Posts Tagged ‘media landscape’

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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It’s oh so quiet – or is it?

July 8th, 2009 by Phil

Summer is here, and in years gone by we’d all be breathing a collective sigh of relief.  With the kids off school and holidays abound things tended to go quiet, and we could all afford a few weeks of more agreeable working hours, spending our lunch enjoying picnics in the park, as the UK shut itself down for the annual silly season.

But in recent years this hiatus hasn’t materialised, and apart from the usual tendency for the national press to pick up the more obscure and downright obvious PR puff stories, things seem as busy as ever.  Is this a result of the recession, as we all try to deliver 110% for our clients , or is something else afoot?

Is it a symptom of the change in the way we spend our time away from work, with more of us enjoying weekends away and holidays throughout the year?  Or is it a negative symptom of the recession, with fewer people overall taking holidays abroad, instead snatching a few days off work here and there?

Or perhaps, in PR terms at least, the fragmentation of the media landscape means there are always media and marketing opportunities to be pursued, whatever the time of year. The rise in niche and specialist sites (as print publications close and migrate online) results in the potential to make PR hay while the sun shines, throughout the year.

They say there’s no rest for the wicked, but that’s perhaps a little unfair; is the pursuit of results all year round such a bad thing?

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