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December 2009 saw the demise of Editor & Publisher Magazine, which had been around since 1854. It lays claim to being the chief chronicler of the American newspaper industry and has presided over the business for 125 years and is a clear signal that an era is rapidly drawing to a close.

NEWSPAPERS

Daily newspapers have been losing between 2% and 5% per year of their circulation base during the last 10 years. In 1940 there were 1,878 newspapers in the U.S. with a total circulation of 32.4 million. While the number of newspapers continued to decline — 1,611 in 1990 — their circulation increased: 62.6 million in 1990. But by 2008 the number of newspapers had dropped again by a little over 200 to 1,408 while circulation crashed down to 49.2 million. In the first half of 2009 alone another 105 newspapers closed their doors — 10,000 jobs were lost. Even among the leader board 23 of the top 25 newspapers suffered between 7% and 20% declines in circulation this year (the worst slump since the Depression), and advertising revenue could be down as much as a 30% for 2009 when all the data is finalized. One of the most critical statistics revealed that only 27% of Gen Y read a newspaper, compared with 55% of the Silent or Greatest Generation. And as the consumers change so do their preferences so other print related industries as well.

MAGAZINES

There are no reliable industry-wide magazine ad revenue numbers that are publicly reported (for obvious reasons), but according to a report compiled by The Magazine Publishers of America's Publishers Information Bureau, automotive ads for the first six months of 2009 were down 21.3% and technology down 17.5%.

MAIL

The number of pieces of first class mail has steadily decreased and according to CEO Pat Donahoe, the USPS estimates a decline of 10 billion pieces in each of the next two years, dropping from a high of 213 billion pieces in 2006 to 170 billion in 2010. They are trying to cut costs in all areas to stop the bleeding: asking Congress to authorize reducing mail delivery to five days a week (approval unlikely), offering buyouts to 30,000 workers in 2010 to save $500 million and reducing the number of collection boxes across the country, of which in the past 20 years over 200,000 have vanished, more than the 175,000 that still remain.

SPAM

But it’s not just first class mail that is migrating to the Internet. The junk mail business is moving in that direction as well. Today there are 100 billion pieces of junk mail sent in the U.S. every year and 44% of it is discarded, unopened. Consumers respond to only 2% of all the junk mail sent and as a result one of the biggest producers of junk mail — the banking industry — has made getting out of the mail a high priority. Meanwhile it is estimated that 200 billion spam emails are sent every day.

DIRECT MAIL

Revenue from direct mail is also expected to fall from $48.7 billion in 2008 to $29.8 billion in 2013 — a decline of 39% — dropping it from the #1 ad revenue generator to #4, behind the Internet, broadcast TV and newspapers. In a mid-2009 study, Anthea Stratigos, CEO of Outsell, Inc., a media research and advisory outlet, predicted that $65 billion would be siphoned away from traditional advertising channels in 2009 and be spent on companies' own websites and Internet marketing.

THE SHIFT

According to Pew Research, fewer than half of Americans (43%) say that if their local newspaper closed it would hurt their community “a lot,” and even fewer (33%) say they would personally miss reading the paper. Over 68% indicated that they get their news from local television or television websites, 48% from print, 34% from radio and 31% from the Internet.

INTERNET

Ninety trillion emails were sent in 2009 – that’s 247 billion per day. Twitter send 27 million tweets per day, You Tube serves up one billion videos per day and Facebook enjoys 260 billion page views per month. No wonder the Internet is redefining every industry, including real estate brokerage. Real estate professionals have to redefine what they do and how they do; where they find their customer and how they stay in contact with them. Many progressive Realtors® have and continue to adapt every day uncovering new ways to use the Internet in their profession. However hundreds of thousands if Realtors® still remain stuck in a paradigm that is dead. The jury is still out on how many will survive and how many will retire over the course of the next few years.

READ ALL ABOUT IT

The changing arena of real estate marketing is but one of the key trends detailed by Stefan Swanepoel in the 2010 edition of his Swanepoel Trends Report. The 172-page annual report was published in February and is a must read for all Realtors® and real estate professionals.

 
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159 Comments on IS PRINT FINALLY DEAD? Read all about it!!

MAR
08
2010
320,767 Points Outside Blog Called Shot Master

Part of the problem is that the news is biased and leans left and the country is center right.  They cannot figure it out.

9:21am • #1
302,567 Points 4 Featured Posts Attended Rain Camp

Stefan, I know that I enjoy the morning newspaper but news throughout the day comes via the internet.  We have switched the majority of our advertising to the internet, just using a print ad in The Real Estate Book.

9:25am • #2
519,796 Points 43 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

We are very light in print media ads, the internet is the way to go, the press doesn't understand that the average American is center right, not completely farthest left you can get liberal. It won't be long before print is completely dead

9:52am • #3
15 Featured Posts

News should of course be news, and not politically swayed by the left or the right. But then again, reporters are human too.

Glad to see that you guys have repositioned your advertising.

10:03am • #4
153,861 Points 25 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp

One of the worst trends I'm seeing is newspapers hiring bloggers rather than journalists to present the news.   I would be OK being rid of the print edition but it would sure hurt Silicon Valley if the San Jose Mercury News folded altogether.

10:45am • #5
15 Featured Posts

Did you know that the Mercury News was one of the very first newspapers to publish on the Web.

11:27am • #6
848,852 Points 153 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Hi Stefan, excellent analysis.

I am curious if NAR says only 6% of Realtors blog, do you know how many use Social Media?

 

8:22pm • #7
672,536 Points 69 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp

Missy has some good questions. I wouldn't be starting up a newspaper anytime soon. Remember in school, we used to make class newspapers. They probably now make class websites and blogs. It is kind of sad that printed media is dying, but I'm more about embracing the future.

8:31pm • #8
114,309 Points Outside Blog

Boy do I agree, great post. The old Dinosaur businesses are all on their last walk to the death chamber, they need to start progressing now with their thinking before it is too late, they have to learn to do business in today's thinking and technology to KEEP in business !

8:44pm • #9
546,529 Points 11 Featured Posts

Hi Stefan -- I really like reading your stuff, you seem to have your pulse on the market and where things are headinb better than anyone I know!

8:46pm • #10
773,745 Points 92 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

The first dean of the Missouri School of Journalism penned the Jouranlist's Creed, which in part says:

I believe that the journalism which succeeds best -- and best deserves success -- fears God and honors Man; is stoutly independent, unmoved by pride of opinion or greed of power, constructive, tolerant but never careless, self-controlled, patient, always respectful of its readers but always unafraid, is quickly indignant at injustice; is unswayed by the appeal of privilege or the clamor of the mob; seeks to give every man a chance and, as far as law and honest wage and recognition of human brotherhood can make it so, an equal chance; is profoundly patriotic while sincerely promoting international good will and cementing world-comradeship; is a journalism of humanity, of and for today's world.

You tell me, will you get that online? I am sorry to see the demise of print. Journalists are a national treasure.

