Entries from Lucas Grindley's blog | Exploring the new way for journalism tagged with 'Dying Newspapers'

Newsroom not needed for community sites

What I’ve seen while helping to launch our first user-submitted Web site, PortCharlotteVoice.com, is piqued excitement and involvement from the Advertising and Marketing sides of the business. Their level of participation is enough that it begs the question about whether...

Newspapers condescend what they fear most: Red Eye

Every newspaper secretly knows its kryptonite. But newspapers’ real flaw is a hubris so pervasive that it stops them from admitting weakness and actually doing something. The latest example of this principle is fleshed out in a journo-debate spotted by...

Newspapers lose monopoly on journalism grads

I’m supposed to talk with a journalism class on Monday at the University of South Florida, my alma mater. Knowing what I know about how frustrated young graduates become when they hit the wall that is newspaper culture, what should...

Study suggests newspaper editors are clueless

It’s time to consider an uncomfortable reality: What if newspaper editors are doing a sucky job of picking the day’s top stories? A study by the Project for Excellence in Journalism shows news lineups are far different from the norm...

How to save the Albuquerque Tribune

Investors shouldn’t let a good opportunity pass by again. If I were to buy the Albuquerque Tribune, which Romenesko points out was put up for sale by Scripps, here’s a list of things I would do to reinvent the newspaper....

Final closing bell nears for standalone business sections

Business and features sections are to newspapers what art and gym classes are to public schools -- the first to go when the budget gets tight. The latest in a long list of examples is the Winston-Salem Journal, which cut...

Post declares WWN 'dead'

Wired reported last week that the supermarket tabloid, Weekly World News, is ending its print version and going online-only. But the Washington Post just called the publication "dead" and made no mention of its life on the Web. Someone's wrong....

AP predicts never again – again

After Sam Zell bought the Tribune Co., the AP wrote a story about how very unlikely it was that anymore newspaper companies would change hands. Now with the sale of Dow Jones to tycoon Rupert Murdoch, the AP is back...

Raising cover price hurts newspapers in long run

A warning for newspapers grasping at expense cuts: Be careful not to exacerbate the problem you’re trying to solve, which is declining advertising revenue. Shortfalls in advertising revenue are not solely an income problem. The revenue drop is first and...

As papers close down, opportunities pass by

Time to check in on a prediction Wired magazine made (and I seconded) at the start of the year. Wired said a newspaper will combat revenue declines by ending print publication and going online-only. An opportunity for that change is...

Prepare for salary cuts across the board

In what is sure to become a trend across the industry, The Daily Herald out of Chicago cut all employee salaries by 5 percent to combat falling revenues. Plan now. Many of you will make less money in the near...

Still hoping for a fourth-quarter comeback?

Any hopes that print advertising revenues would recover during the last three months of 2007 should start withering with the announcement of first-quarter earnings in a few days. Optimistic executives might be tempted to retract earlier predictions of a late...

Go ahead, I dare you to listen to David Lazarus

SFGate.com columnist David Lazarus says newspapers should start charging for access to their Web sites. And if someone listens to him, then I'm going to get very rich. Let me just promise right now. If any local newspaper decides to...

The worst-case scenario game

What happens if the sliding print revenues of 2006 become permanent or worsen? The reality is that most newspaper companies are not prepared to make the switch from primarily print-focused to Web-focused. So if print revenue can no longer support...

Wired's top 40 trends

Wired is letting users decide what trends will affect tech businesses in the coming year as it writes its Wired 40 list of top companies. And it's a lot of fun. Rate each trend or submit your own and watch...

RIP, MERCURY NEWS

What started out as a way for the San Jose Mercury News to attract new readers has now been cut to save money. The “Read This!” section for teens and written by teens had appeared on the back page of...

One way to survive the stock price slide

Wall Street expects newspapers to maintain huge profit margins. But during this transition to a new reality, those margins must slide. So investing in the online future means pissing off shareholders now. Investing in the online future costs money. It...

Eyes wide open, but feet firmly planted

Said Philip Meyer, Knight Chair in Journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: "Things are so bad in the newspaper business today that I am inclined to root for all sorts of radical experiments that I would...

Is it OK to sabotage Craigslist?

Newspapers are losing millions of dollars to Craigslist. Lost revenue leads to layoffs and budget cuts. So, I have to ask, is it OK to sabotage Craigslist? Seriously. It’s an option. So we should at least discuss it. What’s stopping...

Craigslist combats spam with traditional business model

In earlier posts, I inferred that Craigslist’s only methods for eliminating racism and prostitution from its Web site are a flagging system and “education” pages. But it turns out there’s one other way – charging users. Here’s how the San...

Some newspapers need economics lesson

Spending all this time working online has led me to a theory. All news – no matter the subject or how targeted its audience – should be free. First of all, the goal of any newspaper or magazine is to...

The 7th Step; Beyond CraigsList

Newspapers should take what they know about their kryptonite and use it against each other. Remember Rule No. 1. “If newspapers are going to survive, first some must die.” Maybe even more than most industries, newspapers spend time identifying and...

Syllabus for 'The New Way'

The New Way for newspapers comes with a few “new rules,” as Bill Maher likes to call them. Only these are serious. 1. If newspapers are going to survive, first some newspapers will have to die. And it’s every man...