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1-2-3, nu kommer muren!

De tre store danske dagblade har erkendt, at det bliver nødvendigt at tage betaling for nyheder på nettet. Som inspiration til videre læsning er her tre hurtige pluk fra de seneste dages publikationer om emnet – fra nettet, selvfølgelig. (To var ovenikøbet illustreret med det samme foto, indtil en af dem skiftede billedet ud …)

1. januar:
quoteVi kommer helt sikkert til at se flere betalingsmure rundt om netaviser, også på lokale og regionale medier, men spørgsmålet er, hvor mange der er villige til at betale for noget, der har været gratis i årevis. Nok ikke mange.
– Ida Willig, RUC, i en kommentar på b.dk

2. januar:
quoteUdfordringen for en avis er at skabe unikt egenproduceret indhold, som brugerne er villige til at betale for. Og så […] er der selve problemet med journalistik som vare.
– Mikkel Vuorela, på politiken.dk

3. januar:
quoteDet digitale skift er en evolutionær forandring snarere end revolutionær, og både aviser og kunderne skal finde ud af, hvad de hver især vil have og har behov for.
– Robert Picard, Oxford University, på epn.dk

medieaaret2013

Læs også:
“I’m building a wall” – om de skandinaviske tiltag. Fra SNDS Magazine.

I’m building a wall*

Making people pay for news on the web and other digital platforms has been doomed impossible by media researchers, but that does not keep anyone from trying.

By Lars Pryds / From SNDS Magazine 4, 2012.

It certainly looks like a new trend for Scandinavian media houses: setting up paywalls on their websites and preparing special paid-for digital products.

As Anders Tapola writes on the back page of this magazine, Fædre­landsvennen in Norway has started charging for Everything, Everywhere, Always. An easy-to-understand strategy – click any link on the front page of fvn.no and you will be prompted to pay for access to the journalistic content.

In Denmark Berlingske did the same in November for a handful of its regional newspapers, so readers who want to read local news from e.g. Aarhus Stiftstidende will have to pay for it, whether it’s in print or online.

Building a wall – but a soft one
However, most media houses do not have the courage to go all the way and charge for everything, but allow a certain amount of content for free before you have to punch in those numbers from your credit card. Also in November, in Finland, the mighty Helsingin Sanomat built a ‘soft’ paywall for hs.fi – allowing five free articles per week.

In Sweden, several papers have tried the same, says SNDS President Anders Tapola. Dagens Nyheter has launched a new website, dagensnyheter.se, where all material from the print edition is published at one o’clock every night – to complement the fast news updates on the regular dn.se.

“However, most of the initiatives look rather half-heartedly,” says Tapola, “and in some cases it’s difficult to understand what you’re paying for.”

Just like the New York Times
The three major national papers in Denmark all seem to be going the same way as Helsingin Sanomat – Politiken has chosen “the Metered Model which New York Times were the first to launch 18 months ago and which 150 US newspapers have rolled out since. We will launch our model in the new year,” says Anders Emil Møller, head of digital development at Politiken.

Berlingske will do the same – also “in the new year” (probably in February) – allowing 10 clicks for free each month before charging for articles. A complete reorganization of the way news stories will be planned are in the works – in order to publish all content to all platforms.

Jyllands-Posten has introduced a slightly different model for charging for online content in the form of a ‘Premium’ product, which will give subscribers access to content of a ‘special quality’.

The times are certainly changing (again) for the news media – and this is how it should be. Dr. Mario R. García – a die-hard optimist on behalf of the news business – phrased it very clearly in Cleveland, at the SND workshop:

“There is a place even for print – but those who survive are the ones who rethink themselves”.

An impossible task?
But, will the news companies survive by introducing paid-for web content? Not everyone is as optimistic as García. Erik Rasmussen, CEO and publisher, Monday Morning Management (DK), thinks that this project is impossible – for two reasons:

“Firstly, no matter what kind of paywalls the dailies set up, there will be an abundance of free news on the web. Second­ly, the newspapers have neglected to develop the originality and use value that the readers are willing to pay for.” (Berlingske, 22 Oct. 2012).

So, maybe all the hard work should not start with preparations for publishing your contenton a multitude of platforms in hundreds of different shapes and sizes, or trying to keep up with your competitors by doing exactly the same as they do. Instead, it might be a good idea to rethink the content itself.

As García also said in Cleveland – the story comes first, not the platform.

* I’m building a wall
a fine wall
not so much to keep you out
more to keep me in
– Pet Shop Boys (2009)

 

STOP! Even though you don’t understand a word of Finnish, the message of this warning sign is easily recognizable: Pay, if you want to continue. If you’re already a subscriber to Helsingin Sanomat in print, you’re only a little bit more lucky – you still have to pay, but the price will be as low as 3 euros per month, less than a third of the price for new readers. (Screenshot from hs.fi)

dagensnyheter.se – the printed paper, online.

fvn.no – pay for news Everything, Everywhere, Always.

stiften.dk – local news behind iron curtains.

SNDS Magazine no. 4 has hit the streets

There’s a lot of great stuff in this year’s last SNDS Magazine, which has just been published on the snds.org website and is on its way (in hard copy) to members and subscribers.

We have great photos from SNDS and SND workshops in Copenhagen, Denmark, and in Cleveland, Ohio. We also look at paid for news on the web; at infographics that unite the world; the results from Poynter’s iPad Eyetrack research; the recently redesigned USA Today; and the new exciting possibilities in the SNDS competition. And much more!

Historien om TEX-antik

“Jeg får de mest fantastiske mails, gode historier og personlige bestillinger fra alle egne af Danmark, men også fra steder som Island, Norge, Sverige og Holland har jeg fået forespørgsler. Det er en fantastisk oplevelse.”

Lisbeths lidt nørdede niche-butik, TEX-antik, der sælger gode brugte (og enkelte nye) bøger om tekstil, håndarbejde, kunsthåndværk og kunst fra hjemmesiden tex-antik.com er stille og roligt ved at vokse sig stor. Vi har fået styr på kategorierne, fået støvet nogle lidt pænere reoler af, så bøgerne præsenterer sig godt, og der kommer hele tiden nye titler til salg. TEX-antik er ganske unik i Danmark – Lisbeth nægter at tage alle mulige slags bøger ind i sortimentet men koncentrerer sig om noget af det, hun ved mest om og derfor er god til at finde også sjældne bøger om – nemlig tekstil og håndarbejde.

Historien om, hvordan det hele begyndte for “byens bedste bogpusher”, som en tilfreds kunde har døbt TEX-antik, kan nu læses i en stort og flot opsat artikel i Haandarbejdets Fremmes blad nr. 3, november 2012. Find bladet på biblioteket, eller bestil det på haandarbejdetsfremme.info

TEX-antik findes, som nævnt, på tex-antik.com

“I now declare this bazaar open!”

Så er julebazaren i Den gamle Stationsbygning i Espergærde åbnet. Med masser af besøgende, sne på taget og varm glögg indendøre. Maleri, collage, smykker, keramik, skulptur, t-shirts og fotografi kan ses – og købes – i den charmerende gamle station, hvor Maj Ribergård og Ole Munk til daglig har tegnestue, men i december måned udvider butikken med en glad udstilling af kunst. Herunder er et par billeder fra åbningen – bazaren er åben frem til og med den 21. december, torsdag-søndag kl. 10-16.

Se mere information om udstillerne på
www.pryds.com/2012/11/22/velkommen-til-jule-kunst-bazar/

Tekstile smykker af Lisbeth Tolstrup