Consumer, driver of change in newspaper industry: Mittelbach

September 23, 2009 03:51 pm | Updated 05:13 pm IST - CHENNAI:

Mr. Mittelbach at the inauguration of the Publish Asia Conference and IFRA Expo India, Chennai Trade Centre, Nandambakkam on Wednesday.

Mr. Mittelbach at the inauguration of the Publish Asia Conference and IFRA Expo India, Chennai Trade Centre, Nandambakkam on Wednesday.

Newspapers have to adopt multi-media, multi-channel and multi-platform strategies for providing consumer-centric communication, Reiner Mittelbach, Chief Executive Officer of WAN-IFRA, a global organisation of newspapers and news publishers, said on Wednesday.

Identifying four elements of consumer-centric communication, Mr. Mittelbach said the concept of “Newsroom 4.0” wherein media integration and target group orientation were combined in newsroom, segmentation of customer markets, a strong and visible brand and the concept of regarding advertisers as partners, not as cash cows, constituted the features.

Mr. Mittelbach was addressing the inauguration of the Publish Asia Conference and IFRA Expo India at the Chennai Trade Centre in Nandambakkam near here.

Noting that consumer habits were changing, the CEO, who quoted examples mainly from the European newspaper industry, said consumer was the driver of all changes in the newspaper industry. Each newspaper should be the “best of bread” and it should ensure that customers would not go to any other brand than it, as far as seeking information was concerned.

The newspapers should adopt the “full service” concept wherein they performed the roles such as news agencies, events agencies, and PR agencies. “The advertiser’s success is also the success of the publishing house because you keep the customer happy and the customer with you,” he said.

Mr. Mittelbach also called for a change in the organisational structure of the newspapers to go in tune with customer segmentation.

In his welcome address, N. Murali, Managing Director of The Hindu , pointed out how the newspaper industry in the country, particularly mainstream large English newspapers, was excessively reliant on advertising revenue. While the share of advertising revenue was around 60 per cent in respect of the overall industry, it was “unsustainably and staggeringly 84 or 85 per cent,” in the case of the English newspapers.

Noting that the advertising growth was expected to remain flat or taper off in the foreseeable future, Mr. Murali wanted the industry to view the present economic downturn as an opportunity to restructure and reform itself and embrace sound fundamentals. The industry should move to a strategy of profitable growth as opposed to pursuing high-growth, artificial high-growth at any cost.

Pointing out that online media was still growing at an exponential rate in the country, he said the newspaper industry would have to develop its online and digital businesses though a search for a profitable model was still elusive the world over.

Thomas Jacob, Deputy CEO, WAN-IFRA and Managing Director-Greater Asia Pacific, said the Asian media had become world leaders not only in print but also in online. India and China together accounted for 45 of the world’s largest 100 newspapers. Asia boasted the highest broadband users of 158 million, exceeding 123 million in Europe and 97.5 million in the United States. Asia was also emerging a leading user of mobile phones.

Publications on the Asian edition of world press trends and new printing plants were released on the occasion.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.