Every company eventually tries to become a media company
Every company eventually tries to become a media companyPLUS: Are publishers underestimating Twitter as a traffic driver?Welcome! I'm Simon Owens and this is my media industry newsletter. If you've received it, then you either subscribed or someone forwarded it to you. If you fit into the latter camp and want to subscribe, then you can click on this handy little button: Let’s jump into it… Every company eventually tries to become a media companyAxios reports that the stock trading platform Robinhood is launching a standalone, independent media company:
The other week, I wrote about the business newsletter The Hustle and why it was acquired by HubSpot, a SaaS tech company. My piece included this quote from HubSpot’s former SVP of marketing Kieran Flanagan:
Robinhood’s new media outlet definitely fits within that trend, and its executives certainly hope that Sherwood will lower user acquisition costs while strengthening the company’s brand within the finance community. Whether it stays committed to the project and continues to invest remains to be seen; remember, it’s only been about a month since a16z shut down Future, the outlet that was supposedly going to replace traditional tech journalism. Stop Paying 5-10% of Your Revenue for Substandard Newsletter Software[Sponsored] You don’t need to sharecrop for Substack or pay 5% of your revenue for duct-tape-and-twig solutions that try to make WordPress into a newsletter-focused site. Printing presses don’t take a percentage of newspaper or magazine subscriptions. Why should your website? Outpost Publishers Cooperative can help you join the independent revolution. Our members use Ghost — an open-source, modern CMS built for subscription-driven, newsletter-focused sites, and then supercharge it with Outpost’s power tools for Ghost that automate the business chores, like upselling readers, taking donations from multiple payment processors, institutional/gift subscriptions, and more. Outpost can help you transition to the future seamlessly like we did for Tangle and Lever News, or build custom solutions like we did for The Atlantic. You’ll get modern, open tools that make it simpler to run your site and the freedom to make it work how you want it to work. You will save money, because neither Outpost or Ghost takes a percentage of your subscription revenue. Already using Ghost? Outpost’s tools will help take your newsletter to the next level, and you can start today with a 21-day free trial. Visit Outpost.pub to learn more. How much traffic does Twitter actually send to publishers?Digiday reports that Twitter traffic to publishers is down, possibly because of its removal of the Moments tool.
This could be a sign that the platform is losing relevance, but then again I’ve always thought the media underestimated Twitter’s role as a traffic driver. If you look at just the referral analytics alone, then sure, Twitter ranks far behind larger platforms like Facebook and Google, but it’s always had outsized influence in seeding content on those larger platforms. A story that takes off on Facebook, for instance, often experiences early success on Twitter. For better or worse, it’s the place where all the journalists, policymakers, and industry leaders spend most of their time online, and I don’t think that dynamic has changed that much since Musk took over. What do you think?
Let's talk to Sean Griffey, CEO of Industry DiveWhen it comes to running a B2B Media company, few people are more knowledgeable than Sean Griffey. After co-founding Industry Dive in 2012, he helped grow it into 22 separate verticals. In 2022, it was acquired by Informa for a reported $525 million. Sean has graciously agreed to join a live Zoom call with my audience and answer questions about everything related to running and growing a B2B media company. PLEASE NOTE: This won’t be one of those boring webinar interviews; this is an interactive session where everyone will have the opportunity to speak up, ask questions, and share their own expertise. You can find the login details over here. How much real journalism does the media actually produce?The media has always been incredibly good at covering its own supposed demise, so it should surprise absolutely no one that it’s flooded the zone with think pieces about the threat of ChatGPT and the role it will play in replacing flesh and blood journalists with cheap AI copy. I think Brian Morrissey did a good job of throwing cold water on this notion in a recent piece about the media’s “identity crisis,” and there was one particularly good line that stood out to me:
Yes! This is often the thought I have when people bemoan the decline of legacy newspapers. They often frame the pre-internet era as this golden age of journalism in which armies of reporters were engaged in months-long investigations into corporate and government malfeasance. In reality, that kind of journalism represented a tiny portion of a newspaper’s output. I was a newspaper reporter prior to the 2009 recession — a time that’s generally understood to be the tail end of the print era. While I did report on government meetings and write the occasional investigative feature, many of my weekly duties didn’t really involve Capital J journalism. Here’s a sampling:
You get the gist. So much of media back then was just filler. That’s not to say that it didn’t have value — I’m sure readers got tremendous value from the church news section — but it also didn’t really require any journalism skills. A school teacher is just as capable of snapping a photo and uploading it to their class Instagram account as I was at taking school photos for my employer. And that’s just as true today in the post-print media, with so many resources put toward rewriting AP copy, aggregating celebrity news, and repackaging company earnings reports. In Morrissey’s words, it’s “unremarkable, lifeless filler,” and I don’t think it should be romanticized just because it appears next to the real journalism that required actual skill to produce. How The New York Times adapted to a post-Trump worldAdweek wrote about The New York Times’s efforts to grow its wellness-focused newsletter:
It really underscores why The New York Times has continued to grow during the post-Trump era while many other outlets — especially The Washington Post — experienced steep churn: it invested in niches outside of politics and hard news. Many of the Times’ fastest-growing verticals now are in areas like health, games, gadgets, and sports. It didn’t take its Trump-bump momentum for granted; instead, it reinvested in areas that are less dependent on who happens to be occupying the White House at any given time. Why right wing tech platforms failThe MAGAverse has been trying to build various alternative social networks — Parler, Gab, Truth Social — for years, but the results have been pretty mediocre. Rolling Stone took a deep look at Rumble — a right wing version of YouTube — and found that many of its biggest celebrities were struggling to gain traction:
The reason that these MAGA platforms struggle is that they’re missing one crucial ingredient: liberals. I don’t think it’s unfair to say that the GOP has shed nearly all policy positions and reoriented itself entirely around “triggering the libs,” and the reason that the Don Jr’s of the world receive so much engagement on platforms like Facebook and Twitter is that they regularly piss off a substantial portion of the platform’s audience. Browse through the quote-tweets of any Ted Cruz post, and often you’ll find that they’re mostly written by liberals who are responding to Cruz’s incendiary rhetoric. But if you create a social media ecosystem designed specifically to alienate liberals, then it just becomes an echo chamber that only appeals to the most hardened partisans. It makes for boring content, and it’s likely why a right wing social platform will never truly become mainstream. ICYMI: How a podcast for entrepreneurial parents generates $200,000 a yearSarah Peck explains why she didn't chase scale when building her Startup Parent podcast. Help me brainstorm new media and Creator Economy trends to write aboutIn my state-of-the-newsletter article I published at the end of 2022, I wrote about my ambition to pursue more longform reporting in 2023. As such, I’ve been thinking a lot about trends within the Creator Economy and media that I could explore. Here are a few ideas I came up with:
But I’m not going to pretend that I have my finger on the pulse of everything going on in digital media. There are all sorts of niches and platforms that I’m not paying close attention to. So I was hoping to enlist your help in identifying some big picture trends worth investigating. Are there any sectors of the media that deserve a deeper look? Sound off in the comments: You're currently a free subscriber to Simon Owens's Media Newsletter. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
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How to build a successful B2B media company
Friday, January 6, 2023
B2B used to be the least sexy space in media. That's no longer the case.
Why creators are in less of a rush to quit their day jobs
Wednesday, January 4, 2023
There are benefits to traditional employment that are incredibly difficult to replicate when you're out on your own.
The state of this newsletter
Thursday, December 22, 2022
Plus: What I have planned for 2023
Why media companies struggle to act like tech companies
Friday, December 16, 2022
Quality journalism doesn't scale like tech; in fact, that may be one of its greatest features.
How to leverage paid marketing to drive newsletter signups
Friday, December 9, 2022
Welcome! I'm Simon Owens and this is my media industry newsletter. If you've received it, then you either subscribed or someone forwarded it to you. If you fit into the latter camp and want to
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