8:52pm • #11

Yes, you are right the print is dead, the TV is looking more like print media 5 years ago. I think we enter in a wonderful new era, today I can have my own electronic paper, my own TV station streaming high definition video to an unlimited number of viewers. Is just wonderful, the opportunities are mind boggling. 

8:59pm • #12
989,739 Points 3 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp

I saw a new term used in an Active Rain blog the other day, 'Customer Initiated Contact'. That's how we find our best customers. Put the information out on the internet and perhaps they'll find it, like it and call.

8:59pm • #13
197,077 Points 7 Featured Posts Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Stefan - The only time I would buy a newspaper is during Thanksgiving to look up the sale advertisement. Most of the retailer have the discount posted on their website. The newspaper industry might not sustain long. Someday, we might only able to find newspaper in the museum.

9:03pm • #14
338,720 Points 9 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

Stefan, So true... I had narrowed my print ads down to just one magazine & I didn't even publish ads in that one this month.. Internet is now & future!

Elizabeth, I love that quote! Why doesn't our media refer to that philosophy today!?

9:03pm • #15
122,759 Points 1 Featured Post Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Stefan:

Great information. Thanks for all you offer. I LOVED your class at KWFR. It was a remarkable amount of info and I am grateful to have been apart of it.

 

Have a great day!

 

9:22pm • #16
235,304 Points 6 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

Stefan: Interesting statistics and great research. Are those newspaper numbers for daily newspapers? We have over three hundred papers in Iowa alone and we have only about 3 million people.

9:22pm • #17
103,403 Points

I believe  you have come up with some good numbers.

I only use print ads because some of my sellers still think is important, no matter how much you tell them that it isn't so.

Jerry

9:57pm • #19
632,077 Points 12 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Stefan - Interesting topic and I appreciate the fresh point of view and the statistics.  I would love to see the statistics specifically broken down by generation because I still have a ton of contacts that come from print marketing.  

10:26pm • #20
315,289 Points 23 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

No surprise at all.  I am of the "Boomer" generation and I do not read the newspaper and haven't in over 10 years thanks to the Internet!

10:30pm • #21
Attended Rain Camp

The trends you are sharing are so incredible.  I know that a lot of people do not stay on top of what is happening around them.  I know I am continually amazed at the speed of the changes.  I read as much as possible - mostly on the internet to learn about real estate, and everything else going on.

10:36pm • #22
136,231 Points 1 Featured Post

After all the newspaper's bad press, (which by the way has been going on before , during, and after the boom, I determined that if they weren't going to report accurately, my wallet would stay shut.  I'm really glad to have been advertising on the internets for years now.  Where else can I make quick changes to an ad to reflect a mistake, price change, or new marketing propgram?

10:38pm • #23

Print advertising in real estate serves to keep your name and face in front of the 40+ year old audience. When the consumer links the fact that real estate agents no longer have massive marketing budgets and that most of our avenues of marketing are cheap if not free... then what?

10:46pm • #24
8 Featured Posts

Stefan, I think we've all seen this coming.  The Real Estate magazines have been getting smaller.  I still use some print for people who don't own a computer and never intend to in. 

10:50pm • #25
116,227 Points 1 Featured Post Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

I can't remember the last time I bought a newspaper.  I'm sure it's happened in the past year.  I do like a few magazines but the reality is that so much is available online that print is becoming less and less necessary.  I don't think it's dead but certainly in critical condition.

11:10pm • #26
1,009,909 Points 36 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

I used to read the paper daily.  I don't any more.  I get my news online.

11:15pm • #27

Frank - Print media won't die completely until every bathroom has free wi-fi.

11:16pm • #28

We regularly recieve calls to get the paper delivered direct to our door and incredibly low prices but like more and more we get our news via the net and can get the type of news we want. Personally I still do our local real estate paper because in our town of 80,000 it is still well read and we do get lots of traction from our ads there.

11:18pm • #29
581,830 Points 11 Featured Posts Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Hi Stefan...the press for too long have been driven by printing doom and gloom to sell newspapers, people want human interest stories..look at Oprah, The News reporting I think fueled the Financial Disaster. Here our local paper would only write about the coming bubble burst that never materialized...will I miss them? No, Their demise is in my option is self infected.

Interesting Numbers you have gathered about the Internet, how do you calculate these stats.

11:26pm • #30
104,249 Points Outside Blog

As far as print advertising that has been a bone of contention in my smaller 120K population market.  I came from a 6 million market to this much smaller market. An expensive add lasts a day and then gets tossed ... not what I call top-of-mind staying power!

11:38pm • #31
531,237 Points 4 Featured Posts Outside Blog

These are pretty interesting statisics here for print ads. I see the paper here getting thinner and the price getting higher

11:42pm • #32
MAR
09
2010
289,505 Points 6 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

As much as I hate to admit it, I get almost all my news from the internet.  I still love the touch, feel and smell of good old fashioned news print.  I think that this is a sad trend.  It's unfortunate that newspapers took so long to adopt the internet.  I wonder if they had embraced it early on, if this things would be different.

12:08am • #33
406,175 Points 34 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Goodt post and frankly the news is not left in a right leaning country. The fact remains that newspapers were delivering less and charging more without changing with the times and it's the same with numerous other periodicals!

12:28am • #34
579,308 Points 61 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Called Shot Master

I gave up on newspapers a while ago.  It still works with the older generation - but even I get most of my news online.  I'm in my forties - and I think that holds true for most people my age and below.

12:39am • #35
615,509 Points Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

We pretty much gave up print quite awhile ago -- electronic is where it is now at it seems.

12:50am • #36
177,234 Points 14 Featured Posts
I haven't bought a newspaper in years but I do read it religiously. Specifically the sports and editorial (letters to the editor) sections. If I were to advertise in print, those are the sections I would try for.
1:19am • #37
129,974 Points 5 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp

I subscribe to the online version of the Austin American Statesman.  Electronic is the way to go.  I do miss the tactile feel of newsprint so I buy it on Sunday, but  that's all.

1:32am • #38
247,208 Points Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Thanks Stefan for the great statistics.  I do believe print Newspapers are and have been experiencing a huge transition from print to online.  I also believe this transition is generational and local newspapers while changing how they do business will not be ceasing to print entirely.  There is still a generation that wants to go outside and pick up that paper, bring it inside and pore over it while they drink their coffee and turn on the TV.  The seniors generally are not so interested in the Newspaper for World news which they get from TV on the channels that fit their leanings, but, they want to read about the local news.

My 82 year old hubby is lost/disappointed when it isn't there when he gets up so he can do the crossword puzzle.  He could never master doing the puzzle online!  He loves his email but I still can't get him to understand that the Home Page I put on his laptop is "The Newspaper"! and it updates throughout the day.

Postal mail is another dinosaur having a slow death.  For many seniors its a daily, looked forward to event!  I can attest to that by my husbands behavior re the mail and the other seniors where we are living.  Personally I don't see the need for weekend delivery and think it could even be cut back more.  But then a lot more folks will be out of work!

Many magazines are not printing as many issues to help curtail their costs as subscriptions decline.

Real estate print ads are taking a beating here as the cost is so high and business for realtors isn't exactly booming and the ads are hard to afford.

