Back in the 1990s when I was working for Wellington’s now-defunct
Evening Post, we experienced a series
of printing press breakdowns which meant the paper was repeatedly late coming
out.
I recall an unusual sight as I drove home late in the
afternoons. Along the streets leading to my house, people were standing at
their gates gazing along the footpath to see whether the paper was on its way.
It was striking to see how keenly people anticipated their
paper each day and how discombobulated they were when it didn’t arrive on time.
I thought of this recently as I read a book on the state of
the New Zealand and Australian newspaper industries. Stop Press: The Last Days of Newspapers was written by New Zealand
journalist Rachel Buchanan, who has worked for papers on both sides of the
Tasman.
It’s a pessimistic title – some would say unduly so. But
there’s no doubt newspapers are going through a period of unprecedented
upheaval and no one quite knows where or how it’s going to end.
Certainly the book has the tone of an obituary, even though
the death hasn’t occurred yet.
One or two senior newspaper executives quoted in the book
clearly have no time for prophets of doom. Buchanan quotes New Zealander Campbell
Reid, editorial director of Rupert Murdoch’s News Limited, as saying: “Those in
the newspaper and journalism profession that talk themselves into their funeral
will get no help from me. They should shut up and retire and wander off in
disgrace and let the next generation get on with it.”
The future of journalism, Reid insists, “is literally at our
fingertips every single day courtesy of the information revolution”.
That’s bold talk. A cynic might observe that Reid has no
option but to sound bullish, given his position. He has to believe in the revolution. Certainly I’ve heard lots of
similar talk over the past couple of years from cheerleaders for online media,
and it’s only fair to acknowledge that my own gloomy view of the industry, although
widely shared within journalism, is hotly contested by some.
They may be right. We shall see.
What we can say with certainty is that the revolution Reid
speaks of has transformed the print media. Whether it’s for better or for worse
is a matter of fierce debate. I fall into the pessimist camp, but I would be
delighted to be proved wrong.
We can also say that no matter how much we might wish to, we
can’t turn the clock back to the halcyon days before the worldwide web transformed
the newspaper business.
That was the era when newspapers effectively had a monopoly
on printed information. If you wanted to know what was happening in the world,
around New Zealand or in your community, you read the paper.
Television and radio provided competition of sorts, but
couldn’t match the print medium for depth or breadth of coverage.
Newspapers set the journalism agenda, breaking virtually all
the big stories. They were able to do so because they had more reporters on the
ground. And the reason they could afford to employ lots of journalists is that
they made healthy profits through advertising.
Classified advertising in particular – by which I mean all those
small-print ads for jobs, cars, real estate, second-hand goods and so forth – generated
so much revenue that it gave birth to the phrase “rivers of gold”.
Alas, the rivers of gold began to dry up the moment the
Internet made it possible for people to advertise more cheaply and efficiently
online. Arguably the two most lethal words in the history of New Zealand
newspapers were Trade Me.
The digital revolution had another consequence which, even
if it couldn’t have been avoided altogether, might have been a lot less
damaging had the newspaper industry reacted differently.
I believe that newspaper owners, panicked by predictions
that the mainstream media was headed for obsolescence, committed a potentially fatal
strategic error by making all their content available free online.
The theory was that advertising would follow, but it didn’t
– at least, not to anything like the extent that would be necessary for
newspaper websites to be profitable.
We’re now left with a situation in which newspaper
publishers have diverted journalistic resources away from their traditional
core product in pursuit of what may be an illusory holy grail.
The fact that they haven’t yet worked out how to make money in this brave new
world doesn’t seem to have dimmed their faith.
If we are indeed observing the last days of newspapers, as
Buchanan argues, then I fear the industry may have hastened its own demise.
What’s more, I believe newspaper owners have compounded
their mistake by pandering to the capricious online grazer – the Facebook
generation – over the habitual newspaper reader, who tends to be older and more
loyal.
A new type of journalism has evolved to cater to this new
market. The flag-bearers for this new journalism tend to be dismissive of what
they call “legacy” journalism, which is their disparaging term for dreary stuff
about matters of public interest. What attracts website traffic is titillating
stories about celebrities, scandal, political conflict, gossip, crime and
controversy.
In the newspaper industry, such stories are known as
clickbait. The objective is to
attract as many “clicks” as possible from browsing readers, thereby bumping up
readership figures.
Meanwhile, having belatedly woken up to the fact that the
online business model is seriously flawed, publishers are exploring ways of
introducing paywalls, whereby readers will have to pay for online access.
Admittedly hindsight’s a wonderful thing, but shouldn’t they
have done this from the outset? Good journalism costs money; making it
available free of charge was suicidal.
Will paywalls work? I’m sceptical. Now that online readers
are in the habit of getting access for nothing, it may be an uphill battle
persuading them to pay.
But back to Buchanan’s book. It’s an affectionate, nostalgic
and ultimately sad portrait of an industry struggling to adapt in a
fast-changing environment. Though often witty, the book’s dominant tone is one
of impending loss.
Newspapers are a defining feature of an informed, literate and
engaged society. Sir Bob Jones acknowledged this in a recent column in the New Zealand Herald in which he wrote:
“Nothing matches the daily newspaper for sheer stimulation, education and
entertainment value for money.”
I’ve spent my working life in the newspaper business, but
until I saw all those people standing at their gates waiting for the Evening Post, even I didn’t grasp how
important the daily paper was in people’s lives. My concern now is that we
won’t realise how much we stand to lose until it’s too late.
4 comments:
An objective and apolitical 'free press' is fundimental to a free society. By going after 'clickbait' as you so aptly described it, these papers have abadoned much of what once passed for intelligent reporting and given the phrase 'current affairs' new meaning.
Their demise is all but certain, and based upon current form, well deserved.
The NZ Herald is just so awful-they have gone right down market hoping to attract 'the younger reader' and as you point in general terms leaving the older (me!) with nothing worth loking at and so I look on line where I can read papers from around the world. I pull the paper from our rural letterbox at around 2 pm and almost always wince at the headline which is usually juvenile and sensational. In the house I throw away the sport section, the ridiculous BITE and other supplements. Not much left by now! Reading on line also makes me aware of what the Herald doesn't cover-what it must deliberately leave out.
Some things are just sad and for me the demise of newspapers is one of those things.
Now we get amateurs publishing, putting out poorly researched stories or opinions based on prejudices.
I liked the days of the gatekeepers where professionals filtered the rubbish to provide reasonably reliable information.
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