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July 16th, 2010 by Wadds

Are PRs shunning News International titles and taking their pitches elsewhere?

Media reporting on the News International paywall was never going to be easy to find. Journalists were unlikely to ever be supportive of Murdoch and its no surprise that more journalists aren’t critical. I would be cautious of calling out anyone that was attempting to discover alternative ways to protect my livelihood.

But one thing is for sure. Michael Wolff, Murdoch’s biographer and publisher of Newser was never going to be an fan. In his Newser column on Wednesday Wolff called for Murdoch’s publications to report on one of the biggest stories in media-land.

“Murdoch outlets have no [...] penchant for anything other than the party line. The news from News Corp is always snarlingly good – even when it is very bad.”

Wolff suggests that PRs are starting to pitch their stories to other media outlets rather than News International titles that are beyond the paywall and the reach of Google.

He quotes an unnamed entertainment PR as saying:

“Why would I get my clients to talk to the Times or the Sunday Times if they are behind a paywall? Who can see it.”

Are you prioritising pitches to other titles ahead of The Times and The Sunday Times?

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March 31st, 2010 by Wadds

Speed on the future of media – roundup of recent posts

We spend a lot of time at Speed thinking about the future of media and how we need to innovate our services to help clients build and protect their reputation in traditional, online and social and media.

We’re out and about speaking on this issue in the coming weeks at CIPR, PIRA, Strategic Social Media and Social Media in Business events.

Here’s a round-up of posts from the past month.

  1. Regional online media’s content conundrum
  2. How do you make money from online news content?
  3. NLA web licensing won’t make a dent in online losses for newspaper industry
  4. Is the Daily Mail the UK’s most successful online newspaper?
  5. Online newspaper circulation figures: ABC Multi-Platform Monthly Report – February 2010
  6. BBC web site set to become content hub; iPlayer 3.0 to incorporate social features
  7. Media industry urged to stop worrying about Murdoch
  8. Newser and Wikipedia founders spotlight start-up media business opportunities
  9. Newser founder Michael Wolff on the future of media – “smaller less profitable news organisations”
  10. Reputation Online on Times Online blocks
  11. BBC Strategy Review: BBC 1 – commercial sector 0
  12. Future of media according to Sorrell
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March 18th, 2010 by Wadds

Media industry urged to stop worrying about Murdoch

Rupert Murdoch - World Economic Forum Annual M...
Image via Wikipedia

Newser-founder and media entrepreneur Michael Wolff (@MichaelWolffNYC) said that the media industry spends too much time worrying about Rupert Murdoch and that News International is no longer in a position to materially impact the future of the newspaper industry.

Wolff should know. He recently wrote The man who owns the news, a biography of Murdoch.

Speaking at The Guardian’s Changing Media Summit today, Wolff said, “Murdoch has always been the defiler of the newspaper industry yet now he’s its last defender. It’s incredibly painful for him but he might not make it to retirement [in the newspaper business] or whatever he wants to do next”.

“He wants to be the saviour of the industry but no one else in News International thinks like this – no one is challenging him. Up until a year ago he’d only been on the internet accompanied,” he said.

In a closing prediction to his keynote Wolff said that we will have stopped worrying about Murdoch in five years time.

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March 18th, 2010 by Wadds

Newser and Wikipedia founders spotlight start-up media business opportunities

Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales quoted a metaphor from Matthew Freud, boss of Freud Communications this morning during his keynote at The Guardian’s Changing Media Summit, to demonstrate the flaw in the business model of traditional media.

“A baker sells fresh bread each day and gives away the previous day’s stale bread. By contrast the media gives away its fresh product [online] and sells the previous day’s product [print].

The concept of a news cycle shouldn’t exist in an environment where content can be published round the clock said Wales. He cited the example of an international story such as the international response to the Haiti earthquake.

“A newspaper might provide a daily news update but that doesn’t provide any context in the way that a Wikipedia entry would. Newspapers could easily provide contextual information yet they are focussed too much on the news cycle,” said Wales.

In his afternoon keynote Newser-founder Michael Wolff (@MichaelWolffNYC) agreed that traditional media remained focussed on news cycles but that consumers had an unsatisfied appetite for news in the morning as a kickoff to the day.

“Television, radio and print are all tied to a morning agenda,” said Wolff. But no one has cracked this concept online,” he said. In response Emily Bell said that although The Guardian was a continuous news operation it tried to deliver to a morning agenda.

“Entrepreneurs should spent time exploring new models. Morning internet is an opportunity,” said Wolff.

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March 18th, 2010 by Wadds

Newser founder Michael Wolff on the future of media – “smaller less profitable news organisations”

Speaking at an event in 2005 Newser-founder Michael Wolff (@MichaelWolffNYC) is famously quoted as saying that the traditional media can’t hold an audience because its content is shit, although he denied it today when he was interviewed during a keynote session by Emily Bell, director of digital content at the Guardian, at its Changing Media Summit.

But nonetheless Wolff’s prognosis for the future of the traditional media industry was brutal.

“It can’t go on without radical transformation […]. Very few people in the [traditional] media today will have a future in the media. There’s a line where technology meets [the editorial process] and people aren’t going to get over it. Its industrial transformation […] accelerated by the recession,” said Wolff.

He said that every big city newspaper in the US is either in bankruptcy or will be within the next 12 months. New media companies will combine technology and editorial skills to deliver a product at much lower cost he said. And that’s crucial because consumers will pay considerable less.

Wolff cited Politco as an example of a six-person start-up that has successfully taken on the Washington Post as the main source of political reporting in Washington.

“The Washington Post is a $1.4 billion organisation whereas Politico is $15 million. The future is smaller less profitable news organisations,” said Wolff.

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