Welcome to SportsJournalists.com, a friendly forum for discussing all things sports and journalism.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register for a free account to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Down to five days. They already were six days a week. For generations.I imagine the press room folk don't want a split weekend. Note that their Bennington and Brattleboro papers are only going to six days, and I think they print those in Pittsfield.
Knowing nothing about the paper or the region, I'm surprised they kept Tuesday.
Just about every Tuesday paper I see in my area (the Northwest) is skin-on-bones scrawny. Wednesday and Sunday are the days advertisers prefer, and at our shop, we have feature sections with targeted advertising (Outdoors and Entertainment) to bolster the Thursday and Friday editions. Granted, the Entertainment section ads have been rather scarce since COVID ...
Anyway, if you're going to cut back on print, a four-day week makes sense to me (W-F, and a weekend edition for Saturday-Sunday). Maybe they thought a three-day gap without a new print edition was too long for their market.
It's grim news either way.
Here's the problem: Newspapers are heading fast toward a world where advertising isn't a thing. Flip through any random local print edition, and notice just how few ads there are. Not how small they are, but just their general lack of existence. As those advertising contracts expire, many — most — won't be renewed. A print edition cannot support itself, nor generate revenue, on subscriptions and single-copy sales alone.
A digital product has nowhere near the expense of a print product. No dead trees, no fossil fuel. A digital product, at the proper scale, can conceivably support itself on reader revenue alone.
In my town, I face the situation where I not only don't have a seven-day print product, I don't have a seven-day web site. I logged in this morning to each of the three sites that cover my area (two Gannett, one independent) and saw no stories that were updated in the last 24 hours. That concerns me way more than not getting a seven-day print edition. If truly nothing happened here since Saturday evening, I could see that, but I'm reasonably sure that's not the case.
This is the big problem I've seen: Anytime a newspaper reduces the number of days for the print edition, you always see "we're expanding our online coverage" or some statement like that. But it almost never happens.Here's the problem: Newspapers are heading fast toward a world where advertising isn't a thing. Flip through any random local print edition, and notice just how few ads there are. Not how small they are, but just their general lack of existence. As those advertising contracts expire, many — most — won't be renewed. A print edition cannot support itself, nor generate revenue, on subscriptions and single-copy sales alone.
A digital product has nowhere near the expense of a print product. No dead trees, no fossil fuel. A digital product, at the proper scale, can conceivably support itself on reader revenue alone.
In my town, I face the situation where I not only don't have a seven-day print product, I don't have a seven-day web site. I logged in this morning to each of the three sites that cover my area (two Gannett, one independent) and saw no stories that were updated in the last 24 hours. That concerns me way more than not getting a seven-day print edition. If truly nothing happened here since Saturday evening, I could see that, but I'm reasonably sure that's not the case.