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The Future of News: How to Survive the New Media Shift

News organizations cannot continue to ignore the global shift from institutionally controlled media to user controlled media. They have to redefine their processes and face the obvious question: Do we still need old media for news?

New Media Traffic  2006-2007 Traffic New Media 06/07:
Clear upward trend

Old Media Traffic 2006-2007 Traffic Old Media 06/07:
Clear downward trend

A) Enter

A good newspaper is a country speaking to itself.� These are not the words of Internet junkie high on Web 2.0. This is arthur miller, defining newspapers back in 1961. If Miller is right about news being a conversation, the obvious instrument for organizing this conversation is the Web. It is fast, it is versatile and it is conversational in its nature.

There are obvious signs that the shift in the usage of media is irreversible. While the access statistics of social media sites are going through the roof, Newspapers lose readers online and offline. Young people read more but read less printed materials. Ad revenue prognostics for the Internet point to stupefying future while all other media are feeling the pressure already. In a special edition on the decline of printed news The Economist stated that �the most useful bit of the media is disappearing. A cause for concern, but not for panic.� Given that it�s never time to panic, the question is: Concern for whom? For the reader or the publishing houses?

future_of_news_ia.jpg You can download this text as a PDF and print it out, if you like… The Future of News
(PDF, 1MB)
Version 0.5 (Draft)

Threats

1. Lowering reading experience. Printed text is nice. It�s nice to look at, nice to feel, nice to smell, it is nice to read. Newspapers are handy in a train, in a cafe, at the hairdresser�s, on Sunday morning after your continental breakfast. So, yes, everyone that likes reading as such is concerned. Concerned not in regards to the quality of the information, but the quality of reading as an aesthetic experience.

2. Losing journalistic quality. The implications of losing journalistic standards are disastrous for our democratic society.

3. Severing cultural roots. The history of printed texts goes way back to the first papyri, the dead sea scrolls, Heraklit�s and Plato�s works and first serially printed product: The bible. Losing paper would mean to lose a central part of that intellectual power and cultural magic.

Opportunities

Before answering to the raised concerns we should look at the causes for the change optimism within the new media community.

1. Optimizing reading experience. Reading newpapers is relatively stressful. Quality newspapers like the New York Times, The Guardian or Die Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung are � compared to web standards � considerably user unfriendly; they are comparingly hard to scan, the print is small, the editors are stingy with subtitles, the language snobbish and esotheric beyond necessity, reader comments come in days after the article is published, the sources are hard to track.

Newspapers refer to previous events and articles that not everyone follows. Good enough in the olden days, where the gentleman had enough time to smoke his pipe in his rocking chair, have toast and tea and devote himself to read with his wall clock clicking slowly… But we are far too stressed and impatient for that kind of business. We really can�t be bothered with 19th century data delivery anymore. We want to be able to quickly see if an article is worth reading. We want to see key points, sources and logic structure of the story before we dedicate our sparse time to it.

We are spoiled by new media technology: Hyperlinks allow to quickly get to the cited sources and verify the information or interpretation, search engines allow cross checking, article discussions open perspectives to other people�s views on the subject.

In short: The Internet is without any doubt the most useful information resource � especially when it comes to news. Most useful not just for readers. Contemporary journalists can see what effect their writing has and learn and improve with every article they write.

2. Improving democracy.That old media loses its edge is not as bad as it may seem. Being a one way medium, old media can be easily controlled by money, power, superstition and misused as a powerful tool for propaganda. “If the death of old media means that we don’t have to deal with the broad media manipulation of rupert murdoch and silvio berlusconi, that is good news for democracies.” It is common sense that in a democratic state, news should not be owned. News should definitely not be owned by people using their media ownership to influence public opinion in their favor.

Where there is open debate, the main channels of political manipulation are under heavy attack. Of course the Chinese government tries to control the Internet, of course Fox News tries to smear and defame interactive media. But all smearing and controlling won�t help on the long term. Unless the apparachik finds a way to stop time, centralised mediation is doomed to fail. Pandora�s box is open.

3. Historic development. The integration of old media into new media is inevitable. It follows considerably solid law: �The content of a medium is always another medium.� That newspapers will turn into a luxury good within the next 10 years seems obvious. Paper cannot compete with neither the production cost nor the production time of new media. That TV is going to transform and become part of the Internet is technically obvious.

