AdLibbing Blog

March 5, 2010

Staking a place in an expanded media landscape

Written by Ilana Kavadlo | 11:56 am
Five leading magazine publishers launched a new campaign this week touting “the power of print.” At a time when most discussion remains focused on the hit-and-miss efforts of print media to adjust itself to the digital age, it feels refreshing to see publishers embrace the innate qualities of their medium.
Yes, the print industry needs to make adjustments to remain viable, however radio didn’t kill newspapers, TV didn’t kill radio, and to date, the Internet has a clean record.
The publishers’ ads reference data from Mediamark Research & Intelligence that show magazine readership has risen 4.3% over the past five years. And I trust this data because I’m living proof.
I am well to the right along the spectrum of digital savvy. I’m of a generation that would rather send a text than make a phone call, and it’s eerie how much I learn via Facebook.
But I LOVE my magazines! I don’t have a stack of books beside my bed; I have old issues of The New Yorker interspersed with ReadyMade and DIY (and a 2008 GQ with my boy Michael Phelps on the cover).
Print has a tangible, tactile and lasting quality that digital simply does not. And that’s OK, for both mediums.
I like to think this campaign, and other similar efforts from the Newspaper Association of America and a trade group of the local-TV industry, are signaling a shift away from decrying the slow demise of traditional media, and moving forward to embrace their place within a broader media landscape.
We all recognize the greater competition for our attention, but while various media types settle into altered roles, we, as consumers, continue to enjoy the unique benefits of each.
What are your thoughts? Do you believe new media is the death knell of the ‘old?’ Or do you envision a world in which numerous media types will thrive?

Five leading magazine publishers launched a new campaign this week touting “the power of print.” At a time when most discussion remains focused on the hit-and-miss efforts of print media to adjust itself to the digital age, it feels refreshing to see publishers embrace the innate qualities of their medium.

power-of-print

Yes, the print industry needs to make adjustments to remain viable, however radio didn’t kill newspapers, TV didn’t kill radio, and to date, the Internet has a clean record.

The publishers’ ads reference data from Mediamark Research & Intelligence that show magazine readership has risen 4.3% over the past five years. And I trust this data because I’m living proof.

I’m pretty darn comfortable with technology. I’m of a generation that would rather send a text than make a phone call, and it’s eerie how much I learn via Facebook.

But I LOVE my magazines! I don’t have a stack of books beside my bed; I have old issues of The New Yorker interspersed with ReadyMade and DIY (and a 2008 GQ with my boy Michael Phelps on the cover).

Print has a tangible, tactile and lasting quality that digital media simply does not. And that’s OK, for both mediums.

I like to think this campaign, and other similar efforts from the Newspaper Association of America and a trade group of the local-TV industry, are signaling a shift away from decrying the slow demise of traditional media, and moving forward to embrace their place within a broader media landscape.

We all recognize the greater competition for our attention, but while various media types settle into altered roles, we, as consumers, continue to enjoy the unique benefits of each.

What are your thoughts? Do you believe new media is the death knell of the ‘old?’ Or do you envision a world in which numerous media types will thrive?

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January 5, 2010

PSAs: What Business are We Really In?

Written by John Boal | 2:11 pm

On one of my Southwest flights returning from a media market trip, I had a chance to pause and ponder:  What business are we really in when we distribute and promote our PSAs and public relations packages on campaigns to traditional media and throughout the social networks?

Yes, these are wonderful messages designed to change behavior for the common good.

Yet, while management consulting firms give the Ad Council great guidance on how to traverse the mega- digital transition, is there a bigger picture to embrace as we enter the brave new media world of 2010 where social networks take more prominence in distributing our messages?

Then I thought about the legendary management guru, Peter Drucker, whom Time Magazine once called, “perhaps the most perceptive observer of the American scene since Alexis de Tocqueville.”

Lofty praise for a cranky professor, and author of 28 books, who hung up on me and refused to grant an interview for a magazine article back in 1997.  Now deceased, the legendary Drucker nevertheless lives on at The Drucker Institute in Claremont, CA (www.druckerinstitute.com).  Despite the snub, I combed through many of his books and articles to glean the essence of his management philosophy.  And sure enough, it was brilliantly perceptive.

(more…)

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