The Advertiser’s days are few

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Malcolm King
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The Advertiser’s days are few

#1 Post by Malcolm King » Thu Sep 18, 2014 7:10 am

South Australian’s only daily and weekend newspapers are in dire straits as the downward trend in circulation and advertising revenue cannot be stopped.

Like most large metropolitan newspapers, The Advertiser has been squeezed by high news gathering costs, decreasing ad revenue (the classifieds have fled online) and a loss of consumers.

According to the Audit Bureau of Circulation (ABC), since 2009 the weekday Advertiser has lost 39,818 in sales, the Saturday Advertiser is down 59,978 and the Sunday Mail has plummeted a whopping 74,971. Each masthead is currently dropping at about 9 per cent per annum. ABC trend data is listed for the three mastheads in the article below (see graph).

http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=16691

News Corporation spins these numbers by combining monthly ‘readership’ figures with unique page clicks on its online newspapers. Don’t be fooled. If a man picks up a copy of The Advertiser at the dentist, he is counted as a ‘reader’. So are the dentist, the receptionist and all the patients that day.

The Advertiser gets many more ‘readers’ online than the print edition because most visitors come to consume free information such as weather, dating opportunities and the constant stream of ‘clickbait’ celebrity, lifestyle and ‘man bites dog’ stories. Few are there for the reporting.

A recently leaked News Corporation report to Crikey, showed how Murdoch’s Australian newspapers were travelling in 2012-13. The Advertiser and Sunday Mail budgeted income for the year 2013-12 was $30 million. They scraped in at $22 million – almost half that of the previous year ($42 million).

The Advertiser and Sunday Mail sacked 195 staff in 2012-13 and another 23 got the chop from the Messenger. This typifies the ‘creative destruction’ running through the global newspaper industry. The Advertiser, like the Titanic, is going down bow first.

The speed at which Google has vanquished Gutenberg is astounding. Over the last five years, 24 large US newspapers have closed and almost as many have cut back to publishing two or three editions a week. Newspapers are expensive to produce. They require highly skilled staff, large complex printers, kilometres of paper and a distribution network.

Surely SA’s online subscribers will come to The Advertiser’s rescue?

News Corporation won’t release the online subscription figures for The Advertiser. Even so, it’s pay walls won’t make up for the shortfall in newspaper sales and ad revenue. Currently, The Advertiser charges $6.00 a week in subscriptions for all three papers. This is not nearly enough.

As for online advertising, as Eric Beecher said in an essay in The Monthly (July) last year, “It (the Internet) is the first mass medium with almost no barriers to entry and practically unlimited content carrying capacity. These two factors have converged to create millions of websites and blogs, billions of webpages resulting in the collapse of online advertising rates for all but highly specialized or unique websites.”

Digital advertising is expected to account for just one third of advertising revenue for Australian newspaper publishers by 2018. No stand alone news website in the world can support even a fraction of the journalistic resources of a major metropolitan newspaper. There is no crossing over from the old newspaper platform and replicating it in the online world.

The ‘Tiser’ was a primary node of influence connecting Adelaide’s businessmen and women. It appeared - superficially at least - as liberal, humanist and even handed, but its normative values supported a deeply orthodox political mindset.

It patrolled the status quo like a Rottweiler, making it completely unfit to discuss how radical changes such as globalization, deregulation, the rise of Asian manufacturing and online trading, would effect South Australians and especially local business.

It slumped from a newspaper of record under the great editorships of Des Colquhoun and Don Riddell, to become mired in parochialism after the News Ltd take over in 1987. To be fair, no alternative political ideologies or business philosophies were savaged. They simply weren’t reported.

The journalists on the whole were very good – some were excellent. It was management who treated the public like morons, and in the hunt for the lowest common denominator, drove the newspaper so low in the market, one needed to decompress after reading it.

No matter what I think, the fact is that The Advertiser’s days of setting the news agenda in SA are almost over. But before the champagne corks fly, for all of the ‘Tiser’s’ faults, ask, who will guard the public against the incompetent politicians we elected? Who will expose those who do deals in the dead of night?

South Australia is entering the most serious economic downturn since Federation. The threat is that without accurate and timely local news, we will have to rely on what our mediocre MP’s say and do. The opportunities though are boundless. From the ashes will rise new, nimble and niche online publishers, who will write without fear or favour. There are signs of this already with the rise of InDaily and In-Business.

For more than two centuries, newspapers have been an indispensable source of public information. People still want the news. Let me amend that. People need the news. It’s as vital to democracy as sunlight is to crops.

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Re: The Advertiser’s days are few

#2 Post by monotonehell » Thu Sep 18, 2014 5:03 pm

...who will guard the public against the incompetent politicians we elected? Who will expose those who do deals in the dead of night?
I guess you're looking at it. New media. Sadly however, your average reader does not have the skills to wade through the astroturfing, misinformation and complete bollocks to find actual information. It certainly hasn't been the Limited News reporting on these things, in fact their bias towards what serves their master has hardly been hidden in recent times.

In short: we're all screwed.
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.

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Re: The Advertiser’s days are few

#3 Post by Wayno » Mon Sep 22, 2014 5:12 pm

monotonehell wrote:In short: we're all screwed.
We're currently unscrewed ? ;-)

A quote from slightly before the digital age (1787) by Thomas Jeffersen:
“The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them.”
Jefferson also said the only reliable info in newspapers were the adverts, and he was most happy when not reading the papers.
Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.

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Re: The Advertiser’s days are few

#4 Post by rubberman » Wed Oct 15, 2014 10:58 pm

Certainly, people need the news. The problem is that newspapers only provide some of it, and often that is poor quality in Australia.

If someone wants balance and fair discussion of both sides of an issue, then reading the Advertiser doesn't provide that. You have to go online to get other views. Once you are forced to do that, you might as well go the whole hog and get all your news there.

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Re: The Advertiser’s days are few

#5 Post by stumpjumper » Sun Dec 21, 2014 2:19 pm

There was a time when you could rely on the ABC to report the news. Now it censors its reporting according to its groupthink prejudices, and editorialises in almost everything it publishes anyway.

I except Matthew Abraham and David Bevan from the general malaise which is killing the ABC.

I'd like to see an entrepreneur start up Radio SA, employing those two for a start. Sometimes, they seem to be the only Opposition the government has.

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Re: The Advertiser’s days are few

#6 Post by pushbutton » Mon Dec 22, 2014 8:21 am

Without The Advertiser, who'd show us the wonderful photos of empty shopping malls every public holiday. Who'd whinge about how apparently Adelaide is so renowned for its amazing shopping that tourists visit the city for that specific reason, then find the shops closed for a day and go back to their home cities telling everyone not to bother coming?

Who'd publish those fantastical stories we all look forward to about how some insane lunatics are driving around Adelaide at up to 10 km above the speed limit and getting away with it because of "secret" police tolerances?

Oh, and who'd print big illustrated fairy tales about the incredible things that will probably never actually be built in Adelaide?

Yep. It's doomsday if The Advertiser shuts down.

Thankfully that's not gonna happen anytime soon!

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