warming stories of have-a-go heroes delivering milk to old ladies. Add to this the fantastic photos of Snow Daleks, and you have the makings of a true epic.  But above all, and unlike the Prime Minister story, it’s identifiable.   Be it to describe our miserable journey into the office or just to say that the whole fuss is ridiculous, we all have a comment to make on it. Never before have the ‘Your Pictures’ and ‘Your Comments’ sections of news sites been more busy.

What I find really fascinating about this are the implications it has on the ongoing debate for and against monetising news content online. For the record, I completely agree with paying for comment and analysis from professionals, and do believe that this should be charged for as it would be in the street (if it protects the production of content).  However, if Joe Public is helping (or even pushing) the news agenda, it changes things.   Shouldn’t we get a cut if the news is predominantly made up of our stories and pictures?  And would we all be so willing to send things in if we had to pay to access that content online?

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All’s free in love and news

October 12th, 2009 by Claire Burgess

Another week, and another title joins the freesheet melee. But on closer inspection, it’s not another new title: it’s the London Evening Standard. It may be losing its 50p cover price but in the process new owner Alexander Lebedev will be more than doubling its circulation with 600,000 copies hitting the streets from this Monday.

A few short years ago it would have been hard to imagine the Evening Standard being handed out free. But the age of the freesheets has radically changed the publishing playing field. Mainstream titles are waging their own price wars in print and online, and looking for ever more radical ways to attract the fickle newspaper buyer – from wallcharts and CDs to winning Stonehenge (well a sunrise there, at least!). But for the freesheets it is a battle of volume; a battle that claimed thelondonpaper as its most recent casualty.

If freesheets are to generate the ad sales required to allow them to continue printing, then consistently appealing to a broad audience is essential. It will be interesting to see how the Evening Standard, which has always cultivated a relatively young, upmarket readership, balances the needs of the commercial department with the editorial integrity on which it has built its reputation.

Mike Ironside, chief executive of the National Readership Survey was at Eulogy! last week and asked us whether we felt our newspapers had a unique voice. Without a doubt, the room replied. It is clear that newspapers are still a national passion. Over the course of a week, three quarters of the UK population reads a newspaper, and half of us are still buying a Sunday paper.

If the Evening Standard can make the free model work, then it is going to put serious pressure on rival titles that are still hanging on to their cover price. But how long can the free model prosper? In this case, the power really is in readers’ hands. If we’re not willing to pick the freesheets up, then the advertisers will follow suit.

Like many others, I have found the evening journey rather empty since thelondonpaper departed and the Evening Standard, which has a distinctly different voice to London Lite and other freesheets, is undoubtedly a welcome addition for commuters and advertisers alike.

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Will we weep for the death of the broadsheets?

July 16th, 2009 by Ian

A highly experienced national freelance recently visited Eulogy! to give the lowdown on the current state of the fourth estate. Sadly for fans of a free, vibrant press, he painted a picture as grey as newsprint.

As we handle PR for both ABC and the National Readership Survey, we have immediate access to the tools that tell us national newspapers are continuing their spiral of decline. There are some short-term blips to this trend, and not every title is suffering, but overall it’s a bleak background.

Traditionally left-leaning titles such as The Guardian, The Observer and especially The Independent are struggling. In the case of the former, the journalist suggested editorial was beginning to cosy up to the Conservative front bench in a bid to stem the backlash for its long-term Labour support, should the Tories triumph at the next General Election.

Be that as it may, the death of any quality national newspaper (as our guest pointed out, the recent swap to Berliner formats more or less rendered the term ‘broadsheet’ obsolete) should not be taken lightly. In the same way that a whole town goes into mourning if its football club goes bust, so a title’s loyal readers would feel let down.

For PR folk, a healthy press is vital for the basic element of our job: placing stories in print. Newspapers also continue to be a central plank of the wider media community, not least planning and buying. And for the UK as a whole, the nationals remain a vital defence against political excess. It would be a tragedy if a great swathe of the publishing middle ground was doomed by the rise of rolling TV news and the appetite for quick-hit online updates.

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