Entries from June 2009
I try to look at every new local news/information site out there – blogs, wikis, newspaper sites. First, because I once thought of starting a business in this area (I still do now and then, but then I lie down and it passes). But second, because so many local news sites are so bad, depending on repurposed, stale newspaper content, sporadic blogs, or hole-ridden databases of local information, stores and vendors. I’m always looking for someone who has taken a fresh look at the problem of creating a genuinely useful local site.
Here’s one that works: Richmond Sunlight. This site consolidates and organizes everything you might want to know about the Virginia State Legislature – not just a news blog, but a database of every single bill on the legislature’s agenda and where it stands, as well as every legislator and his or her activities. You can search for a specific bill, easily find all bills on a particular topic, or get a customized RSS alerting you to every bill a particular legislator sponsors. Of course, there are also ongoing discussions of the merits of particular bills (see this furious exchange on dog tethering). Best of all, it’s all pulled together in a simple, appealing and immediately understandable interface.
What’s the business model? It’s a nonprofit, started by a local blogger but now owned by the Virginia Interfaith Center, staffed (says the site) with volunteers. Does that mean this isn’t relevant to a for-profit local news business? Not at all. Far too many local sites are depending on producing news — as in articles. Instead, they should be trying to build local tools – on local issues, real estate, business, stores, events – that people will depend on for all sorts of business and personal reasons. What’s appealing about this site – a deep and integrated database, exceptional ease of use, and a clear focus – could be part of anyone’s local information business, maybe especially one where you’re trying to make money.
Categories: Local News · Newspapers · Online Media · Online Publishing
Tagged: Richmond Sunlight
An interesting column by Simon Dumenco at AdAge.com called “How the $0 Netbook Might Just Help Save the Media Industry.” The thesis: To make money on low-margin netbooks, computer makers might have to gin up some bundles of add-on content to sell — perhaps including news and media subscriptions. In the process, they’d help jump-start the idea that said content is actually worth paying for.
I’m a little skeptical about the hardware people getting into this successfully, but it’s a reminder that there are plenty of people who might want to build packages of content, either to sell or to use as incentives for their own marketing. There are always combatants desperately trying to gain market share (Comcast vs. FiOS, Verizon vs. Sprint, Lexis vs. Westlaw, Starbucks vs. McDonald’s) — they need some of the proverbial (and elusive) “added value” to get people to switch. Why shouldn’t premium content (music, news, video) be part of the bait? Would you try using Google Chrome, or use a Verizon wireless data plan instead of Sprint’s, if you got access to premium news and music you’d otherwise have to pay for? If the offer were compelling enough, you might.
This isn’t a new idea. Why, back in 1996 when I worked at wsj.com, we got a big check from Microsoft to give Internet Explorer 3 users free access to the otherwise subscription-only Wall Street Journal (they also got some nice things from ESPN and MTV). Back then, Microsoft was trying to grab share from the then-dominant browser, Netscape. They did. This year (when they can force you to download IE8 in a way they couldn’t in 1996) Microsoft is giving the money to charity instead. The newspapers might need it more – too bad so few of them have come up with interesting services worth charging for.
Categories: E-Commerce · Marketing · Newspapers · Online Publishing · Online Subscriptions
When it comes to the nuts and bolts of selling online subscriptions, who knows more than Marketing Sherpa founder Anne Holland? Here’s Anne’s newest site, www.whichtestwon.com, with some fun quizzes where you can guess which online offer pulled the highest response. Good luck, Anne!
Categories: E-Commerce · Marketing · Online Subscriptions
Tagged: Anne Holland
Nice piece in the sports section of the New York Times last week about the Daily Racing Form, still thriving as a daily paper at $6/copy, with a growing online business. Think this is a weird anomaly, based on a unique hybrid of sports and gambling, with no lessons for other information companies? I would disagree.
Many people want to build Web news and information businesses these days based on minimal people costs, scraped or user-generated content, and tons of automated technology. That model can work, of course. But there are also still plenty of vertical businesses (based on specific industries, hobbies, etc.) that can be built based more on the unglamorous, often low-tech slog of collecting and packaging specialized news and data, and then charging for it. Take BidClerk.com, a Chicago publisher of construction project opportunities, selling memberships for the market-disrupting price of $50/month. Aggregating all those projects isn’t glamorous work, I’m sure, but it’s information that helps people make money – and therefore, information that they’ll pay for. Just like at the race track.
Categories: Online Media · Online Publishing · Online Subscriptions
Tagged: Daily Racing Form
The Chicago Tribune just opened up its ChicagoNow.com site for a very early first look. Over at Recovering Journalist, Mark Potts says it’s “the future.” It’s still a work in progress, I know, but I wish I could get more excited about what’s there so far. Their promotional video says it will be the best of Huffington Post and Facebook rolled into a local package, and clearly they have high hopes that they’ve come up with a new approach to what a local news site canĀ be.
To me, despite some very attractive design work, so far it’s a low-tech letdown: Some interesting-looking bloggers holding forth on local topics, with a common registration system so you can register once and comment across the entire community.
But can blogs-and-comments, no matter how you package them, really make for a resource that penetrates enough of a local market to matter to advertisers? The promo video suggests there will be a lot more coming over time. I hope so, because until there is I’m not sure how they’re going to build scale.
Categories: Newspapers · Online Media · Online Publishing
Tagged: Chicago Tribune, ChicagoNow