New York Times to focus on ‘pay-to-read’ in digital offering
Subscription revenues in print and
online surged in the past decade, says group Vice-Chairman
Chennai,
March 2:
Michael Golden believes readers will pay for good
and meaningful content on the web despite the fact that there is so much of
free information on the web. The Vice-Chairman of The New York Times
says the newspaper group has seen advertising revenues plunge in the last
decade but digital revenues, more so subscriptions, where people pay to read
the NYT on the web, have been growing, even faster than digital ad revenues.
Speaking at a Digital Media summit in New Delhi
organised by WAN-IFRA, a world association of newspapers and publishers, Golden
says the NYT is focussed on consumer (subscription) revenue as the main
driver: It’s now 60 per cent of revenue while 40 per cent is advertising. That
includes its print subscriptions as well.
“Just 10 years ago, 70 per cent of our revenues was
from advertising and 30 per cent was consumer. It would be nice if advertising
revenue stayed steady, but that’s not happening,” he says.
Declining ad
revenues
Explaining the scale of the decline, Golden says the
news group’s advertising in print declined from $1 billion about 15 years ago
to $320 million last year. However, while advertising has dropped, there was a
surge in subscriptions both in digital and print. Last year, the NYT had
a little over $ 250 million in digital consumer revenues, in addition to $600
million in print consumer revenues.
The group has 1.8 million digital only subscribers
since it launched its digital subscription plan in 2011. “At that time, most
people said it was absurd and it will fail and we will not attract people to
pay for digital information. Also, many people, including in the NYT,
thought consumers will change from print to pay for digital subscriptions,” he
says.
However, events proved otherwise. While print
subscriptions to the NYT costs $1,000 for a year, digital costs $225-$425 a
year.
“My belief is that people don’t see them (print and
digital) as substitutable alternatives. Print subscribers will like print and
digital subscriptions did not cannibalise our print in any meaningful way,”
Golden elaborates, though he does emphasise that the print medium is on a
decline in the US.
“We would have had declines in print without digital
subscriptions. Fifty-five per cent of smart phone users are under 25 and they
are not buying print subscriptions the way 25-year-olds used to. The world is
changing in front of us,” he adds.
The news organisation is adding 50,000 net
subscribers every quarter. In the third quarter of the last year – July to
September - NYT had net 116,000 digital subscribers. “That was the biggest
addition since we launched the plan in 2011,” he says.
In the 4th quarter – October to December – NYT had
257,000 net digital subscribers, more than twice the previous quarter. “In
times of uncertainty people go to the sources they trust to find out what’s
going in the world. We saw the same thing happen during 9/11 and we see this
happening now,” Golden says.
Source | Business Line | 3 March 2017
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co
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