Every newsroom I've occupied in the last dozen years has seen a greater (and almost always better) relationship between editorial and advertising departments. In professional and responsible organizations there is a healthy, mutual respect for what each contributes, and I could count on one hand the challenges of managing that relationship out of hundreds of opportunities where it could have gone sideways. Before those discussions took place, there was too much unnecessary acrimony, hypothesizing of motives and plain old misunderstanding of functions and complexities of the roles. Today we all understand better what the other parts of the puzzle contribute.
A number of places still hold sacrosanct an impenetrable wall between the two principal units of media, and Forbes.com is pointing in a new article to the gradual commingling of common interests in news organizations, in some cases with commitment and in others sheer compliance. It's a relatively positive piece on how many newsrooms are working with "the enemy within" and finding the collisions are not nearly as serious as one might expect.
The Center for Media Research has caught up to some BIGResearch data from February on who is blogging, and while the data is getting a little stale (as these things do about every week or two), its analysis is worth examining. A new report from the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) provides a very strong overview for anyone trying to understand the evolving relationship between advertising, marketing and social media. Embedding links in stories is a years-old practice for many news media, but the problem is that it usually takes a user off the site to never return. It's as if someone reading the sidebar to a main story in the newspaper put the paper down and left the rest of it unread. Buzzmachine has, for years, been a provocative but thoughtful source on media change. Jeff Jarvis, a veteran journalist and manager, has been spreading his observations generously through his site and through several columns and outlets.
Let's start with the bad news: The American Society of Newspaper Editors has released its annual survey of U.S. newspaper newsroom staffing and found a 4.4 per cent decline in the year. That's the largest decline since it began the survey three decades ago and puts the U.S. newspaper editorial staffs back at 1984 levels. Britain, the world's most developed online advertising market, is on the cusp of making more digital history. Ad spending online will pass print and television next year, says the Internet Advertising Bureau, the World Advertising Research Centre and PriceWaterhouseCoopers. The market share was 15.3 per cent in 2007 (revenues of about $5.6 billion), behind print (19.9) and TV (21.8), but the rapid growth is set to eclipse both media next year. The pace of growth in paid search is slowing somewhat, but search, classified and banner advertising all showed strong growth. The Reuters story on the report is here. A new poll suggests about one-quarter of Canadians believe Facebook plays a more negative than positive role. Jonathan Zittrain, the Oxford-Harvard Internet governance and cyberlaw scholar, has written a very accessible and provocative book called The Future of the Internet and How To Stop It. It stopped me dead in my tracks today and I had to steal away time to absorb its premise and enter the full-on reading of the book. |