I
was at the eye doctor the other day for an annual checkup that turned out to be
my bi-annual exam, and while in the waiting room the receptionist walked by and
randomly said aloud: “I wonder what would happen if we just got rid of all
these magazines?” pointing to the rack of about a dozen different titles. “I mean, everything is digital, right?”
And
that’s how it begins. Someone makes a
seemingly innocent comment, unsolicited and suddenly a decision is made. One by one, households, businesses, and
medical offices are making cost-cutting measures and the thing that gets put on
the chopping block is publications.
Everyone
is walking around with an iPad, Smartphone, or laptop. They are either doing work, socializing,
reading free content, shopping, or buying digital materials -- movies, music,
books, mags, and newspapers. Print is
dying, sadly. The question now is not whether print will survive, but when it
will cease to print. The next question
is, once it’s all digital, will a publication still retain its circulation and
remain profitable, given the reduced ad revenue and increased advertising, and
reading options?
At
one point it was thought that print and digital could co-exist, but they
can’t. The cost of print increase over
time, as does postage. And as reader preferences move towards digital, the
justification for print weakens.
On
the other hand, printed books still make sense to me, and certain types of
books need to be in print such as coffee table photography books. I think printed books should begin to include
advertising in them. This could help publishers
defer costs and price books competitively.
But
for now and the near future, we will continue to see a contraction in the
purchase of printed content. And don’t
be surprised if your local doctor no longer offers you reading material. He or she may instead offer you an electrical
outlet to plug in your device of choice.
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