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Media Industries Face Challenge in Harnessing Web-Based Markets

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The astonishing growth of the Internet is not the first techno-revolution that the media industry has had to face. But the speed at which it is occurring is creating challenges to fair competition and freedom of speech, said an industry expert.

“The world of the Web is impacting . . . print newspapers, publishing, magazines and also telephone companies, TV and radio,” said media observer Ken Auletta on April 3 at Fordham. “You cannot talk to one of those traditional media companies and not realize how frightened it is.”

The author of 10 books and long-time contributor of the “Annals of Communication” column for The New Yorker magazine participated in a keynote Q&A at “Media Industries in Hard Times,” a symposium at the Lincoln Center campus that attracted 200 media executives, commentators, scholars and students.

Auletta, who was among the first to popularize the idea of the “information superhighway,” said it took television decades to reach 50 percent of the American population; it has taken the Internet only 10 years.

He pointed to young, innovative Silicon Valley Internet company founders as leaders in a digital revolution that has left the hired management of traditional firms scrambling for market share.

Many people in the Valley are founders in the way William Paley (founder of CBS) was a founder,” Auletta said. “They’re entrepreneurs, and they think differently.”

For example, Larry Page, who co-founded Google in his mid-20s, was inspired to digitize the world’s books while sitting in his office playing with his Lego set, Auletta said.

In the past few years, Google has entered into agreements with several university libraries to digitize their collections. It has also collaborated with the Library of Congress to digitize some of its works, and, through other company acquisitions, is becoming an Internet industry giant.

“Here’s a guy sitting in his office dreaming big,” Auletta said. “He’s not thinking of all the obstacles. He’s not thinking of copywriting, or the author’s guild, or publishers. He’s just thinking, ‘Wouldn’t it be a cool service, and what would it do for search?’

“But, it has tremendous consequences for other industries.”

Auletta said the newspaper industry will face its toughest times in the next decade trying to move from print to a subscription-based Internet model. Moving newspapers online would save roughly 70 percent in costs, and yet investors do not necessarily view it as a growth industry because search engines like Google make a “commodity” of the news. The California-based company reportedly accounts for 60 percent of the world’s Internet searches and links to 25,000 newspapers and magazines.

“If you accept the fact that the Internet commoditizes news, then it is inevitable that it increases the value and impact of the brand,” said Auletta. But brands like The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal are “driven crazy” by the search engine’s algorithmic approach to site ranking, which bases its rank on which sites are most frequently visited and not necessarily who produces the best news product.

“How do you extend your Times or WSJ brand in a world where . . . users just want the information, and in a world where twittering has a 140-character limit? It’s an enormous challenge. But it’s also an opportunity.”

According to Auletta, traditional media managers should “lean forward” to understand the Web’s participation-based models that offer thousands of venues for consumer feedback and cross-communication, such as blogs and Twitter.

The conference was sponsored by the Graduate School of Business Administration’s Center for Communications, and the Media and Entertainment Alliance, and organized by Ev Dennis, Ph.D, area chair of communications and media management in the Center for Communications.

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