Even books are now becoming electronic more and more.  Now I must say that I am old school enough that I would surely miss the feel and aroma of a book in my hands.  I love reading and I love the physical book.

In today's world could you just imagine what would happen if "something" could take the Internet down.  Total chaos!!

Sue of Robin and Sue

2:08am • #39
730,552 Points 1 Featured Post Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Although newspaper is dropping, in Toronto we still have four daily newspapers in our very competitive market - The Toronto Star, The Toronto Sun, The Globe and Mail and The National Post.  Two of these papers are circulated nation wide.  I read the papers online.

4:40am • #40
125,799 Points 1 Featured Post Localism Sponsor Hit Router

We still have a strong Paper presence here with the older generations for sure...  But I feel it may come to an end completly in the next 20 years or so...the local mags and paper are getting thinner and thinner....

4:54am • #41
5 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Print is not dead, the industry needs to adapt.  People will still need and want to read "books" and magazines that have great stories, great insight.  The industry niche markets will still do relatively well. 

As another poster wrote, it's likely 2 generations away from a complete disapearance of modern print.

5:01am • #42
622,286 Points 21 Featured Posts Outside Blog

I remember delivering newspapers on Sunday morning that were about 2 inches thick with all the advertisments.  But that was 40 years ago.

5:18am • #43
105,968 Points Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

First of all, we don't live in a country that is 'center right'.  That is what people that listen to Rush Limbaugh want you to believe.  Our news media is not biased to the left, either.  This is what the right is out there spewing every day, as part of their hate-mongering toward anything they don't believe in.  

Let's not forget the 8 years of prosperity, growth, and a $236B surplus budget that was the hallmark of a 'left-leaning' president during the years 1992-2000.  Compare that with our shattered economy today and the useless wars we're involved in overseas.  Compare that with 10% unemployment, thanks to Bush and Criminals, LLC.  Compare that with the state of our industry today, after 8 years of 'center right' management.

ActiveRain is not the place for politics, but if agents are going to use their pens to twist the truth, we all have the responsibility to respond.

 

Is print finally dead?  I'm sure there are lots of us that miss sitting in the cafe reading a copy of their favorite paper, for me, the NYT.  But if I do grab a cup of coffee and sit to read the paper in SB, I'm reading news that's at least one day old, aren't I?  

It's also nice to think about how many less trees will be cut down to make pulp for this industry, destroying the rivers of America in the process.  How much ink will no longer pollute our water, how much less trash will be created?

I think it's a good start.

 

Scott Miller, Realty Associates, Boca Raton, FL

 

 

5:36am • #44
612,139 Points 11 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Print media is not only dead but also very expensive with usually a poor ROI !!!!!!!!!

5:42am • #45
411,040 Points 21 Featured Posts Outside Blog

I disagree that if a newspaper shut down it would not hurt the community - it would - there are serveral people who would be out of work.  While some could keep their jobs in a shift to online news, certainly many would no longer be needed.

But for me personally, I would not miss it.  I rarely if ever buy the newspaper or magazines (they are often thin on meat and full on fluff/ads!)

That said...it's sad and a little scary to see our world change so much.

5:49am • #46
154,733 Points 1 Featured Post

An easy case study would be to take a look at a newstand.  There are no magazines left!!  Newspapers die daily. http://www.newspaperdeathwatch.com/

6:18am • #47
1,194,430 Points 89 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Called Shot Master

Karen wrote: "While some could keep their jobs in a shift to online news, certainly many would no longer be needed."

Karen is your local paper online now? 

Our local paper is online and has been for a number of years.  At first they charged... or you could read online as long as you were a subscriber.  Then they stopped charging.  There was a little kerfuffle this past week between the editor and some local bloggers.  I have yet to sort it out.  I understand somewhere in it there is something about the paper starting to charge again. Or going behind a paywall.  The Columbus Dispatch has also have started more "blogs."     I read articles from the paper online via Twitter.

I know people who work for the Columbus Dispatch and I would hate to see them lose their jobs.   I would also hate to see us lose journalism.   Our local TV news has been much better about working social media into their repertoire than the newspaper.   

The company I work for, the largest RE brokerage  in Central Ohio stopped advertising in the Columbus Dispatch long, long ago.  In the 90's?  We do advertise in the weekly neighborhood papers still. The money was shifted to building the Internet presence...

It's changing...

6:31am • #48

Good post Stefan. This certainly should open the eyes of any of the last holdouts still thinking that the way business is done isn't changing. Couple this with an article from Business Insider titled 15 Facts About China That Will Blow Your Mind and the entire landscape of business as we know it will be drastically different in the next 5 - 10 years.

And the Post Office hasn't helped it's cause with respect to the drop in 1st class mail either. They continuously make it more difficult to do business with them with regulations and increased postage in an era when with all of the new technology they have they should be much more efficient than ever before. They are their own worst problem.  

A C
6:41am • #49
724,565 Points 223 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

There was a time when you could not sell real estate without paying the NY Times a king's ransom. My business skyrocketed after switching from the times to online syndication. 

7:00am • #50

Internet, Internet, Internet, it is what the new and some old generation wants....it is more convienient and for the most part free....I go online from time to time to read my local paper....it is a slow death for print...

7:01am • #51
201,080 Points Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp

And the internet is the Model T of the information timeline.  Only time will tell what comes next.

7:05am • #52
479,050 Points 65 Featured Posts Outside Blog Called Shot Master

I don't think print is dead yet, but it is a dying breed.  I agree with some that if print media dies and is replaced wholly by web based news, we'll loose the true nature of journalism as we've known it.  On the internet, it's sometimes difficult to tell what's news and what's not (speaking of reliable content).  I do read my morning newspaper online because of limited time, but I always read Sunday print edition.  I had to see print media disappear into oblivion.

7:13am • #53
152,767 Points 1 Featured Post

Print is, as said by Mark Twain, "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated."

Now, reporting is dead. The news is just whatever they decide to tell us. Thus, the Iraq invasion.

7:25am • #54
745,527 Points 3 Featured Posts

Stefan,

 

Your observations seem quite right. If I see something in the newspaper that I want to keep, then I go to the internet and save it electronically.

 

Brian

7:25am • #55
212,308 Points 16 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

While I am a big fan of electronically delivered news -- nothing beast a quiet Sunday morning with a real paper.  And doing the New York Times crossword puzzle in ink!

7:31am • #56
327,553 Points 9 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

I'm horrified at the demise of newspapers and what it means for the future - and the unfortunate present I landed in - of our country.  Twitter? Youtube? Blogs? This is what we think replaces newspapers and magazines?  It's very difficult to live during the decline and fall.

Liz

7:38am • #57

I think it's definitely on it's way out - our local newspaper gets smaller and smaller - I still kind of like it, but then again it leaves me feeling 'unfulfilled' - I guess because of the endless amount of information available online - print news leaves me with unanswered questions and you can't dig further to get more info.

7:43am • #58
109,714 Points 8 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

Very interesting statistics.  Thanks for all the research.

7:53am • #60
244,106 Points 1 Featured Post Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

I'm a hard core "boomer" paper reader, and I'm thinking of giving it up. It isn't the paper it used to be.

