In the Economist article I linked to on Friday – which I’ve now had time to properly digest, the Norwegian newspaper firm Schibsted
is credited with having a successful strategy because it ignored the
lure of the aggregators and focussed on sticky content strategies (ways
of making people hang around on the website).
The firm reasons that if
it attracts readers for micro-chunks of content such as single stories
only to then lose them.
The secret of making money online, according to Schibsted, is not to
rely on news aggregators like Google News and Yahoo!. Three-quarters of
traffic to the websites for Schibsted’s VG and Aftonbladet
comes through their own home-pages and only a quarter from other
websites. “If visitors come from Google to stories deep in the paper
and then leave,” explains Mr Munck, “Google gets the dollars and we get
only cents, but if we can bring them in through the front page we can
charge €19,000 [$25,000] for a 24-hour banner ad.” In spite of this,
most newspapers still depend on news aggregators.
I think this sounds like a vote for idea of walled gardens of content, a concept that is doomed in the age of networks.
I respect the Economist hugely, but I think its analysis in this case is flawed. I think the idea that you should ignore aggregators and the networks is a short-sighted one, about as sensible as saying that search engines don’t matter – if people find us on their own we’ll make more ad revenue.
The Economist report also mentioned the Guardian‘s success in
the US market, but without understanding that part of that success is
down to the openness of the site. The fact that it is attractive to
aggregators and Google as an authoritative news source is one of the key reasons for its success.
In the language of social media network strategy: The Guardian is a useful player in the online networks of which it is a member, a player, a node.
It’s relatively early commitment to this approach has helped become the first UK newspaper to begin to win profitability and leadership for its online presence.
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