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Recent Posts
 Saturday, February 19, 2005
New Business Models

Steve Outing has a good, yet short, article about communication services (think Net access, cable TV, Dish TV, cell phones).

Obstensively, the article talks about how newspapers may get the short straw in the rush to get other communication/data subscriptions: News has become a commodity - so newspapers may well be cancelled in favor of, for example, NetFlix or whatever for those without unlimited budgets.

Newspapers have already become aware of this - slowly, but they are adopting and adapting (see Dan Gillmor's blog on any given day for more on this). Large newspaper companies are starting to experiment with free newspapers for commuters and other city dwellers, betting the ad revenue for this non-subscription product will be great, as the target audience's appeal to advertisers - younger, professional, conspicuous consumers - will feed the coffers.

Papers have also begun to embrace the blog mentality - that's content that IS unique to a Web site. When Gillmor was at the San Jose Mercury - blogging daily for their Silicon Valley property - I'd read him daily. And there's those ad impressions....

But the article also touched on the idea of "bundling" services (as Comcast has done with their Triple Play - VoIP, TV and Internet), but didn't explore it much.

Bears more thought, methinks.

What are some of those thoughts? Consider the following:

What this all means today, tomorrow or next decade I can't say.

But it's all a way different way of looking at a lot of things - data, content, delivery and distribution systems - than were not really even on the radar a decade ago.

- Posted by Lee at 5:03 PM Permalink #
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