8:09am • #61
Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Statistics are terrific and presents a great argument for those die hard sellers who want you to advertise in print. I've stopped buying the newspaper about 5 years ago, since there is so many newspapers to choose from on the web.

8:20am • #62
193,276 Points 1 Featured Post Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router Called Shot Master

While print material has lost ALOT of its influence, it will always be around as it will continue to have it's place. Quite a bit of other avenues now though.

Thank you

8:33am • #63

Stephen,

Very interesting statistics. Hey but beware ... we all will be paying for the free newspaper feeds soon. .Even TV channels are losing revenue to internet.CNN already started charging.. All the other news media is going to follow.....

8:39am • #64
10 Featured Posts Attended Rain Camp

As a Realtor or loan officer, I would bet you that within 5 years over 80% of your business will come from the inernet. If you are not using inbound marketing techniques (permision based marketing), you will be at a severe disadvantage. Print is dying. Americans love immediate gratification and in Real Estate, Immediate Gratification=Search Engine

 

 

8:43am • #65
429,369 Points 57 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Called Shot Master

I agree with the majority of the commenters here. Web presence will dominate any other form of advertising.  Personally, the majority of my business is ALL Internet based.

8:46am • #66
250,733 Points 77 Featured Posts Outside Blog

I stopped most of my print marketing in 2008.  I advertise in two free local papers.  The ads are simple they just have the address for my real estate blog in them. I like to support those papers and I occasionally write for them too and in one I am the only realtor advertising.  It is a small niche paper with a distribution of about 4000 and it costs les than ten dollars for an ad.

8:49am • #67
2 Featured Posts

Well business can do fine without newspapers I guess, but what saddens me is that no one reads news anymore.  I read on the internet, but suspect many younger adults don't read the news too much.  It's all about texting, facebook, etc.  I sound old don't I?  But we (the US) ARE in the middle of a mental decline I think.  Look at television and where it is now.  Reality TV.  All in the name of profits - the almighty dollar rules!

8:50am • #68
278,556 Points 15 Featured Posts

As a Boomer it has been hard to rid myself of my addiction to paper. When you won't throw away books you bought in the 1960's on you see the extent of my problem, and that goes for music too. However, I now download music onto my Ipod, I download reading to my Kindle, and I can't wait for our Oklahoma 19th Century government to finally allow digital signatures in real estate. My local paper I do subscribe to for $4.95 a month. I am a steward to my planet and the less paper exist the better. The other shift is to news as it happens. Twitter reported Michael Jacksons death before the mainstream media. Trent Lott and Dan Rather lost their jobs becasue blogs forced mainstream corporate media to report what the did. What I love about this proliferation of media is that fewer and fewer entities can control and spin the news cycle. I would also add in our business it has been less than a decade since we had the book of listings that came out every two weeks. People want the information now. The caveat is in interpretation and the dissemination of truth with so much news white noise out there.

8:54am • #69
129,555 Points 5 Featured Posts

I would have to say that print is slowing down, but DEAD?  NO. 

 

My 2 cents, until people stop reading magazines and newspapers altogether, there will always be some market for it.  I have stated this many times on AR and will say it again.  Print is slowing down, but if it is effective in your overall business plan and still cost effective, I would use it in conjunction with other media outlets.  I use print everyday.  Now I also have cut back and have gone to strong content, but I still find it to be very effective.  Smart media companies are now adapting to more online and print models until the day comes that print will die.  For now, I encourage to explore using both if used properly. 

Great Post and insight

 

 

9:06am • #70
168,521 Points 4 Featured Posts Outside Blog Called Shot Master

Very good article.  The media has a tough time adjusting...too busy cramming the news as they see it down our throats. 

9:13am • #71
2 Featured Posts Hit Router

Great statistics but I do not thing print is dead. 

Coming from the car business where the media shift (media budget) has definitely gone to internet sites, customer relationship management programs (email follow ups, loyalty cards, etc.), blogging, and lead generators.  Now, print has definitely minimized (the shift is huge) but as long as their are guys kicking tires, talking shop during coffee break or looking for their next toys, - print will still be around.  Wheels deals, nickel nik, and even the classifieds serve a purpose of showing buddies.  As a guy look behind the toilet or on the floor and you will typically find the sports section or a wheels deals.  Real estate is a little different, the media shift is the same and the classifieds can still be found.  Balance is key!

9:15am • #72
291,720 Points 5 Featured Posts

Stefan: Thanks for the post. I appreciate the statistics. I tend to read my local paper online. I might even pay if I had to. I am seeing the local community newspapers holding their own but I think the future is delivering news that a restless public can digest quickly. Thanks again!

9:19am • #73
550,873 Points 7 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

Stefan:

Like everything else in the universe since the advent of the internet, we have had to reinvent ourselves.  Many print magazines dealing with real estate have done that with an online edition, and they are helping realtors maximize their web presence. The publishers that are our media partners on the Language of Luxury professional networking community have developed some extremely innovative applications for print, that can give agents a tremendous competitive advantage.  We are launching a video blog series interviewing the major publishers.

We subscribe to the Wall Street Journal on line, and we have not had a newspaper delivered for at least 10 years.  I (Alexandra) still subscribe to cooking magazines, knowing full well that the whole thing is on line, as well as the recipes contained in it.  For me reading these magazines cuddled in my couch is a break from the computer.  It is relaxing and comfortable and is a luxury.

With all of us staring all day at the computer, print may be the next luxury!

9:19am • #74
1 Featured Post

Stefan:

Thanks for the update.  Very useful information.

I've proven that in a disaster market you need the right MIX of media to get traffic and sales.  If you rely solely on the Internet and email, there would not be a crowd at grand opening events.  One builder I helped got 200-250 people per event with just newspaper.  Then they tried just web and email - 300. 

With the message I created and my mix of 1/4 page newspaper, web, email, radio, and direct mail, I drove 1,700 - 1,900+ consistently to each event.  Print is not dead - its use has to be reconsidered as part of the mix.

Mike

9:46am • #75
123,720 Points 1 Featured Post

Newspapers may be dying a slow and painful death and that's sad in a way, yes I agree on that. I stopped the 7 day newspaper a few months ago after many, many years, and now only get Sunday, and that goes unread half the time.

Advertising listings in the newspaper is expensive and just not worth the money anymore. Why bother when the vast majority of people do their first searches online? What is the point of advertising in the newspaper anymore? As one comment said above, he used to have pay the NY Times a king's ransom if he wanted to sell any houses, now he doesn't need them. That's the simple answer. We don't need newspapers anymore.

I will say that I have no idea how magazines stay in business today. Who has the time or the care to read a magazine anymore?

However, printing is not dead and will not die.

"They" have been talking for years about the paperless society and it still hasn't come full bore. If it comes, it is decades away. I defy you to show me ANY business that really and honestly run on zero amount of paper and only run on an iphone and/or laptop. It cannot be done. At some point, no matter how high tech you think you are, you're still going to grab a piece of paper and write something down, therefore, you are not running the true paperless business.

