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What We Know About the Business of Digital Journalism

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Columbia <strong>Journalism</strong> School | Tow Center for <strong>Digital</strong> <strong>Journalism</strong>To begin to understand <strong>the</strong> disruptions <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> digital transformation, it is importantto appreciate <strong>the</strong> circumstances that made <strong>the</strong> news business—whe<strong>the</strong>rin broadcast, cable, magazines or newspapers—so pr<strong>of</strong>itable for so long. Thecommercial heyday that buoyed <strong>the</strong> fortunes <strong>of</strong> American newsrooms in <strong>the</strong> lasthalf-century had its roots in changes that began much earlier.Through <strong>the</strong> 19th Century, newspapers benefited from economic and demographicshifts that accompanied industrialization—in particular, rapid urbanizationand <strong>the</strong> attendant rise <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> big-city retail economy. The growing advertisingmarket encouraged urban publishers, who had begun to loosen <strong>the</strong>ir ties topolitical parties and to think <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>mselves as independent businesspeople. In <strong>the</strong>process, <strong>the</strong>y realized <strong>the</strong>y could make most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir money from local retailers,ra<strong>the</strong>r than from people in <strong>the</strong> street paying a few pennies to buy <strong>the</strong>ir papers.Historians <strong>of</strong> journalism argue that <strong>the</strong>se economic and political shifts underpinnedan increasingly pr<strong>of</strong>essionalized and objective journalism that became <strong>the</strong>norm in <strong>the</strong> 1920s and 1930s. The move toward general-interest, advertisingsupportednewspapers aimed at broad audiences also drove a cycle <strong>of</strong> concentrationand consolidation that would continue for decades.With audiences and ad revenue growing even as competitors disappeared,newsrooms and newspapers swelled in size. An analysis <strong>of</strong> major metropolitandailies by <strong>the</strong> American <strong>Journalism</strong> Review found that between 1965 and 1999,eight <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 10 newspapers studied saw at least one competitor disappear. 4 During<strong>the</strong> same period, on average, each <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> surviving newspapers doubled <strong>the</strong>amount <strong>of</strong> news it produced. Even as new or expanded sections—sports, business,lifestyle—claimed a larger share <strong>of</strong> each edition, <strong>the</strong> total coverage <strong>of</strong> local,national and international news continued to increase.The trend <strong>of</strong> increasing consolidation in a growing advertising market helpedto compensate for declining readership. By <strong>the</strong> early 1980s, most U.S. cities hadjust one daily newspaper. Or, in markets with two papers, one was clearly dominantand <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r was kept afloat by favorable terms negotiated in joint operatingagreements that Congress had created to preserve local journalistic competition.Radio and television newsrooms enjoyed similar access to a lucrativeNews from Everywhere: The Economics <strong>of</strong> <strong>Digital</strong> <strong>Journalism</strong> 9

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