Tuesday, March 2, 2010

The printed newspaper has all the value it needs to win back old customers—and win over the Internet generation

By Bob Davis

A few days ago my wife, Kim, and I were standing in the checkout line at a grocery store. The clerk asked the middle-aged woman ahead of us if she had any coupons.

“I wish I had some coupons,” said the woman, who was shopping with her two grown children. “But I canceled my newspaper subscription, and now I don’t have any.”

Kim asked, “Do you mind if I ask why you canceled your newspaper subscription?”

“I stopped it two weeks ago because they were just piling up, but now I miss it and I am going to order it again,” replied the woman.

“What do you miss most?”

“Besides the coupons, I miss the entertainment section.”

We then turned our attention to the two grown children, who told us that they don’t read the newspaper because they read online, to which their mother chimed in, “I hate reading the paper online. I miss my paper, and I am going to get a new subscription.”

People who read the paper love doing so. For them it is a visceral experience that is as addictive as the morning cup of coffee. And I learned years ago that when you get people talking about what they value in the paper, they are passionate about it and sell themselves on keeping their subscriptions going.

Despite the Internet, I believe that if non-print readers were to experience the daily routine of reading the printed newspaper for one month, they would be as addicted to the physical newspaper as the generation before them.

Bernard Baruch was an advisor to five Presidents, a self-made multi-millionaire, a leader in his church, and a leader in his home and community. When asked the recipe for success, he included his advice to “read the newspaper every day.” In the newspaper business, our noble cause is to bring that ingredient in Bourke’s recipe for success to as many people as possible.

I am writing this article on a Sunday afternoon, after spending a couple hours with the day’s newspaper. I read an op-ed piece about Congressman Paul Ryan from Wisconsin and the tax reform bill that he has introduced into Congress designed to reform our tax code while addressing the pressing issues of health care reform and keeping social security solvent. Now, I surf the web as much as the next person, but I have to admit that before I read about Paul Ryan in the paper today, I had never heard of him, and the format of the print version helped me discover him and become a better informed citizen.

In the same issue, I learned through paid advertising that the acclaimed musical “Mama Mia” opens in my city this week. And I discovered that the Leonardo Davinci “Hand of the Genius” exhibition is at a local museum. The print newspaper continues to deliver valuable information that I would have missed online, and I believe that the newspaper industry owes the citizens of this country the opportunity to stay informed in ways that only print can provide.

Many in our industry are asking, how do we turn the trend of declining print circulation around? How do we get the Internet generation reading the paper in print every day? It all starts with a belief that we can do it—we must believe that:

  • If we can just get them to try it, they will like it and benefit from it.
  • We offer a key ingredient Bourke’s recipe for success, and if we don’t get the next generation to read the paper, we are doing them a disservice.
  • Our product has high value for the price. I pay less than 70 cents a day to get a world-class newspaper delivered to my driveway and filled with enriching information—plus coupons to save me money. Even if I paid a dollar per day, it would be a steal.
  • Our online presence is an extension of the newspaper, not a replacement of it.
Once these beliefs are firmly ingrained at every level within the newspaper, we are ready to start turning things around.

Then there’s education. We must reinvigorate our newspaper in education (NIE) programs. We need to partner with high schools and colleges where they use our newspapers every day in the classroom. Ideas include:
  • Sponsoring current events classes that require students read the paper.
  • Running school contests with great prizes and scholarships students can win by reading the paper.
The bottom line is that industry wide, we need to start selling the paper based on its demonstrated value, not with the latest discount or promotional gimmick. The newspaper is at least as much a bargain today as it was 100 years ago—and probably more of one.

With this kind of approach, I believe we’ll win back subscribers like the woman we met at the grocery store. And as long as we focus on value and experience, we’ll win over the Internet generation, too. It’s a challenge, but we’re up for it.

Bob Davis is the president of Robert C. Davis and Associates (www.robertcdavis.net). He specializes in creating custom programs that deliver measurable results for the newspaper industry. Bob is also co-founder of Surpass (www.surpasscalls.com), an outsource call center serving the needs of newspapers across the country.

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