9:55am • #76
498,254 Points 8 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Called Shot Master

You are so right - "the Internet is redefining every industry" and I previously read the paper, however, I now read my news on line. I still see some people reading the Saturday real estate section.

10:01am • #77

I'm all about embracing the future, especially with online media. But I still feel terrible for print media, I hear about more and more papers folding every day.

10:19am • #78

No doubt.... Print is a dying breed. Communication is ever changing, fluid, and evolving. Someday we will look back a ask "Is Internet advertising dying?" Hard to imagine, but the only thing certain is change. Great article!

10:33am • #79
Outside Blog

Great read, our generation is used to the 24/7 news cycle, we need to learn to adapt our marketing to this new norm.

10:36am • #80
170,820 Points 3 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

Fascinating article! Thanks Stefan for taking time to research and post this.  I talk to a lot of real estate professionals everyday and it's amazing the disparity between those who are adapting to the changing market and the others who are stuck as you said to a dying paradigm. I find myself as one who is struggling to keep up with the changes.

11:25am • #81
399,439 Points 3 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

I enjoy reading the paper, many times the local newspaper covers community events that do not get the spotlight on the big stage of life. IE: The city of Oceanside removes 166 street lights and has replaced only 30. I know that this would not be a headline item, on many levels but in the community of Rancho Del Oro it is major in Oceanside.

11:51am • #82

Stefan I must say that is a great article. I agree with Ed above thanks for taking the time to research the  information and post it. Just like the blacksmith hated to see the automobile come along I bet newspapers feel the same way about the Internet. I know some newspapers embraced the Internet while others were slow to come around. It's interesting to hear about all the Realtors that no longer use print advertising.

12:28pm • #83
483,320 Points 1 Featured Post Localism Sponsor Outside Blog

Hi Stefan,  Very interesting review - though not much of a surprise.  I think the lack of readership is more a reflection of consumer habits than any political bias.

12:31pm • #84

Stefan,

 

Thanks for the article.   We only have a few ads in specific Outdoor Magizines.    I did an open house ad in local paper - 0 shows.  No more print for me.    Newspapers may be left of center but not as bad a TV.   But then again, I heard of a study that states only 5% of news on TV is accurate, the rest is hype.

1:10pm • #85

I still use SOME print media. The key is that the recipient not have to OPEN it. Post cards are still effective if you have a very local spin to it. I am a GEN X'er and i am spending a ton of time getting our (The Simanton Group) social media up and running. Exciting but so many avenues to follow...

1:57pm • #86
1 Featured Post

I still get the Sunday paper , more because I always have.,

3:00pm • #87
1 Featured Post

I still get the Sunday paper , more because I always have.,

3:00pm • #88

We are still heavy in one particular magazine and get quite a bit of business and recognition from it! That being said we are much heavier with our online presence and continue to focus more and more on it. Track your advertising before making the decision because some print media still works very well. Most realtors don't really know and just do what someone else say's is the thing to do! Look at what the most successful agents and teams are doing and you may have a clue as to what works. I know plenty of social media gurus who don't sell much because they don't really know where their business comes from, so track! Cheers.

3:04pm • #89
107,343 Points 16 Featured Posts Outside Blog

I buy and sell at least 3-4 properties per month.

The one place I never advertise is the newspaper.  Huge waste of money.

Thanks for the facts and figures.

3:23pm • #90
360,757 Points 36 Featured Posts Called Shot Master

Stephan,  I just came back to the office from a listing appointment where my 70ish sellers (I got the listing) asked why I no longer advertise in the HOMES magazine.  I explained all the reasons why I spend my money mostly on the web and they understood my answer.  I do still advertise (a little) in print but I am not seeing any results there anymore.  I expect that this may be the final year for me. 

The future is internet.  Well, I think perhaps the present is the internet is more like it and if we don't move forward, we're doomed, just like many local newspapers have already found out.

Good blog.

4:04pm • #91
110,556 Points

I'm with Elizabeth Weintraub (#11).  And nothing like swinging in the hammock and covering your face with the paper while you doze.  But them I'm a big fan of a sharpened pencil & a pad of paper too, no need for gadgets or energy.

4:26pm • #92
254,906 Points 4 Featured Posts Outside Blog Hit Router

Yeh, our Homes and Land shut down. Another publication combined it's Kansas & Missouri into one book and the others are so thin they don't qualify as bathroom material anymore.

4:51pm • #93
1 Featured Post Outside Blog

Since we live in a remote part of Mexico where there is no English paper, we have been getting our news over the net for years.  However I began to reach the same conclusion as you did Stephan, when the paper from our former Canadian home city ran an article about us and three other Western Canadians who "migrated south" to live and work in a warmer climate.  I asked several people I know if they could send me a copy of the piece for my files and not one of them had a subscription.   This is sad... and it is hard to hold a laptop while you lay in a hammock!

5:20pm • #94
154,308 Points 1 Featured Post Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Stefan, i am one of the ones that does not take the paper anymore. It is so biased depending on the publication. I read the Internet and watch the news.

6:00pm • #95
1 Featured Post

I wrote several articles for Editor and Publisher in the early 70s. I was a magazine editor and I worked in Manhattan for 10 years before I moved to Pennsylvania and became a Realtor.

I wrote my first weekly newspaper column when I was 16 years old. I worked as a newspaper reporter, magazine editor, and freelance writer for many years ... my career came full circle and I devote a great deal of my time to writing endeavors these days.

The ranks of the real estate press has dwindled markedly in the last few years. It's a fact of life, owed in arge measure to economic downturn and decreasing newspaper revenue.

Bloggers will take up a lot of slack, and so will RSS feeds from numerous social media sources as the techies in our midst formulate and design new applications to feed the news-hungry masses. Elizabeth Weintraub does a great job across social media platforms, and there are other notables in the blogosphere and ezine communities staking new ground and filling that need. Kevin Tomlinson, Teresa Boardman, Ardell Della Loggia, Kristal Kraft, Jon Strum, Kris Berg, and others do an outstanding job in their market areas.

I personally traveled a journey from mechanical typewriter --> electric typewriter --> hot metal Linottype tyepsetting --> phototypesetting --> computers and online publishing. I hate to see reporters lose their jobs and newspapers die ... I grew up with printer's ink running in my veins.

6:02pm • #96
126,373 Points 4 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Our company still advertises some in the local paper because we have such a huge senior community at the beach.  Many do not know how to use a computer; however, the majority of our 50 agents said they had never directly sold a house from a newspaper ad.

6:54pm • #97

Well I say print is not dead yet. We will always going to need print. I say once they stop printing money then I will be worry :)

7:14pm • #99
108,218 Points Called Shot Master

Thanks for the great stats. I am a boomer and I get about 40% my news online. The rest is split evenly between TV and newspapers. We still use more print here than most places. Our market is made up of a lot of coastal second homes. Most of the customers for these homes are boomers. We have found by talking to a lot of these boomers that they use the Internet, but more often than not they start their seach with the various home sales magazines or in the newspaper.

