Digital Survival skills for publishers: preview of SIIA Digital Content & Media Summit

SIIA Digital Content & Media Summit

Publishing has changed forever, and media owners will have to learn a whole new set of digital survival skills to thrive in a world of digital content – before brands, retailers, government and start-ups eat their lunch.

What are these skills, and which media businesses are already putting them into practice? And what can publishers learn from organisations outside the media industry?

Showcasing excellence in these new digital skills from within and outside media and providing publishers with practical advice on how to apply them to their business is the focus of a new SIIA event  - the Digital Content & Media Summit, taking place 23-25 September at One Wimpole Street, London.

Carolyn Morgan previews the six key digital survival skills and some of the stories that will be told at the Summit…

If you haven’t time to read this article, listen to the recording using this link:

Digital Survival skills for publishers

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10 tips to grow advertising revenues: expert insights from Specialist Media Conference

Advertising sales teams face multiple challenges – increased pressure on print ad yields, low CPMs for online display, risk-averse clients and the requirement for new skills. But there are opportunities to create premium priced multi-media campaigns for clients that help them engage with your community and generate higher revenues. The expert panel at the Specialist Media Conference – Stuart Dinsey of Intent Media, Cath Waller of Immediate Media, and Marcus Wilkinson of IDG, had some practical advice on how publishers can go about pitching for high value, integrated campaigns. Here’s the top ten tips from the panel:

Advertising panel Intent Media, Immediate Media, IDG, Specialist Media Conference

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Users Support Targeted Advertising Over Paying for Internet Content

Advertising has always been the driving force behind quality content, and the ad industry has reshaped its business models as today’s Internet-based content ecosystem continues to evolve. Generic print ads of yesterday have made way for tailored Internet ads that fuel free access to everything from local news to viral videos like the Harlem Shake!

But do Internet users know that ads tailored to their own interests helps provide for their free content? And how do they feel about seeing these ads?

A new poll shows that Americans value free Internet content, and they are comfortable with the tailored Internet advertising that powers it. The survey, released by the Digital Advertising Alliance (DAA), measured consumers’ attitudes about Internet advertising. Despite the seeming unpopularity of “behavioral advertising” the survey found that when given the choice, Americans would prefer ad-supported content to paying for ad-free content. Some key data points:

· 92 percent of Americans think free content like news, weather and blogs is important to the overall value of the Internet (64 percent extremely important, 28 percent somewhat important)

· 75 percent prefer ad supported content to paying for ad-free content

· 41 percent of users think that browser obstacles to displaying advertising will result in less access to free content

Tailored ads are worth more to advertisers than generic ads aimed at the general population. That’s why they are so vital to the future of quality Internet content. The DAA survey shows that most Internet users support this revenue model:

    · 68 percent prefer to get at least some ads Internet directed at their interests

· 40 percent prefer to get all their ads directed to their interests

· 47 percent would oppose a law that would restrict how data is used for Internet advertising but also potentially reduced free content availability, compared to only 22 percent that support such a law

 

DAA’s findings are promising for the viability of the content industry. Most Americans are comfortable with seeing ads that are directed at their interests–and all Internet users deserve a transparent experience with online advertising. To that end, the DAA runs the ad industry’s primary opt-out program, a choice tool that allows users to tailor how and whether they receive interest-based advertising.

Read more about the findings from the DAA poll.


Laura Greenback is Communications Director at SIIA. Follow the SIIA Public Policy team at @SIIAPolicy.

SIPAlert Daily: Profile of Economist Reveals Key Fundamentals

There was an interesting profile of The Economist on the eMarketer website on Friday. The Q&A was with Nic Blunden, global publisher of Economist Digital. Some interesting takeaways:

  • For their digital edition and website, 70% of the revenue comes from advertising. A quick look at their homepage shows two Microsoft ads, an Accenture-sponsored “Featured Technology” spot, and six classified box ads on the bottom.
  • Other revenue sources: ebooks; a print product that’s moved into digital and charges on a paid download basis; app singles, “where, rather than just taking the weekly cut of The Economist content and putting that into a digital edition, we take a vertical slice, for example, around innovation, and put together our best content to use as a revenue-generating opportunity, either as a sponsorship or as a paid-for download.”
  • People will pay for a combination of content and experience. “The content we put into individual app singles is available online for free, but, if you put it together into a nice package that people can download and use on their iPad or iPhone, it creates enough value for the consumer that they’re willing to pay for it.”
  • “…we encourage our advertisers to think very creatively about how they want to represent their brand,” says Blunden. An Avis ad “uses the motion-detection capability of the iPad to change the way you interact with the device, which is a lovely way of exploiting the iPad’s rich potential.”
  • Blunden says readers feel that digital advertising “adds to their experience or doesn’t distract from it.” They’ve also developed a set of best-practice guidelines for their advertisers.

At the SIPA Miami Conference in December, Peter Sanderson of Wiley spoke about the same kind of slicing of verticals. “Say if we have a publication Mental Health Weekly and we want to then bundle the leadership content that we have. We then are creating a new product on mental health leadership.”

For this process, Wiley worked with Astek; they developed a new content management system (Webany) that makes this process much easier. “You can get [the content] in multiple versions, giving the reader the ability to read it however they want,” Sanderson said.

Again, he’s sounding the same notes as Blunden: valued information and an ease of process for the consumer. So much is about time these days and working your content and processes into customers’ workflows. That’s what has happened to newspapers. Their main time window was mornings, when we now check email and rush out of the house. Evenings? Maybe after we finish email again, walk the dog and put kids to bed. Maybe.

But if you can deliver that vertical so it shows up nicely on an iPad or iPhone, then that’s worth paying for. And sometimes more may not be better, despite what those cute commercials of the guy sitting around with the little kids say. It may just be distracting to get more information than the slice you’re looking for. And there are enough distractions out there.

As Blunden admits, all the available information – free and otherwise – makes editorial curating and analysis even more valuable. Sanderson has also reduced the time it takes to put out a newsletter from close to 3 hours to less than 1 hour. Content can be different every day. Information is fresh. Customers are happier. “It’s becoming like a New York Times-ish kind of feel,” he says.  And Google is even paying more attention.

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Ronn LevineRonn Levine began his career as a reporter for The Washington Post and has won numerous writing and publications awards since. Most recently, he spent 12 years at the Newspaper Association of America covering a variety of topics before joining SIPA in 2009 as managing editor. Follow Ronn on Twitter at @RonnatSIPA