Local newspapers shouldn’t yet be running up white flags in the battle for local mindshare.
Responding thoughfully to my recent argument that local newspaper sites must do more than merely gather news, Chris Tolles of Topix.net comments:
One word –WAL*MART. The idea that a set of local monopolies are going to be maintained in the long run, with the audience increasing its rate of online adoption (where there is little or no brand for a loot of local papers) is a bit of a stretch. … How often does the average 25 year old start looking for a restaurant review on the home page of the local paper, vs. Google?
Chris makes a great point about long-run consolidation. (Hence, by the way, the modest title of this blog.) But I think he overestimates the adoption rate — and the Google loyalty — of “the average 25 year old.” If a newspaper can provide a better restaurant directory than Google, it’s certainly not too late to notify the neighborhood. This goes double in small markets, which are less mobile — and therefore potentially more loyal — than the big one that I assume Chris lives in.
Most local papers have cash flowing out their armpits. Rapid reinvention as local information sites could head off the encroaching Wal-Martization of local content. (This might be engineered at the corporate level.) And that would go a long way toward keeping newspaper brands alive — and their news operations viable — for many years to come.
Chris’s original post closed with the following vision for newspapers (my emphasis):
[N]ewspapers need to build the products their audiences and advertisers want, rather than basing their strategy on a capacity for great journalism and printing pages of classifieds. … The successful newspaper business of 2010 might look a lot like the successful newspaper business of 1910 – and the connection to Pultizer won’t be his prize, but rather his business methods.
I’ve got no problem with changing the business methods. But maybe the difference between Chris and I is that I’m not ready to give up those prizes. And I’m not convinced we have to.
Not yet.