7:22pm • #100
108,218 Points Called Shot Master

Thanks for the great stats. I am a boomer and I get about 40% my news online. The rest is split evenly between TV and newspapers. We still use more print here than most places. Our market is made up of a lot of coastal second homes. Most of the customers for these homes are boomers. We have found by talking to a lot of these boomers that they use the Internet, but more often than not they start their seach with the various home sales magazines or in the newspaper.

7:22pm • #101
343,188 Points 13 Featured Posts

In our area it is as dead as King Henry VIII, The little real estate magazine does get noticed a bit. But the plain Jane ads in the Tampa Tribune or St. Pete Times cost a fortune and I have yet to get even one call or one open house visit as a result of them. I even got a free huge (relatively) color ad for a property as a prize. Still no calls. My money is much better spent on my internet sites.

For news, I still think a lot of people read newpapers and magazines. But for advertising, no. And sadly if they cannot bring in the advertising dollars, the subscriptions alone cannot sustain them.

PS Last ad person that tried to persuade me to use their advertising service informed me that not only would my ads appear in their papers but also on Zillow. Wrong approach, since my listing agreements with my customers specifically prohibits me from placing their homes on sites that do auto-valuations. So was a "no go" from the start.

7:29pm • #102
277,620 Points 8 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

I think that for the most part print advertising is dead.  By time it makes it to print it is old news.

8:03pm • #103
553,769 Points 8 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

I believe the older generation that still doesn't use the computer are the only ones reading the paper now.  I quit paper advertising a year ago, worked the internet more and don't see how papers can stay in business.

8:16pm • #104
425,489 Points 2 Featured Posts Outside Blog Called Shot Master

I rarely use newspaper ads.  I can't say never yet because there are some buyers that are utilizing the paper in this area.  Each area is different and you need to do what works for you! 

9:44pm • #105

Times are changing i wonder if it is for the good, or for the worse

9:51pm • #106
865,699 Points 50 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp

Newspapers need to radically alter their business model if they are going to survive...  And they aren't the only ones. 

9:56pm • #107
Outside Blog

Can't say that I didn't see that coming.

10:33pm • #108
1 Featured Post

Definitely repositioned in 2009. I'm mostly done with print.

10:33pm • #109

I love the smell of a newspaper but you can't type a keyword into a paper and find what you're looking for. Great post!

10:35pm • #110
454,907 Points 5 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router Attended Rain Camp

Lane is quite right ! But I also agree that part of the demise is every paper I read is so far left it it is crazy.

10:36pm • #111
290,496 Points 14 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

To that guy in the first comment:

Your comment is off base. First of all, newspapers are all owned by very conservative corporations, and they have forced newspapers into being biased toward the right, therefore making newspapers untrustworthy sources for news.

Second of all, the country isn't really center-right. It's center. The right and left are loud and obnoxious, and both sides think they are right about everything.

What's right or left doesn't matter -- it's what is right and wrong that we should focus on. Congress is full of posturing a-holes who only care about being re-elected. Nothing of substance ever gets done.

What makes it all worse: Even the very few people who really care about doing the right things for America and the world get ruined when they get to the Hill.

11:32pm • #112
MAR
10
2010
278,566 Points 7 Featured Posts

Stefan,  I guess I'm one of the few people who still read a newspaper.  We live in a small town, and if we didn't read our local newspaper we wouldn't know what's going on in our city.  Our area news stations come from a larger city about 30 miles away, and they have a tendency to ignore our town.

12:12am • #113
778,609 Points 53 Featured Posts Outside Blog Called Shot Master

Stefan:  Honestly, I really hope that newspapers do NOT disappear.  I just really enjoy sitting down for breakfast all by myself... and read the morning paper.  It's therapy.  Very cheap therapy.

12:16am • #114

It is a fading era - much like the era of letters, I would imagine. A challenge still to convince the older boomers of the ineffectiveness of newspaper ads. They do work when we are advertizing 55+ communities, but clearly the Gen X & Y don't know what a telephone jack is for or unless they are taking a polisci class in college, why you would buy a newspaper.

5:44am • #115
3 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Print is obsolete, which is why we're seeing every industry going paperless.  Real estate seems to be the last vestige of industries that use hundreds of sheets of paper to get the job done.  Luckily, this too is quickly changing as more and more agents are doing paperless transactions.

I didn't know about the amount of Tweets, though.  90 trillion e-mails....wow. 

Thanks for posting.

Nick
http://dotloop.com

10:18am • #116
1 Featured Post

To lump all PRINT into one category is a mistake. Certainly NEWSPAPERS are declining as their pay-for-news business model is being beat up by free and instant news online.

Am I the only one who finds it IRONIC that the AUTHOR of this blog is promoting a PRINTED book FOR SALE!?! Obviously, not all PRINT is dead!

Most on here probably don't know that MAGAZINES are the #1 driver of traffic to websites.

Print is certainly changing and you must be online. However, if you abandon PRINT altogether you are missing out on a very powerful method of BRANDING yourself in your local area. You should use a good mix of print/online/direct mail/social media/blog/video/etc to reach your prospects across all channels of media.

If you're savvy you'll gather data about your local advertising options to find out who offers you the MOST exposure for your advertising dollars BOTH IN PRINT AND ONLINE.

"Most of the high-tech agents we surveyed confessed that as much as 50 percent of their traffic came from offline marketing. It's a bit counter intuitive but the best way to succeed online is to market your website offline."
--Gary Keller, co-founder and chairman of the board of Keller Williams Realty International in his book Shift: How Top Real Estate Agents Tackle Tough Times

One last thought: Any of you receive some kind of magazine in the mail in the last week/month? My girlfriend gets a new Victoria's Secret magazine practically every week!!! Do you think they'd be spending money on PRINT if it didn't generate sales??? Most industries do not put all their marketing eggs in one basket and for good reason.

10:48am • #117

Thanks for compiling this for us...let's us see at a glance the huge shift in communication methods.    Historically, it's happened before and will happen again.    Newspapers themselves replaced a medium of communication -- that Gutenberg printing press sent all the scribes out of business!     In the middle of such a profound change, though, it's difficult to suss out just what does work...a lot of confusion out there, for those in business, trying to reach a consumer.    A new method of communication always calls for a new format of getting the info to the buyer...in this case, it's about allure (pulling in) not push/deliver...also all takes much more time.    Yes, the consumer wants info instantly but they can take their time in doing something about it all.    The long tail approach has not been the message of 20th century marketing.     One thing for sure:  in change lies opportunity, and it's essential not to be overcome by new communication methods.    That's all they are: methods.   

11:12am • #118

There is no doubt that the way consumers want to get their daily news has changed and drastically affected the newspaper business. However, because of the demise of the newspaper, everyone wants to associate all print in the same category as the newspaper. Conversely, specialized print magazine titles actually increased during 2009. Take a look at the magazine section at your local grocery store, its no longer Time and Business Week. Its specialty magazines i.e. Football, Womens, Pregnancy, Karate, Hunting, Sailing, Men, Youth, Teens, Babies all dedicated to a particular niche. As a publisher of a real estate magazine in San Antonio, I am proud to say that over the last 12 months we have grown 15%. Just goes to say that not all print is the same!   