No matter how high Viacom is suing YouTube, they have to face the fact that the days of institutional media control are counted. The best shot for Viacom is to turn YouTube into another Napster. But remember know what happened after Napster died. Music piracy exploded all over the web. After YouTube there will be moe Torrent action and 9,999 new YouTubes. Today media is already controlled the consumer to a great extent. Media as a fourth power is common democratic theory. The success of Fox News in the age of global interactive communication is the swan�s song of old media.

One of the big mysteries of the Information age is the rapid increase in book sales. Why do people buy more books than ever? Simple: Literacy is increasing. Thus the need for real, printed text.

On the other hand the need for Radio and TV diminishes, as the Internet offers time independent and thus much more usable forms of TV and Radio.

The only media that cannot be fully integrated is print. That�s why it deserves special attention.

B) Control

Filter

The journalist�s job description has dramatically changed in the last 5 years. News are no longer launched. Stories are no longer made. The amount of information has grown astronomically and with it the need for quality content. � To people that know both sides of media it is obvious that the journalists function is to filter the noise and make it understandable.

The market value of reliable filters has exponentially increased in the last couple of years. And it will go on being more and more precious. With the increase of the amount of information that is generated Google becomes more and more valuable. Filtering information has replaced controlling it. Filtering is a very solid business, and it continues to be.

Respond

Bloggers are opinionated. On one side that makes them interesting and highly critical about whatever �the other camp� says (Mac vs PC, conservatives vs. liberals, Manchester United vs Liverpool fans); on the other side it makes them dubious and manipulative to the point of blatantly lying and cheating. That is why identity disclosure is an important part of the interactive game and such is the integration of user comments on your blog. If you lie and cheat, it fires back. You are taken to responsibility for what you say online; in some cases manipulation has destroyed careers, severely harmed corporate trust and flattened sales.

Unnecessary to say that lying and distorting information is generally a bad and refutable practice. But manipulated information on a trusted news source is harder to spot and yet not a rare occasion. Bloggers are not expected to be �fair and balanced� � news organisations are. As a matter of fact, famous bloggers already work under a similar scrutiny as a journalist of the New York Times (in case you didn�t know: good bloggers are journalists). The future journalist is very shrewd at discovering information and crosschecking it � he will also have the guts to expose himself to the public opinion.

Future press has to become less biased and thus more independent. The best journalists will be independent freelancers screening and recompiling data online. All this means: Future newspapers will have to change their editorial process. Current editorials are much too dependent on the opinion of the editor in chief and/or whoever owns or sponsors the newspaper. Future newspapers need to make their editorial process transparent and respond to the input of their readers. The making of a news article must become a public process. This will greatly increase the quality and the trust in published text.

The integration of social media into the writing process is a greatest opportunity for writers and readers since the invention of the press; the more intelligent the readership of a newspaper the more intelligent the product will become.

Divide et Impera

Wikipedia proves that it works. The only question is: Which newspaper will allow their readers to participate in the writing an editorial process first. Participating means: You let them influence the article from the beginning to the end � and beyond. Future newspapers will allow their readers to influence the article before and after it is published. The only way to do this is by turning the newspaper web sites into transparent public editorial tools.

Newspaper readers need to be organized just like a state. On top you have the editor in chief. On the bottom you have the passive reader. In the middle you have journalists and active contributing readers. In order to control trolls and spammers, readers choose and elect representatives among themselves. Some readers have more rights (and duties) than others, due to their qualifications as readers. Slashdot works just like that; and it works very well. Most forums don�t work because there is no organization among the readers.

C) Shift

Branding

Printed newspapers will shift into a luxury product, an amalgam of the best information that you created online. Both products need to be extremely easy to read and incite the user constantly to go online and contribute to the next edition. The branding must transport the use of each media (online: contribute, offline: enjoy); both mediums need to constantly refer to each other.

  1. Use the same design elements on- and offline.
  2. Stop giving your website the silly and disqualifying �Online� attribute. Online news should be as reliable and brand worthy as your print edition.
  3. Show in print which words are links in the online edition by either underlining linked words or coloring them. Links in print make sense as links usually denote keywords that help the user scan and thus quickly understand the article.

