Are magazines dying?

By on October 13th, 2009 In Uncategorized

WHP logoMeg Weaver of Wooden Horse Publishing analyzes magazine markets and trends, and provides the following perspective on the state of magazines today:

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Gourmet, Southern Accents, Vibe, Nickelodeon, Today’s Christian Woman, Portfolio, Pink, Spirit of Aloha, Hallmark, Memory Makers, Canadian Home & Country, Best Life, Western Interiors & Design, Blender, Pink – all magazines gone just this year!

What is going on?  Are we seeing the end of the American magazine?

No – and yes.  Many million-and-more circulation mass market magazines are, or will soon be, gone.  Interesting, well-edited magazines, which give us a “good read,” will survive.  Humans have always been suckers for a good story.  Some publishers have already figured this out.  National Geographic, The Economist, Consumers Reports, Smithsonian, Cook’s Illustrated, and others – to some degree even People magazine – have found that great content, targeted at smaller audiences of really interested people, make money.

Others are thrashing about for something – ANYTHING!  – to bring in money.  They’re desperate to stop the bleeding and are closing magazines while manically squeezing their remaining publications, loading them up with even more marketing partnerships, product line extensions, variations on charging for Internet content (which they trained readers to demand for free) or projects like MagHound, MagCloud, and the yet unnamed “Hulu-like service for magazines.”

If you’re not familiar with these last three, here’s a quick overview: 

MagHound (www.maghound.com) is a subscription service with a twist: The customer can switch between magazines – even in the middle of a subscription period.  MagCloud, at www.magcloud.com, allows anyone to publish a print magazine in a matter of days and have the company take care of the printing, binding and distribution.  The “Hulu for magazines” will be a joint venture between as many magazine publishers as Time Inc can sign up, and will offer subscriptions for digital magazines to be read on any e-reader, whether it’s an Amazon Kindle, Sony Reader, iPhone, Blackberry or Apple’s rumored tablet.  More e-readers in development abound, including those from Time Inc and Barnes & Noble.  The first two are already available and the “Hulu-like” service is estimated to be ready in 2010.

Will it work?  If the publishers are lucky, it may work for a while.  But innovations in subscriptions or reading methods don’t address the need readers have for a good story.

But smart publishers will eventually figure it out – and we will experience another golden age of American magazines and darned happy to have all those inventions to help us acquire and read them.

But today we are in a Never-Never-Land of uncertainty.  How do PR professionals navigate these tumultuous times?  How do you get your client, or client’s product, into successful magazines?  Here’s how:

1) Search out magazines focusing on great content.  They’re out there and their numbers are growing.  One by one, publishers will begin to discover what made magazines successful in the first place.

2) Discover the story behind your product and use it in your pitch. 

3) Break the habit of using “spray-and-pray” distribution methods and work with magazines one-on-one.  Why?  See point 4.

4) Know each magazine’s editorial positioning.  When magazines stop using cookie-cutter content (“lose 5 lbs in 5 minutes!!”), you need to know how they plan to be different than their competitors.  Only pitches supporting this positioning will be considered.

No, we’re not in the dying days of magazines; this is just a course correction.  Good words – even if not necessarily on paper – will always hold a fascination for people.

You can reach Meg at mweaver@woodenhorsepub.com and sign up for her e-newlsetter at www.woodenhorsepub.com.

Comments

Courtenay Dulak Says:
October 13th, 2009 at 10:29 am

Linda-you’re spot on. We don’t need technology as much as we want content–something to teach us something or spark a little curiosity. On a side note, Modern Bride and Elegant Bride were shut down last week by Condenast which surprised me–I thought bridezillas were consuming enough information to keep major pubs like those going.

Dan Wool Says:
October 13th, 2009 at 10:42 am

How to get your client into magazines? Know your audience and do your homework.

Go to the newsstand and flip through the magazines relevant to your pitch. Search online. Get a sense of each publication’s content. Jot down the names of writers or editors covering your niche .

Create RSS feeds for those magazines, keywords on pitch-relevant topics, etc. to stay on top of editorial content and trends. Follow journalists on Twitter.

Tailor your pitches (can’t agree more with #3) – blast pitches no longer work (did they ever?) – personal/custom/exclusive is always the way to go. If you understand the publication’s vibe and the writer’s usual beat your pitch should be easy.

Marketing $ociologist Says:
October 13th, 2009 at 11:08 am

A great opportunity is airline magazines. They will continue to thrive because of a captive audience – until WiFi is available on all flights.

CBS Evening news just did a spot on magazine sales, giving me an opportunity to blog on it –
Duh.. CBS just finding out magazines dead?
Next they’ll discover Facebook Net #2
Economy good
21st Century marketing – some still ignorant

See video, http://marketingsociologist.blogspot.com/2009/10/duh-cbs-just-finding-out-magazines-dead.html

My advice is quit clinging to press release (PR) mentality. There is a place for press conferences (Miley Cyrus announcing a tour – which she did not do – she used the Internet to announce it); but we are two short months from the beginning of the 21st Century. Marketing people are perishing left and right because they refuse to adapt new marketing tools.

As I blogged last week, it is time to develop iPhone app and Google Wave plans in your marketing strategies. Organizations just thinking of YouTube, MySpace and Facebook are about a decade behind the curve.

A major Phoenix company announced last week it is going into “social media” with a Twitter and Facebook presence. I recommended that to them in May, 2008. Shortly after the meeting they called me to “pick up your material.” They were not interested. Thank goodness they are a monopoly and don’t need to be competitive.

This weekend I posted a video on YouTube of an exclusive. My blog (which is tied into the YouTube link) withnessed five-fold visits. I got 1,000 NEW hits in two hours.

21st Century marketing. If you’d like to discuss it,
MediaRelationsExpert.com

Presenting this Saturday at Film, Stage and Showbiz Expo at Los Angeles Convention Center. Available to speak to YOUR organization!

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