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Archive for March, 2010

Guest: Profit on the Web is about audience, not traffic

Friday, March 26th, 2010
Josh Gordon

Josh Gordon

This is a guest blog posting by Josh Gordon, president of Selling 2.0, who moderated the Digital Magazine Symposium in New York in March. It is reprinted with permission from his Ad Sales Blog.

Profit on the Web is about audience, not traffic

At the recent Digital Magazine Symposium, Gordon Borrell astonished the audience by blowing up the notion that building that largest base of online readers is the key to ad revenue.

After surveying the financial results from thousands of local media Web operations for the past eight years Borrell concludes there is no direct correlation between large amounts of traffic and large amounts of money.

For example, Borrell tracked a wedding Web site in one of the top media ten media markets making nearly as much money in Internet advertising (in millions of dollars) as the #1 ranked TV station website in that market. The TV site gets about 600,000 unique visitors per month, the wedding site gets about 60,000, or 1/10th of that traffic. How can this happen?

Borrell says that online, the best advertising is content. There was a time before the Internet (my kids are shocked at this statement) when the top way consumers learned about products was through advertising. But the Internet has become a far more efficient educator. Many of the most profitable websites make money because their content functions like advertising did years ago, as a customer educator for product sales. According to Borrell, visitors of these sites are “leaning forward” to read the content while probably ignoring the banner ads.

Some print publishers are still trying to win the print circulation/CPM battles online. But that battle is over. They lost. Online, search, which now accounts for over half of all online advertising dollars spent, has won. A media buyer can always buy more clicks per dollar buying search.

Online Revenue Per Unique Visitor

From Silicon Alley Insider

While the online CPM battle is lost, the war for publisher profit can be won. Borrell shows us how with an example: “Compare radio, a $15 billion media segment, with the yellow pages, a $9.8 billion segment. About twice as many people listen to radio compared with those who use the

printed yellow pages. So those ad dollars seem just a little out of whack, right?  Now consider this:  For radio, average weekly time spent listening is about 20 hours.  For the yellow pages, it’s about a minute.  An industry that reaches less than half the audience of radio and gets about 60

seconds of quality time with them every week – compared with radio’s 20 hours a week – can still attract about 65% of the ad dollars as radio?  That’s because the yellow pages, like the Internet, are a lean-forward medium where people see the advertising because the advertising is the content.”

At the Digital Magazine Symposium, when Borrell laid this out, everyone in the audience was taking furious notes.

To further support Borrell’s points, the chart above illustrates the dollar value of a unique visitor at some of the best known websites. To estimate these numbers, Silicon Alley Insider took the full year revenue for 2009 for each of the companies below and divided them by the number of their average monthly worldwide unique visitors.

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The Damaging Mantra of Convergence

Monday, March 15th, 2010

I had a spirited panel debate in Orlando recently with three individuals from newspaper companies who were hell-bent on proving that convergence sales forces worked.   When it was over, I was more convinced than ever that local media companies have internal Rasputins who are hypnotizing them into forgetting the past.

Unfortunately, many newspaper companies are on a path to remain, well, newspaper companies. Unlike their predecessors in the 1920s who leapt into radio with separate staffs and in the 1950s who leapt into local TV with separate staffs, many legacy media companies aren’t going to make this particular new media transformation.  They have either not read or completely forgotten the principal lesson of disruptive innovation: When a disruptor comes along, the winner is virtually always the organization that pursues the new venture with separate resources.

A lot of local media companies – newspapers, TV, radio, yellow pages and cable –labor under the delusion that their existing print or broadcast staffs are all they need to tackle the Internet.  While I believe that these legacy staffs can develop online content and sell online advertising, there’s overwhelming proof that they’re merely enhancing the core business, not building a new one. Those who have devoted significant and separate resources to the Internet have a far better chance of creating new value for their organizations.  McClatchy, for instance, derives about half of its online revenue from new, non-print advertisers; Fisher Communications in Seattle is outsourcing much of its sales to a separate telemarketing sales force and now has more than 2,000 advertisers – almost none of them broadcast advertisers.  They are creating new value, not shoring up old value, for their companies.

