The Right Mind For Print Advertising.

After months of speculation and debate, News Corp. has announced its acquisition of Dow Jones & Co Inc. (who’s co-founder, Edward Davis Jones, was a Worcester Academy alumni) for $5.6 billion.
Rupert Murdoch has been acclaimed for his understanding of the role of new media within today’s society. As newspapers have been in debate in this blog (here, here, and here), and as Google has expanded it’s advertising model to include print ads (here) it will be interesting to see how Murdoch’s forward thinking will affect the print industry—specifically the newspaper industry. Thoughts?
August 1st, 2007 at 8:57 am
If it puts a little “right” in a left-winged industry, I’d be happy.
August 1st, 2007 at 9:11 am
To help get started:
Print will never die because it is a tangible, archival, and (seemingly) credible source of information, education, and entertainment. The major changes that we will see, I expect, will not be in the medium itself, but within how the content is formulated.
Google’s print ad service is brilliant, because it allows small businesses the ability to advertise on a national level with a budget that they can afford. This is allowing exposure to these companies that my have never had the chance. The reason for this is because a lot of companies have pulled advertising from this medium which has left unused ad space…which allows for this unused space to be sold at a lower price (hello supply and demand).
News Corp has certainly had its hands within a lot of New Media, and now that they will have control over DJ Co., I would suspect that this “dying” medium would be able to evolve.
As for “print on demand” newspapers—as I’ve discussed with many of you—I don’t see that happening. While I would love to get a newspaper that doesn’t include certain sections (namely sports) I don’t think the costs would outweigh the benefits…then again I’m not a industry expert on the matter. Maybe someone else could weigh in on that if I am wrong.
PS: Very true, Brian. I’d lie if I said I hadn’t thought of that as well!
August 2nd, 2007 at 8:24 am
At risk of sounding repetitive, I thought that I would share a comment I made to Jay Severin in regards to the political debate on conservatives taking over a print media outlet: