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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>Impact: Since news and content supplied by paid pr<strong>of</strong>essionals begets freecontent by readers/users, <strong>the</strong> average cost to produce a page view is drivenlower. But <strong>the</strong> quality, accuracy and authority <strong>of</strong> this content are highly variableand susceptible to manipulation.• On digital platforms, it is <strong>of</strong>ten hard to make sure that advertising supplymatches demand. Online editors frequently have a difficult time generatingenough page views when advertisers demand <strong>the</strong>m—or filling up thatadvertising space when reader traffic soars and ad demand is light. So newssites <strong>of</strong>ten need to run cheap ads, called “remnants,” that may get a tenth <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> revenue <strong>the</strong>ir usual ads draw. Michael Barrett, <strong>the</strong> CEO <strong>of</strong> Admeld, acompany that tries to increase advertising rates on sites with traffic prone topeaks and valleys, says that some <strong>of</strong> his clients view <strong>the</strong> situation “like seatson an airplane. They don’t want to fly <strong>the</strong> plane with any empty seats.”Impact: Because <strong>the</strong> cost <strong>of</strong> creating each additional page is close to zero,media companies can have a wide range <strong>of</strong> prices, charging <strong>the</strong> highest ratesfor <strong>the</strong> most desirable times, placement and audience. But all those unpredictablepage views exert constant downward pressure on ad prices.• Advertising is transformed in a digital format, and not always for <strong>the</strong>better. Some journalists may not realize this, but many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir readers andviewers see advertising as useful and entertaining. Indeed, access to advertisingis ano<strong>the</strong>r incentive for people to buy magazines and newspapers orlisten to and watch broadcasts. But <strong>the</strong> appeal <strong>of</strong> online advertising is <strong>of</strong>tendiminished by its format. A small, rectangular banner ad conveys little usefulinformation—certainly less than an insert in a newspaper or a glossy adin a fashion magazine. To get useful information from an online ad, a reader<strong>of</strong>ten must click and head to a new site, something people rarely do. And <strong>the</strong>more intrusive forms <strong>of</strong> online advertising—such as “roadblock” messagesthat take over <strong>the</strong> entire screen for a few seconds—upset <strong>the</strong> user experience.Some digital companies are bringing content value to ads, but <strong>the</strong>y tendnot to be news media. Google became a powerhouse by tying advertisingdirectly to users’ search queries. And Groupon, which attracts readers whoNews from Everywhere: The Economics <strong>of</strong> <strong>Digital</strong> <strong>Journalism</strong> 17

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