Information Design

Newspapers will have to focus on their online editions and learn from successful information resources such as Google News, Techcrunch, Memeorandum, robert scoble or jakob nielsen. Successful websites do not only prove that relevant well made online news do have a solid future, they also show how its done. Here are three simple rules:

  1. Dramatically increase font sizes on and offline. Use white space (digital white space is cost free).
  2. Care as much about online layout and typography as you care about printed information design. Sloppy information design is an insulting the intelligence of your users.
  3. Use more paragraphs and subtitles in print.
  4. Use left and right side bars for additional information online instead of trying to distract users with ads and �other interesting stories�.
  5. Stop packing pages with other articles or annoying advertisement.
  6. Write simple, write backwards (most important information first).

Advertisement

No. Locking away your articles is not smart. It is technically ignorant and financially stupid. How much money do you make with your paid access? How much money would you make if you sold advertisement on those old articles instead? Yes, it is that easy.

  1. Reduce number of banners per page to one.
  2. Increase banner size.
  3. Distinguish clearly between ads and content.
  4. Kill all pop up windows.
  5. Forbid animated and amateurish banners.
  6. No google or other cheap looking ads.
  7. Hire sales staff to sell proper advertisement instead of whining that there is no money online.
  8. Care as much about increasing the quality of online advertisement as you care in print.
  9. Sell the books you cite, the CDs and DVDs you discuss, sell T-shirts from fashion designers you write about� 10.Sell print and online ad space together.
  10. Value of print advertisement: Presence. Value of online advertisement: Same.
  11. Continuously reduce the cost of print ads and raise the cost of online advertisement at the same paste.

Interaction

Letters to the editor is often the most successful section of a newspaper. Why is that? Because web 2.0 is a new fashion that will disappear soon? Or because the curiosity in what real people think is human, all too human?

Comments on articles, that have been made on the web need to be integrated the very next day. Right beside the article. This will incite the reader to go online and write smart comments. This will also help recruiting the reader as a marketer. This is so obvious that it doesn�t need more explanation.

listening_to_lots.gif The Guardian is wide awake: Bravo! Discovered via [wk london]

Let your reader write articles. Who knows more about car engines than a mechanic? The engineer? Who knows more about hairdressing than hair dressers? The fashion journalist? Who knows more about art than artists? The art critic? Give real people the opportunity to write about what they know best. Their profession, their passion, their dearest concerns. This is interesting, and if a professional editor works it over it will be a fantastic read. Reward their most talented readers by printing their articles. �Man, did you see my article in the New York Times yesterday?� And that is how it�s done:

  1. Motivate readers on and offline to write quality comments and articles.
  2. Reward their most talented commentators and writers for their contributions with a remarkable writer fee and by printing their articles and comments: These readers will become your biggest fans and the most passionate marketers.
  3. Print comments the next day or turn intelligent comments into online articles. Print very intelligent comments as separate articles
  4. Integrate your readers in the news generating process by allowing them to have insight in and comment on upcoming articles.
  5. Create a section called Informants wanted.

Technology

Opening the archives is not enough. You have to link new news to related old news. Good newspapers are intelligent soap operas. Why do you make it so hard for your reader to review the old episodes of the amazing macho show The War on Terror or the award winning political thriller series Scooter Libby or the award winning tragedy Britney Spears?

  1. Use the best editorial tool around; the most powerful multiuser CMS system, engaging intelligent users in collective content creation is Wikimedia. All you need is a good information designer that cleans up the currently somewhat messy user interfaces.
  2. Wiki technology allows us to collectively edit, discuss, crosslink, easily follow a story back to its roots. Wikis well done could turn newspapers in a information wonderland.
  3. For print: Use better print quality, better paper.

D) Escape

There is no escape. The is only adaption. Sooner or later online news will replace up to to 95 percent of printed news. The mere fact that printed news cannot compete with either production speed or reproduction cost of digital media is in itself a killing economical argument.

The true reason though is that digital news are more useful and more democratic and thus more appealing to a democratic society. The end of old media is, all in all, a positive and overdue socio-political development. Old-school editors that try to resist the inevitable change that is happening throughout all levels of society �will be punished by life�.

