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RE: How much advertising is there?
Just to support Joe's argument with a little bit of real data. We
have a niche (totally distinctive?) online magazine (which also
comes out in print) called OECD Observer (www.oecdobserver.org).
The online edition has always been freely available. It earns
$3000 annually thanks to Google's ads, which covers about half
the hosting and software licencing costs.
Toby Green
Head of Publishing
OECD Publishing
-----Original Message-----
[mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Joseph J. Esposito
Sent: 20 September, 2007 11:50 PM
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: How much advertising is there?
The recent announcement by the New York Times concerning the
termination of its Times Select premium subscription service has
deservedly attracted a great deal of attention, on this list and
all over the blogosphere and "mainstream media." The Times may
or may not be successful with its new strategy (my own view is
that it was the right decision, but the Times's future is by no
means assured), but of course not all media organizations have
the brand and cultural centrality of the Times; the Times thus is
no model for anyone. What I wonder about is where all the
advertising revenue is going to come from to support all these
media businesses, whether they are the Times, Elsevier's new
ad-supported oncology site, or any of the two dozen new Silicon
Valley social networking start-ups I stumbled upon in just the
past month (owners of pets, parents of young children, human
potential activists, financial planners, etc., etc.), not to
mention such academic publishing services as Scholarly Exchange.
So we step into the laboratory and ask this question: How much
must the world's economy have to grow in order to support all
these media businesses? A media business aggregates audiences,
which in turn are sold to advertisers. The advertisers have
their own products and services to sell (and not all of them are
media products, thank god). If they can't sell their products,
the advertising dries up and the media businesses scale back or
disappear.
Let's say a company budgets 10 percent of total revenue to
advertising. Thus, with sales of $10 million, the company spends
$1 million on advertising. For every dollar thus spent on
advertising, the economy must grow by ten times that amount. How
many shirts, stents, time share condos, cars, and toilet seat
covers do we need?
The market isn't there for all this advertising. The world's
resources are not there to create the forecast volume of goods
and services to satisfy the demand created by the advertising. We
will run out of fossil fuel trying, and then have virtually no
economy left to advertise anything.
The notion that the sale of advertising alone somehow can support
the full range of information businesses is crazy. It may work
for the Times or South Park, and Elsevier has a shot with its new
portal, but the fate of most advertising-supported businesses is
oblivion. Only the strong, the huge, and the totally distinctive
survive. B-level players need not apply.
Joe Esposito