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Hi. I'm a former journalist and Malaysian correspondent to CNet, ZDnet, Newsbytes (Washington Post-Newsweek Interactive wire agency), Nikkei Electronics Asia and AsiaBizTech.com. I also previously contributed to The Star, The Edge, The New Straits Times, The New Zealand Herald and various magazines. Currently, I train and advise managers and executives on strategies to optimize their use of social media and online channels to reach customers. My company, Trinetizen Media, runs media training workshops on social media, media relations, investor relations, corporate blogging,multimedia marketing, online advertising, multimedia journalism and crisis communications. You can connect with me on Facebook , LinkedIn, Twitter or Google+.

Sunday, July 09, 2006

Unbundling mainstream media

Peter Rip, a venture capitalist with Leapfrog Ventures, handled Knight Ridder's investments in start-ups from 1997 to 1999. At the time,he says, KRI was two cultures, 99% newsprint and 1% HTML.

He laments that by 1997, when the "meteor" of the Internet had hit earth, KRI realized that being a dinosaur was the "fatal choice", not the decision to run once it hit.

"Turning KRI into a 'pure newspaper play' made the business more comprehensible to Wall Street, but it didn't make it a better business."

"The real irony of this situation is that for 15 years KRI was, by far, the most innovative newspaper company in the country, including its early experiments in teletext and having the first online newspaper (the Mercury News on AOL in the mid 90s).

"As I have written elsewhere, the Web presented a double whammy to newspapers everywhere. KRI was especially susceptible to these issues because its circulation was concentrated in metro markets like the Bay Area, Miami, and Philadelphia -- markets where Internet penetration and usage of online services are highest. That makes it the first high profile victim, not the last. Local and rural newspapers see the writing on the wall, albeit faintly. But the effects go well beyond newspapers and even magazines.

"The traditional advertising supported media model is based on bundling content with advertising, with a large helping of proprietary distribution infrastructure. The entire media value chain is being reconstructed with the 'help' of online. Social media are re-defining content. Advertising networks are re-defining revenue generation models. Blogs are redefining the concept of 'editorial brand' in media.

"The fatal flaw of the online newspapers has been to be newspapers, online. This is obvious to everyone. What is not obvious is what local newspaper companies can do online that is defensible. Online local aggregation is kind of an oxymoron. It can be done more efficiently on a national scale, as Craigslist is proving.

"Perhaps Craigslist holds a model for what newspapers become - a series of specific unbundled 'newspaper-like' services, but done with community-generated content and executed on a national scale. Cross a Craigslist community model for local content creation and an Ebay-like reputation mechanism and you have a pretty good proxy for local news gathering. What's missing are the editorial and investigative functions, but the blogosphere suggests editorial chaos self-organizes with some voices louder than others. Like most creative destruction, it is much easier to imagine a new entrant doing something like this than an established newspaper company.

"I especially would not like to be a television network executive these days. The rise of YouTube and the 100 other video-sharing sites represent a similar unbundling of entertainment and advertising delivered in a low cost distribution channel. The impact of cable on the fragmentation of the TV audience is nothing compared to the explosion of Internet video. If they think 'Well, the quality of Flash movies is lousy. We have time,' they are wrong. They only have Internet Time. The executive team at KRI thought newspapers would be around for 20 more years, despite declining circulation. And they likely will, just not KRI."


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