11:14am • #119
706,299 Points 6 Featured Posts Outside Blog Called Shot Master

Thanks for compiling this for us...let's us see at a glance the huge shift in communication methods.    Historically, it's happened before and will happen again.    Newspapers themselves replaced a medium of communication -- that Gutenberg printing press sent all the scribes out of business!     In the middle of such a profound change, though, it's difficult to suss out just what does work...a lot of confusion out there, for those in business, trying to reach a consumer.    A new method of communication always calls for a new format of getting the info to the buyer...in this case, it's about allure (pulling in) not push/deliver...also all takes much more time.    Yes, the consumer wants info instantly but they can take their time in doing something about it all.    The long tail approach has not been the message of 20th century marketing.     One thing for sure:  in change lies opportunity, and it's essential not to be overcome by new communication methods.    That's all they are: methods.

11:15am • #120
15 Featured Posts

Wow, I am on the road one day giving a talk in Chicago and the comments go wild. I play catch up and try and respond to some of the great comments.


Stefan

1:32pm • #121
15 Featured Posts

Missy, re how many agents use social media...

Good question, of course much harder to answer and there are so many platforms, various levels of "using" social media and of course also much duplication.

That said, I would estimate 250,000 agents have a social media account with maybe 100,000 really using it regularly.

What do you think?

Stefan

 

1:36pm • #122
15 Featured Posts

Elizabeth

Journalism is an art, not a platform. A good author, write or journalist should be able to use newspapers, magazines, TV, radio and the Internet - and I think many due. However the "open" structure of the Internet and social media does allow anyone to write, and yes, alas many can't write well, or at all.

I do agree that well written copy, a good article, a great book, etc. reamains an absolute joy.

Thanks for your throughts.

Stefan

1:42pm • #123
15 Featured Posts

Vickie

'Customer Initiated Contact' - a great phrase for a growing trend.

Thanks

Stefan

1:44pm • #124
15 Featured Posts

Matt

"300 papers in Iowa alone and we have only about 3 million people".

Wow!! Glad I don't own "Print" in Iowa. Thanks for sharing the stats.

Stefan

 

1:47pm • #125
15 Featured Posts

Sam

Don't have and don't know if stats per generation even exist. You are right. Each generation generally prefers the communication platform and medium they grew up with and are most comfortblae with.

My Dad (Silent Generation) loves his newspapers, while I (Baby Boomer) love my notebook and my son (Gen Y) loves his iPhone and texting. Each medium still works while there are still many members of that generation (group) still supporting that platform. However as the Silent Generation declines in numbers and Gen X and Y move into the drivers seat, the trend detailed in the blog post will continue.

All smart agents, like yourself, should continue to use any marketing and communication platform that is cost effective in bringing them customers.

Stefan

1:53pm • #126
171,483 Points 36 Featured Posts

Yes print is dead, or at least on life support.  Yesterday, I had THREE LARGE PHONEBOOKS left on my porch.  I walked them right over to my recycling bin.  Who uses phonebooks anymore?  I think I stopped using them in 1998, and I was probably a slow bloomer!

1:55pm • #127
15 Featured Posts

Frank,

"Print media won't die completely until every bathroom has free wi-fi."

Nice quote. Thanks

Stefan

1:56pm • #128
15 Featured Posts

Frank and others,

I did not calculate the stats but like most of the information include in our annual Swanepoel Trends Report we research a huge amount of sources, articles, white papers, surveys, etc. to find infomation that we believe is interesting, creditable and meaningful to real estate professionals.

Glad you enjoyed the blog post.

Stefan

2:00pm • #129
15 Featured Posts

Robin and Sue,

"I would surely miss the feel and aroma of a book in my hands. I love reading and I love the physical book."

Well said.

As much as I ador the Internet, and use it for hours and hours every day, I agree. Something special about a physical book over an ebook.

Stefan

2:04pm • #130
15 Featured Posts

Scott

"It's also nice to think about how many less trees will be cut down to make pulp for this industry."

That is a huge benefit in the decline of print that is often overlooked. Thanks for reminding us.

Stefan

2:07pm • #131
15 Featured Posts

Karen

"It's sad and a little scary to see our world change so much."

I think your words are echoed by many thousands of agents across our industry. Alas, as you well know, change is the very essence of life.

Stefan

2:10pm • #132
15 Featured Posts

Robert

"The Internet is the Model T of the information timeline."

What an interesting way of phrasing it. I like it!

Stefan

2:13pm • #133
15 Featured Posts

To Teresa and the many others that shifted their marketing dollars from print to the Internet a few years back - well done, you are leading the change.

Stefan

 

 

2:19pm • #134
15 Featured Posts

Evelyn

"I read on the internet, but suspect many younger adults don't read the news too much."

I think you are right, based on the experience I have seen with many Gen X & Y. But to counter that, I have also seen studies that say when we were young adults we also didn't as a whole read the news all that much either.

Maybe it has less to do with print and the Internet, but rather the needs and wants of people at different stations/times in their life. 

Young adults today however definetly do have access to more information than any previous generation... Google has become the portal to many, many things.


Stefan

 

2:25pm • #135
15 Featured Posts

Nice commentary Joe, thanks

Stefan

2:27pm • #136
15 Featured Posts

Ron & Alexandra,

"Since the advent of the internet, we have had to reinvent ourselves."

Excellent observation. Yes, we the real estate industry, and yes the print industry and yes we as consumers, have and MUST continue to re-invent ourselves.

Fun times!!

Stefan

2:33pm • #137
15 Featured Posts

Mike,

Smart to use a combination of newspaper, web, email, radio, and direct mail. Integrated marketing. Leverage the power of each medium.

Good job!

Stefan

2:46pm • #138
15 Featured Posts

Frances,

"I personally traveled a journey from mechanical typewriter --> electric typewriter --> hot metal Linottype tyepsetting --> phototypesetting --> computers and online publishing."

...and what a journey that must have been. You need to tell me more over a cup of coffee one day.

Stefan

2:52pm • #139
15 Featured Posts

John

"In our area it is as dead as King Henry VIII."

That should do it :-)

Stefan

2:53pm • #140
15 Featured Posts

Karen

"Newspapers are very cheap therapy."

Never thought of newspapers that way. Thanks for sharing.

Stefan

 

2:55pm • #141

@Russell, #117

You left off a very important part in your comment about magazines:

You said: "Magazines are the #1 driver of traffic to websites".

Reality: "Magazines are the #1 OFFLINE driver of traffic to websites".

Huge difference, but that's what magazine.org said. 

Also, not sure how "independent" the research about magazine statistics are when it comes from magazines.org.

Digital is where it's at for advertisers.  Once the ad dollars leave print, it will be official.

 

Robert Drummer
3:01pm • #142
15 Featured Posts

To Chris, Lisa, Maureen, Jenna, Ken, Bill, Tom, Maria, Mike, Ed, Brian, John, Robert and all the many, many others, thanks for your kind comments and thoughts.

Although there are many different opinions, the majority clearly understand that print as we knew it a decade or two ago, has changed. It is of course still changing and in large part is expected to be replaced by the Internet.

