Apple has declared war on email newsletters
Apple has declared war on email newslettersPLUS: How Jay Shabat built one of the earliest newsletters covering the travel industryWelcome! 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… Apple is coming again for your newsletter metricsApple recently announced new privacy updates to its iOS Mail app. Here’s how Digiday describes the changes:
Apple is dead set on making it as difficult as possible for publishers and brands to measure the effectiveness of their newsletter strategies. A few years ago, it killed our ability to accurately track open rates by automatically opening all emails that were loaded into the Apple Mail app. At the time, I wondered if the ability to track opens was even a legitimate privacy concern, considering that I had never heard anyone complain about it prior to Apple rolling out its policy. And with this new announcement, I’m again left wondering the same thing. Open rates and link tracking allow publishers to optimize their newsletters, and the latter also makes it easier for newsletter sponsors to track the effectiveness of their campaigns. By eliminating these features, Apple just seems to be giving more power to closed platform ecosystems that can track user behavior from end to end — platforms like Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok. Apple is basically hurting the decentralized web at a time when publishers are trying to become less dependent on the big tech platforms. I’m not sure consumers will be better off as a result. What do you think?
How Jay Shabat built Airline Weekly, one of the earliest newsletters covering the travel industryWhen Jay Shabat launched his newsletter in 2004, he had absolutely no experience in journalism or in operating a media company. This was also long before the era when it became easy to distribute paid newsletters. But what Jay did have was a passionate fascination with the airline industry, and he leveraged that passion to build a loyal readership. In our interview, we discussed how he found readers in a pre-social media age, his pricing strategy, and why he decided to sell the company in 2018. Watch our discussion in the video embedded below: If video embeds don’t work in your inbox, go here. Will TikTok viewers actually pay for content?TikTok launched a feature that allows its video creators to lock content behind a paywall:
I think it'll be extremely difficult to convert Tiktok viewers into paying subscribers. The app's home feed is almost entirely driven by an algorithm, which makes it more difficult for stars on the platform to form a direct relationship with their viewers. I wouldn't be surprised if the conversion rates on this are very low. The rise of the Substack competitorsVanity Fair checked in on the state of Substack and noted that there are plenty of competitors nipping at its heels:
We've seen a lot of newsletter products launch over the last few years, and they're certainly competing with Substack for writers, but I still think Substack has several key advantages:
Quick hits"Despite the fact that Amazon has cleaned up their own reviews, they’ve done essentially nothing to moderate Goodreads, a site they purchased a decade ago. Goodreads is now the prime site of book spam, trolls, and harassment campaigns." [Counter Craft] A cool oral history of Paper Magazine. [NYT] I find it incredible that Shane Smith steered Vice into one of the biggest implosions in modern media history, and yet he still gets to keep his job post-acquisition. Meanwhile, laid-off staffers are struggling to get reimbursed for thousands of dollars of business expenses they incurred on behalf of Vice. Smith built his entire fortune on the backs of underpaid, exploited workers, and he went to great lengths to mislead both investors and advertisers in order to generate that fortune. He's truly one of the worst people in media — Carlos Watson without the pending prison sentence. [The Media Mix] Have you ever wanted to pick my brain about your own media business?A few months ago, I launched a new feature that allows paid subscribers to my newsletter to schedule a half hour phone call with me. Once you become a subscriber, you receive an automated email with a Calendly link for you to book the call. I’ve been holding these calls for a few months now, and some of my subscribers told me that the call alone was worth their entire subscription price. Click on the link below and get 10% off for your first year: You're currently a free subscriber to Simon Owens's Media Newsletter. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
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