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Newspapers Become Endangered Species As Online Publishing Climbs
Food Chain
It's no
secret that newspapers and other offline publications have rapidly
dwindling readership, as more readers view their news online. Most
newspapers have tried to make the move online with some success,
but revenues gained have not been able to replace the money lost
from offline subscriptions. Printed newspapers generate 20 to 100
times the revenue per user than do their online counterparts, largely
due to subscription fees. Charging for content online has proven
to be ineffective, leading to heavy reliance on ads to drive revenues,
but ad revenue is restricted by readership and the amount of page
content that can be created. With such limitations, how can offline
publishers monetize the online channel and stay in operation for
the coming years? The answer is: by using ad networks and behavioral
targeting.
Let's fast-forward to a Saturday morning in the
year 2012: You get out of bed, put on the coffee, but instead of
stepping out on the front porch to pick up the paper, you sit down
in front of your home computer and click on your local newspaper
online. One by one, the offline publications that have been a part
of your morning routine have faded out of existence. It's not because
of environmental sanctions on paper production, or the astronomical
cost of ink. Like most endangered species, these print publications
have been driven to extinction by something higher on the food chain;
in this case, it's online publications.
Although the Internet may have the potential to
help newspapers stay alive, advertising revenues from publishers'
Web sites must be maximized to sustain the company in the long term.
Like with any medium, the challenge lies in the limited amount of
ad space available: sell "X" impressions available at
"Y" CPM and you get your maximum revenue. However, CPMs
have already increased dramatically for many publishers. So it's
time to turn to the other side of the equation: inventory.
Enter behavioral targeting for publishers, a solution
that creates an "extended audience" by following readers
across an ad network of over 1,000 sites, giving publishers the
ability to sell many more targeted ads. Historically, there has
been a direct correlation between the size of a publication and
the amount of money it can make. A 300-page issue of GQ brings in
more revenue than a 25-page business journal. But with behavioral
targeting, a publisher's online revenue is limited only by the strength
of its brand.
An ad network with behavioral targeting offers a
way for Web sites to serve ads to their readers as they surf other
sites across the network, dramatically increasing ad inventory beyond
the space on their own site and enabling advertisers to see more
ad impressions from their target audiences. Furthermore, behavioral
targeting allows publishers to grow revenue without creating additional
content or building more infrastructure. Publishers negotiate and
sell the ads directly, giving them control of their own destiny.
While the gradual loss of print newspapers is inevitable,
newspaper publishers may avoid that fate if creative new ad models
are explored. By creating new online revenue streams through behavioral
targeting, newspapers can maintain the freedom and leadership they've
always enjoyed. Print newspapers may be heading for the scrap heap.
Their online counterparts however, may be preparing for their most
lucrative season yet.
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