Many have fond memories of newspapers but most appreciate that a smart marketing plan usually includes using multiple platforms that include both print and the Internet.

Many thanks for the great discussion.

Stefan

 

3:05pm • #143
290,496 Points 14 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Russell:

I find it ironic that your post is using an incorrect statistic that favors magazines, and you are from a magazine. (It's the #1 "offline" driver of traffic to websites -- and that is a HUGE difference!)

I used to worked for Keller Williams, and so have read Shift. It's a great book, but I will tell you that KW is one of the worst of the big brokerages to grasp online marketing -- they are not good at it, and therefore the amount of their business generated offline is not surprising.

3:25pm • #144

In one of the earlier posts, "Melissa" makes a comment about "school newspapers" ...  I can tell you that my girls set up chats, and groups etc. on Facebook, MySpace etc.   Our local school system has to get a levy passed... they put my daughter and her friend in charge of setting up a Facebook site to support the levy.  As for me... I'm with a number of the other commenters:  I love my morning newspaper along with a cup of coffee, but get my news electronically the remainder of the day.  I am not sad to see our Industry finally getting the message about not wasting valuable dollars on print ads.  I personally have not run a newspaper ad in YEARS...  I'm a huge fan of Direct Response marketing (see: www.GooderGroup.com) and of course the various web marketing tools available.  And a whole new area, "social media" opening up.  If you haven't invested yet in Stefans latest publication..  Social Media Report 2010 you really need to order your copy.  Great information, and I especially like the 10 day action plan at the end of the book. 

Alec Hagerty
4:09pm • #145
1 Featured Post

Robert and Aaron: Thanks for pointing out my error. Yes, I did mistakingly leave off that magazines are the #1 "offline" way to drive traffic to websites in my comment. An honest mistake. However, if you clicked over to my link it's correct there.

Also, that stat is not derived from magazines.org. It originates from the American Advertising Federation.

5:22pm • #146

I keep hearing everyone say that print is dead,  but I can't tell you how many mega-producing agents ($30M+) I hear say that they still use direct mail and print newsletters on a regular basis. As Mark Twain said, "There are lies, damn lies, and statistics." While I agree that newspapers are dying, I think part of the reason why there is an anticipated falloff in revenue from direct mail is because 1) There are fewer Realtors (and businesses in general) today than there were in 2008, and 2) Many Realtors have shifted their budgets from print to electronic mail. BUT, that does not make print advertising less effective - in fact, staying with the truism of "Find out what others are not doing, then do it",  I think that the mass migration away from print will make the advertising that we put in people's mail will actually be MORE effective.

Rob Rule
5:42pm • #147
Localism Sponsor

 To: Frances Flynn Thorsen, a few blogs ahead of me...if your read this, Thank you for the ending of your blog which reads   "... I grew up with printer's ink running in my veins."

KIND OF PUTS IT TO HEART.

... WITH MORE READERS ON THE WEB NOW I WISH YOU WELL TO FIND YOUR NICHE. 

 

OH YEAH GREAT POST STEFEN, AS ALWAYS VERY PROFESSIONAL AND INSIGHTFUL.

FOLLOW YOU on  TWITTER AS WELL..

5:49pm • #148
861,732 Points 76 Featured Posts Outside Blog Attended Rain Camp Called Shot Master

Wow. Scary numbers.

I used to own a local magazine and sold it in Jan 2008 to the local newspaper. Timely.

6:53pm • #150
149,483 Points

Real estate folks in my town have really cut down on print ads... just too expensive.. hard to see if they actually account for sales..

8:11pm • #151
MAR
11
2010
551,923 Points 3 Featured Posts Outside Blog Called Shot Master

Stephan,

Our local newspapers have an agressive Internet presense and social media program in place.

I no longer receive the newspaper.

Steve

12:57am • #152
185,684 Points 5 Featured Posts Attended Rain Camp

Some interesting points, wonder why the USPS does not get into email service or package delivery rather than fighting for an old vision.

My wife reads and watches everything on the internet, the only reason we get a weekend paper is to start the fire.

I don't think charging people for news on the internet is the way to go  for news corporations as there are so many sources of news available for free.

More and more of what we do as Realtors is to make information available to the consumer. To then guide them through the transaction. Often they know more about a specific topic because they have researched it fully before bringing it up. You can not be a trusted source unless you really know your stuff, but you can quickly get up to speed with the resources available. Just be honest and customers will trust you.

6:26am • #153
15 Featured Posts

Thanks Terrie, now following you on Twitter starting today. Looking forward to your tweets.

Stefan

 

8:35am • #154
15 Featured Posts

Steve

"Our local newspapers have an agressive Internet presense and social media program in place."

Many newspapers do. That's good. It shows progressive thinking and I can find no reason newspapers shouldn't use the new media as well.

Stefan

8:37am • #155
15 Featured Posts

Nick

You say that "wonder why the USPS does not get into email service."

It has always been very difficult to totally change your existing business model and lead the charge for reinventing an industry or process. Very few large corporations have been able to make that quantum leap.

Change usually comes from the "outside" and "innovators" that have little existing expensive infrastructure, or clients they can loose or baggage that hinder change.

Your quote "the only reason we get a weekend paper is to start the fire" put a smile on my face. Thanks

Stefan

 

8:44am • #156
310,174 Points 10 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor Outside Blog Hit Router

Stefan ---- Boyd & I have been talking about this for a couple of years -- been watching as the local newspaper grows smaller and smaller -- we are just rolling out a network of web sites for our agent-owners so that each agent-owner has his/her web site connected under one umbrella for better search engine results -- trying to show the agent-owners who are slow to adapt to the internet world what they need to do -- these are actually blog sites where the agent-owner can send an email via posterous to put some new content on their site -- we want the agent-owner to get the leads directly not the company.
We are doing this because we see the future as not "print".  BTW, an interesting statistics you may enjoy is that only 33% of people living in SC have access to the internet -- Holy Cow, I was surprised, but then thought about all of the rural areas we have across the state. So, we still use mail out pieces along with our internet.

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9:51am • #157
115,762 Points

It is refreshing for me to read something not on a computer screen from time to time!!  I use various forms of print advertising in my business and have always seen positive results!

11:27am • #158

Excellent points!

11:52am • #160
1 Featured Post

 


Personally I have not read a print newspaper in years. I also have to admit I don't have one yet but I most people I know do have a kindle and that is where they subscribe to their news. The rest of it is all online. 

9:54pm • #161
MAR
18
2010

For me it hasn't been an intentional move however I have found that I pick up a paper less and less over the years since I made the move to a smart phone.  One exception is the Sunday Paper.  I still like to enjoy that with my coffee.

8:18am • #162

For me it hasn't been an intentional move however I have found that I pick up a paper less and less over the years since I made the move to a smart phone.  One exception is the Sunday Paper.  I still like to enjoy that with my coffee.

8:18am • #163

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Stefan Swanepoel

Ladera Ranch, CA

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Address: PO Box 7259, Laguna Niguel, CA, 92607

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