23
Apr 13

Shallow Journalism at the Wall Street Journal?

Murdoch’s emphasis from the beginning of his WSJ acquisition was for scoops versus investigative (longform) journalism.   What we are seeing is an intended feature and not a bug.  The lack of Pulitzer prizes for the WSJ team is reflective of editorial priorities.  It remains to be seen if it is sustainable.

The problem with that is ‘scoops’ maps to pageviews whereas longform maps to time-on-site and engagement.  The advertising environment favors the later and not the former.  I guess there is also something to be said about the ease of measuring quantity of clicks versus the messy problem of asserting journalistic quality, and the even tougher job of mapping the above to key performance indicators for the news business.

Some of Murdoch’s properties – the NY Post particularly – did especially horrible regarding ‘scoops’ regarding the Boston Marathon – mostly in reporting straight from the police scanner at best or from the internet mob-sourced information which repeatedly fingered the wrong suspects or anyone brown with a backpack.

The old internet world (and old media world of cable tv) favored being first over being best.  I’m not so sure if that is true anymore.


04
Jan 13

Andrew Sullivan’s Daily Dish does Donor Dowery?

Andrew Sullivan, formerly of Time, the Atlantic, and most recently Tina Brown’s Daily Beast has decided to go it alone, publishing online on his own masthead.

Sullivan has the distinct advantage of being one of the few blogging individuals with a loyal fan base delivering page views.  He’s decided to put his site behind a pay wall on his own domain.  Why be a star in someone else’s sky?

As of this posting it appears that Sullivan has garnered $333,000 in donations from some 11,000 subscribers in the first 24-hours, as reported in GigaOm.

Sullivan has stated that he would not be accepting advertising but has not ruled out advertising in the future.

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Un-asked through all of this is how the subscriber model works in conjunction with presumingly anonymous donors and pay-for-play journalism.  How can the reader account for the possibility that a generous donor could ‘donate’ a large sum in exchange for favorable coverage?  Is Sullivan beyond reproach?  Could the entire industry be trusted with that temptation?


11
Dec 12

Apple’s China Syndrome

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I think there’s several things going on here, none of which has to do with a good operational decision. Is Apple moving some manufacturing to the United States a move from weakness or strength?

First and foremost this is a political statement. Apple has been lamenting the ability to manufacture in the US due to a talent deficit. There’s plenty of talent here, but the problem is that China can simply iterate and pivot faster due to the geographic proximity of design, manufacturing, and labor. Look at how quickly they are able ramp-up production of new products or tackle the initial quality problems with the iPhone 5, labor problems not withstanding.

Then there’s the uncertainty with corporate profits and taxes. One of the legitimate beefs is that profits are offshored to avoid paying taxes. I’d bet this is a token offering to quell those complaints.

Lastly is the China problem, in general. The Chinese excel at reverse engineering, far better than say the Soviets during the Cold War but not as good as the Japanese. I’d say they have climbed learning curve far better than either. All of those manufacturing concerns who fled to China for cheap labor have ended up building factories for their competition (most are joint ventures partially-owned by the state), training their future competitors workforce, and formally and informally transferring their intellectual property. I’ve made this complaint previously with regards to automakers, but I think it applies across the board.

One need not look any further than the frenemy situation between Apple and Samsung (noting that Samsung is a South Korean company). Apple has long partnered with Samsung for chips, processors, and screen technology. This has allowed Samsung to rapidly build the competencies needed to rival their own client, a situation that is causing Apple to frequently go it alone and take their relationship to the courts.

Put me down that a small shift to US manufacturing is a defensive move.


05
Dec 12

Do you remember Christmas Wishbooks?

Most of my time at Christmas growing up was spent looking at Wishbooks (mostly from Sears) wondering what Santa would bring.  Wishbooks (and many of their publishing retail chains) are long gone or are standing in the tub holding a toaster (I’m looking at you JCPenny-Kmart-Sears).

The contemporary “wishbooks” from Target, Walmart, Toys R Us and Kmart pale in comparison.


26
Nov 12

Amazon, Cyber Monday, and the magic of the algorithm

Thanks to the magic of the algorithm, Amazon can tell you which items are…

All of which can be useful if you need some Cyber Monday gift inspiration.  Of course, you can always do gift cards instead.