The only thing websites cannot and will not be able to compete with in the near future is the physical presence and the magic of printed text. Instead of using that edge and leveraging it with the intelligent power of social media, newspapers comfort themselves with user-repulsing information design in print and an often disastrous online presence. Truth is: We need paper for books, yet we don’t absolutely need paper for news—it is just a nice to have option.

If newspapers adapt and change their processes soon, the online edition can (re)establish itself as a reliable data filter in its democratic function as a center of political debate.

Paper is not going to lose its cultural-historic magic. In contrary. The less paper we use, the more it regains its preciousness. The print edition of a newspaper can become a premium product that incites users to contribute to it � online. In order to establish itself as the info extravagance, it needs to learn contemporary information design principles and significantly improve its interface. Newspapers that mange to join online and print soon, will get significant advantage over the competition.

Reading paper is an extraordinary experience. Discussing news online is highly addictive. If news organizations manage to leverage and connect both powers you have a chance to escape oblivion and re-occupy one of the many future centers of public attention.

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Comments


Unregistered
Yosuke

This is madness…


Oliver Reichenstein
Oliver Reichenstein

Madness? This is iA!


Unregistered
Alex

As I’ve come to expect from iA, this is a great piece with some neat ideas - much better than the usual “print is dead, blogs are teh w1n” line that many other new media commentators trot out. Perhaps the only area where I’d disagree with your piece is that when you write about “Losing journalistic quality” as a danger, you qualify this by saying “The implications of losing journalistic standards are disastrous for our democratic society” - undoubtedly true, but it does implies that journalistic quality only refers to its investigative nature; it doesn’t - to be good at the writing part of journalism is really, really difficult and takes training, practice and skill. Soliciting pieces from readers is great - and we do actively do it on the magazine I work for - but they naturally require more editing than stuff written by a trained journalist. While I am a big fan of social media, and its possibilities, I don’t think we should lose sight of the fact that journalism is a profession, and writing is a skill and a talent that needs to be nurtured and developed - in an age when there’s so much content, what i find is important to me, what I make the time for, is the stuff that is best written and most thoughtful…


Unregistered
Régis

Wow… I strongly believe this essay should come first in the paper version of your Notebook!

Brilliant, as usual, is your point of view and how clearly you foresee the future of media with the human at the center of it.

Is it the first sign that iA’s blog will one day turn into a wiki?

Perhaps in a few centuries one will write “The Oliver Papers” ;-) Bravo


Oliver Reichenstein
Oliver Reichenstein

Alex,

very very good point.

I could not agree more. I just failed to make that clear. The integration of content from readers would require a lot of hard work, of course. Meaning, we need more journalists to deal with badly written content.

The skill of a journalist is underrated, as so many creative and intellectual jobs. The disrespect for professions in an age where everyone feels like a writer, designer, musician, journalist, internet consultant is indeed annoying as hell. My philosophy teacher Dr. Gerhard Graf used to say:

“We would never get on a plane with a cheese maker as a pilot, but when it comes to thinking, everyone suddenly feels like a pilot of thought. At times this makes me angry and I get into terrible unfair fights; if I were a philosopher myself, I would get back into the pilot seat by asking questions…”

With new media it gets particularly annoying as you often have to take insults on your hard work from people that have neither read what you wrote, nor any relevant experience in the matter yet they feel so super superior.

But that is just one of the challenges of the new era.


Oliver Reichenstein
Oliver Reichenstein

Régis,

I am actually playing with the idea of printing this as the core piece, and creating a huge second part with sources and the whole typography, easy-to-read and brand=interface info.

In the mean time I have to wait until the projects go live so I can integrate the screenshots.

Hopefully I get some good feedback to improve the text from you guys. I’ll mention everyone that helped on the back of the book of course…

It was a lot of fun designing the book. Again, studying book design, I learned a lot about web design, that at a later point I’ll try to write down. The more I learn about printing the more I am surprised why websites are so unusable. The know how was there for hundreds of years. It’s more a metaphorical misconception that lead to bad web design (the idea that websites are a form of interactive TV…) than being to “paperish”. Imagine newspaper websites got as much layout attention as printed websites - they’d turn out fantastic… Imagine online advertisement gets as much money as printed ads. Luckily, we don’t need to imagine much longer…

And yes, we play with the thought of turning this into a wiki. A different kind of wiki of course. A wiki with a usable interface.