I’d really like to see newspapers win this game.  I started out as a reporter and editor, and the only board that I sit on is the Suburban Newspapers of America board of directors.   But I’ve seen newspapers continue to believe in this thing called convergence – that their print reporters and print salespeople have all the bandwidth they need to tackle this on their own.  They do not.  They need help, and a lot of it.  I’m afraid for newspapers, which I why I keep pounding the desk on this issue.  Newspapers had a 44% share of all locally spent online advertising back in 2004.  In 2009, they had a 23% share.   Competitors with a different strategy – and a lot more time on their hands to compete – are gobbling up all the growth.

Meanwhile, quite a few publishers are rushing to lock down their Web sites by allowing access only to paying subscribers, or looking for riches in eBooks.  A case in point is the Newport (R.I.) Daily News, a 12,000-circulation paper that started charging $35 a month nine months ago for online access.  The goal, as stated by the publisher, was to “drive people back to the printed paper.”  Another is the 23,000-circulation Valley Morning Star in Harlingen, Texas.  The publisher says the pay wall was instituted to “allow greater value to our many loyal print-edition subscribers by not giving away the news to non-subscribers.”

I wonder what would have happened if these publishers were around a half-century ago. Would they have tried to shut down their companies’ new media ventures at the time — TV stations — for fear that local news broadcasts were eroding newspaper circulation?   TV did erode newspaper circulation, just as the Internet most certainly does the same.  New data from Pew Research this week shows just how unwilling people are to pay for news online:  82% said they’d go elsewhere if a site erected a tollgate.  If you dissect the numbers a bit more closely, the figure is actually closer to 93%. 

I don’t want newspaper executives to say – like Encyclopedia Britannica executives said in 1996 – We have the most respected brand.  We have quality content.  People will pay for quality content.  We can’t continue to lose subscriptions by giving away all our valuable content.  Britannica thought this was a convergence play as well.  They completely missed something like Google because their internal managers saw the Internet opportunity from an internal perspective.

MTV, Barnes & Noble, and scores of others are in the same camp – thinking they can seize the opportunity under the same brand and the same managers.   Do 18- to 24-year-olds go to MTV.com?  No, they go to Facebook.  When you want to buy a book do you go to BarnesAndNoble.com?  No, you go to Amazon.com.  

The strategy at Britannica, MTV and Barnes & Noble blinded them to the bigger opportunity, and the strategy at many newspapers to use one combined print-and-online sales force to sell newspaper Web sites is likewise blinding them to a bigger opportunity.

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Goodbye, Junk Mail

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Some of you may recall the report on e-mail marketing we produced last year. In it, we predicted a direct mail ad spending decline of nearly 40 percent within five years. Nearly a year later, the prediction looks to be right on  target. Delivered mail has dropped 250 billion pieces a few years ago to 170 billion pieces in 2009, and will continue to fall this year. The Postmaster General has called for elimination of Saturday delivery and closure of many post offices, to be replaced by kiosks at local retailers. As an interesting sidelight, mail boxes we used to see on every corner are removed from service when they receive less than 25 pieces of mail per week. As of the end of last year, half of those in service five years ago had been pulled from the nation’s streets.

The decline in mail volume has mostly been in personal mail — the letters and postcards we used to send to family and friends, the bills we used to pay. Advertising mail has not dropped nearly as fast … at least, not yet. As e-mail overtakes “snail mail,” the catalogs, marriage mail, and solo offers will increasingly follow suit.  Some will dispense with physical distribution entirely. Others will look to newspapers and magazines as replacements for the mail man.

We haven’t discussed the biggest anchor dragging our postal system down. Like most of our nation’s biggest manufacturers — the steel mills, the auto makers, and others — our Postal Service is heavily unionized, and carries a staggering overhang in employee pension debt. The ever-growing volume of pension demands restricts the Postal Service from changes it could make to remain more competitive. But changes will have to be made to the current situation, or the Postal Service as we know it will not survive.

When we published our report a number of negative responses reached us (all via e-mail, by the way). Among those challenging our forecasts the most were charity managers, who maintained that direct mail was just as good and useful to them as ever. It is poignant now to read about the number of these organizations finding new success with social media. We remain confident that direct mail ad spending will fall almost 40 percent between 2009 and 2014 — from $48.7 billion to $31.6 billion, nationwide. However, we take no pleasure in this forecast or the disruption it describes.

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