Sunday, December 21, 2014

It is time for newspaper publishers to again hold their head high and regain a little of the old swagger

When I started selling advertising, for a radio station against newspapers, I found it easy to sell against newspaper reps. I worked harder and was more creative which gained the respect of accounts. There was no sense of entitlement in my eyes for the customer to get their business.

Newspaper reps were more into servicing their accounts, managing what they had which at the time was plentiful. Creativity happened occasionally but don't get use to an idea too often. Newspaper reps could be arrogant and felt all they needed to do was show up at the account to get the business. These bad habits, allowed for generations by newspaper publishers, is in part to blame for the situation newspapers find themselves.

Early in my sales career, at the very first daily newspaper I worked the publisher was not a people person. A chain smoking, hard headed liberal, the publisher was always in conflict with a more conservative community in which he did business. One afternoon, he made his way to my second biggest account; a furniture store run by a local Republican party leader. They have their words with each other with me watching. Finally the publishers turns to my customer and says, "Tom, if you don't like it get $3 million and start your own G** damn newspaper." And then storms out. The ability to control a small town by being the only media around created arrogant bullies, and made the newspaper business a quick and easy target for upstarts.

Clearly the world has changed since that time. Marketing and advertising has been turned upside down through a number of disruptive forces. Few newspapers and newspaper sales reps can continue with the old mentality and be effective in today's environment. The future of any media outlet rests in its ability to innovate and change as fast as it can. For media sales reps, being adaptive means learning new technology and finding ways for it to solve customer problems. The days of merely showing up and getting the money has past, but there is still money to be earned if you show up with good ideas and solutions.

I do long for some parts of the old days however. This industry must be more outward facing, and trying to help the community's we serve and the advertiser's we partner with if we are going to find success. But I do believe a little bit of swagger, if done in moderation and kept in check by reality would help!

Newspapers have beat themselves up to the point of being apologetic. The industry gets hung up on all that is wrong, and forgets what is right. In most cities and towns across the country, newspapers still hold a lock on the largest audience, the most influential audience with disposable income. The newspaper is still vital to the daily lives of millions, helps keep government in check, chronicles the success and failures in our communities and champion causes to make a difference. Newspaper websites are a main stop for people when they go online, and coupled with print provides as broad a coverage as anyone in most markets. http://www.naa.org/Trends-and-Numbers.aspx

My head is not in the sand. There is still plenty wrong with the current newspaper business model, and swift action is necessary. But in the midst of all the negative that surrounds the future, the legacy product still has a lot to offer.




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