Unregistered
Régis

Don’t you think that it (bad and unusable websites) was an inevitable step to reach a usable and semantic web? It kind of mimics how humanity itself evolved.

The World Wide Web may be the ultimate direct democracy, it is then not surprizing that it tends to become the best medium on which to convey: words.

At least, this is what you helped me to see :-)


Unregistered
Bob Corporaal

Nice article!

As an aside: I’m really curious how ‘Electronic paper’ would fit in between all this. It has the potential of combining the advantages of the traditional and new media. Perhaps giving the traditional media a chance to adapt but it will also bring its own challenges and potential.

Just this week I read that two Dutch newspapers are taking up the challenge and will start working with Philips in the near future.


Oliver Reichenstein
Oliver Reichenstein

Bob,

Nice print is just too nice. It’s not just resolution that makes reading paper so nice. It’s the surface, the color quality, the sound, the smell, the feel…


Unregistered
Bob Corporaal

Oliver,

I know. I love books and magazines myself. One the things I would miss most with digital books would be browsing through bookshops. Especially second hand ones.

Still I think that it would not be impossible to create something would at least approximate some of those things. And perhaps improve on others.

Ever since reading ‘The Diamond Age’ by Neal Stephenson I’ve been wanting to have such a book.


Unregistered
Mark Pearson

I returned from the UK (to the USA) a couple of weeks ago. While I was there I hired a car. At virtually every petrol station, and I mean every petrol station, you would find all the broadsheet newspapers, Guardian, Times, Independent, Telegraph together with the tabloids, Sun, Star, Mirror, Mail for sale at a cost of 70p ($1) or less. People would often purchase two papers. Daily readership of newspapers in the UK dwarfs that of news on the web. And the assertion that the Guardian and its ilk, The Times, Observer, Independent, Telegraph “are – compared to web standards – considerably user unfriendly” is, quite frankly, rubbish. The daily circulation figures in the UK alone give the lie to these arguments. Moreover, when user feedback is constrained to a 40 column wide by 10 line deep box the web site pot calls the newpaper kettle black. Internet news is currently almost entirely parasitic on its printed counterpart. The exception being the innovative use of podcasting by the Guardian (Newsdesk), the BBC (a range of regular video and audio podcasts) and specialist media streams such as the Times’ rugby features.

No, the major propellant towards internet news is ignored by your article and it is simply this. Carbon footprint. The carbon footprint of printing, distributing, and disposing of newsprint is collosal. It must be several orders of magnitude larger than the carbon footprint of news production and distribution on the web. At the end of the day, this will be the major force in moving news online.


Oliver Reichenstein
Oliver Reichenstein

Mark,

Thanks for your feedback.

  1. Newspapers “are – compared to web standards – considerably user unfriendly” means: Printed texts are - compared to well written hypertexts - hard to scan. What’s rubbish about that?
  2. You say: “Internet news is currently almost entirely parasitic on its printed counterpart.” That is a weird statement. The web should logically be a first stage of the news that will be printed later on. Calling the web a parasite means that you suppose that the journalists write for the paper paper in the first place and the web feeds from that work. If I read a story online and then find the same story on paper, I don’t think that the web is the parasite, I think “The paper is a slower publishing medium.” If I find a printed story online after I read the paper, I think “What is wrong with these people?”
  3. You say: “the major propellant towards internet news is ignored by your article and it is simply this. Carbon footprint.” No, that is the major environmental argument. The major economic argument is that print cannot compete with the production and reproduction cost of digital media. It’s pretty much the same problem that the music industry has. With one exception: Music from CD is digital; the mere hearing experience of a downloaded CD and a bought CD is the same - while reading printed news still is a much more pleasurable experience. Meaning the print industry has better cards than the music industry to keep some of the good old analogue.

Unregistered
AK

do you think this: http://www.presto.com/index.aspx has anything to do with the future of news? For non-web heads… a printer that delivers their custom version of the newspaper to their printer at home for consumption with morning coffee?


Unregistered
alberto d'ottavi

Hi guys. Thanks for your brilliant idea and great explanation. I use it in my seminars and it always has a “ahhh.. ohhh” effect (that is the bad version of the “wow” effect ;)

I did a similar analysis for Italy, very rough, may be, but here it is: http://www.infoservi.it/dblog/articolo.asp?articolo=448

Best,


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