Temple: What local newspapers should do, Part 6
This is the sixth in a series of 10 posts on what local newspapers should do to survive and thrive in the face of the economic meltdown and the societal shift to the Internet.
6. Newspapers should revamp their approach to print advertising. If they do, it will free them up to change their approach to the type of content they print.
Today, the approach to editorial content is in part driven by the need to fill holes around ads. As a result, at least partially, you see “A” sections filled with wire stories that can be easily cut to fit. Yet in other areas of modern life, high-quality product design has become a standard consumer expectation.
If you want proof, all you need to do is go to Target. Or go and test drive a modest, compact car. Even those are well-designed now. Yet in many newspapers much of what they print still looks like an after thought. They present small and unwieldy partial pages that editors “fill” with “wire” content that feels like yesterday’s news. That can’t continue.
Newspapers need to adopt a more coherent approach to print advertising that allows them to elevate the quality of their content. This will provide a basis for them to charge readers more, something they’re going to need to do in many cases. In others, it may be that a free newspaper with a fixed-page count with standard advertising units sold on an auction basis is the better approach.
But in either case, what’s essential is that the advertiser is connected to quality editorial content. And that’s possible only if editors can actually plan for the units they have to work with. We’re long past the days where newspapers can get away with “filling” holes. Space actually dictates content. If you doubt that, just check out what people say on Twitter versus what they might say on a blog.
Click here to read the blog post by John Temple, former editor of the Rocky Mountain News, at Temple Talk.
