By Megan Garber Some of the most exciting work taking place in The New York Times building is being done on the 28th floor, in the paper’s Research and Development Lab. The group serves essentially as a skunkworks project for a news institution that stands to benefit, financially and otherwise, from creative thinking; as Michael Zimbalist, the Times’ [...]
Archives for posts tagged ‘New York Times’
The New York Times’ R&D Lab has built a tool that explores the life stories take in the social space
zaterdag, 23 april 2011
Inside the NYT Lincoln Deal: It’s About Dollars, Traffic and Conversion
maandag, 18 april 2011
Apr 7, 2011 So, it looks like an intriguing deal. Ford Motors’ Lincoln is subsidizing 100,000 new NYT digital subscriptions. Well, it is an intriguing deal, but it’s more nuanced than it seems, and in that nuance, we see some of the next models for how the digital circulation business and the digital ad business [...]
The NYT Pay Plan’s Most Dangerous Foe: Perception
maandag, 28 maart 2011
Staci D. Kramer Mar 27, 2011 By now, we were supposed to have clarity about how The New York Times will use a meter to create a digital subscription revenue stream. After all, the plan went into effect in Canada March 17 and is supposed to start rolling out in the United States and globally Monday [...]
The newsonomics of Sunday paper/tablet subscriptions
vrijdag, 25 maart 2011
By Ken Doctor Digital news business models are playing out on pool tables these days. Break the balls and you have no idea where they’re going or how they’ll impact each other. We’ve got paid content models of varying kinds. We’ve got the new combining “free world” of AOL/Huffington Post+ taking aim at the emerging paid world. [...]
Paywall or no paywall, print is still what pays
woensdag, 23 maart 2011
Peter Preston The Observer, Sunday 20 March 2011 The New York Times’s model for online charging will no doubt be widely copied. But according to one analyst, print will still be providing 86% of UK newspapers’ revenues even in 2017. So, at long, long last, we have the paywall policy all Americannewspapers – and many [...]
Media Buyers Say NYT Advertising May Actually Get A Boost From Paywall
maandag, 21 maart 2011
David Kaplan @davidaKaplanMar 18, 2011 11:15 AM ET Media buyers don’t expect the New York Times’ online ad revenue, which was up double digits last year, to take a hit from the company’s new digital subscription plans. Some even see a scenario where the NYT will be able to charge higher rates—if the newspaper hits the expected number of [...]
New York Times launches online charging
vrijdag, 18 maart 2011
By Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson in New York Published: March 17 2011 The New York Times has launched its long-awaited model for charging for news online, with a “metered” subscription approach that will charge more than some analysts had expected, but ensure that most readers never encounter the paywall. NYTimes.com will become the largest non-financial newspaper to charge at [...]
Bob Woodward: ‘You get the truth at night, the lies during the day’
woensdag, 16 maart 2011
by Mallary Jean Tenore Published Mar. 15, 2011 6:34 pm Updated Mar. 16, 2011 9:56 am During a visit to Poynter on Tuesday, Bob Woodward talked about Watergate’s original code name, why he likes his iPad, and the best time of day to access hard-to-reach sources. Below, I’ve highlighted his thoughts on these topics and others. The quotes are drawn [...]
NYT Looks for New Revenue Streams to Supplement Print Ad Struggles
dinsdag, 8 maart 2011
The New York Times (NYT) primarily operates in the newspaper business, with ownership of The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, Boston Globe, and About.com. It competes for online advertising dollars with hybrid publications like News Corp’s (NWS) The Wall Street Journal as well as internet-based outlets like Yahoo (YHOO), Google (GOOG) and AOL (AOL)…more
New York Times Ad Sales Slip
woensdag, 2 maart 2011
By TESS STYNES New York Times Co. said print advertising sales decreased in the low single digits on a percentage basis last month, though the declines continued to moderate. Meanwhile, digital advertising revenue growth was in the mid-single digits, as solid growth at its news media division was partly offset by softness at About Group. The [...]
Apple sees new money in old media
zondag, 24 januari 2010
By YUKARI IWATANI KANE And ETHAN SMITH With the new tablet device that is debuting next week, Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs is betting he can reshape businesses like textbooks, newspapers and television much the way his iPod revamped the music industry—and expand Apple’s influence and revenue as a content middleman. In developing the device, Apple focused on [...]
The Times to Charge for Frequent Access to Its Web Site
vrijdag, 22 januari 2010
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA Taking a step that has tempted and terrified much of the newspaper industry, The New York Times announced on Wednesday that it would charge some frequent readers for access to its Web site — news that drew ample reaction from media analysts and consumers, ranging from enthusiastic to withering…more
More pay, less wall: the websites that already successfully charge for content
donderdag, 7 januari 2010
Many websites already offer charging options – but few, as Rupert Murdoch seems to suggest, simply lock browsers out Charles Arthur, guardian.co.uk - Wednesday 2 December 2009 23.59 GMT From the hands thrown to cheeks at Rupert Murdoch‘s announcement that he’s looking to put paywalls up around his newspaper properties online, you might think that they’re the unicorns [...]
Adding Fees and Fences on Media Sites
woensdag, 30 december 2009
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA and TIM ARANGO Over more than a decade, consumers became accustomed to the sweet, steady flow of free news, pictures, videos and music on the Internet. Paying was for suckers and old fogeys. Content, like wild horses, wanted to be free. Now, however, there are growing signs that this free ride is drawing to [...]
Recession, Revolution and a Leaner Times
dinsdag, 3 november 2009
The New York Times - By CLARK HOYT Published: October 31, 2009 IN his autobiography “The Good Times,” Russell Baker described the Times newsroom he joined in 1954 as “comically overstaffed.” Baker, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington reporter and columnist, quoted a colleague’s explanation for all the idle reporters playing bridge and working crossword puzzles: Adolph Ochs, [...]
Barry Diller: The Internet ‘Absolutely’ Will Become a ‘Paid System’. Time Projection: Within 5 Years
donderdag, 11 juni 2009
The days of the free Internet will draw to a close over the next five years, according to the chairman and chief executive of IAC, the interactive services company which operates a collection of more than 30 Internet sites which produce $1.5 billion a year in revenue. The only missing link, according to Barry Diller, who cut his [...]
The Times and the Future
dinsdag, 19 mei 2009
By DAVID CARR Published: May 17, 2009 Write about the media long enough and eventually you type your way to your own doorstep. Lately, when I finish an interview, most subjects have a question of their own. “What’s going to happen to The New York Times?” they ask, some plaintively, others pruriently. In the last [...]
The Times & CUNY (and others) go hyperlocal
zaterdag, 28 februari 2009
(The Buzzmachine) The New York Times is about to announce that it is starting a hyperlocal product called The Local working with our students at CUNY’s Graduate School of Journalism. PaidContent has the story early. So I’ll tell you about the school’s and my involvement and plans. Read more…
New York Times considers charging for its website
dinsdag, 3 februari 2009
New York Times considers charging for its website Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) – New York Times Co. may charge for access to its flagship newspaper’s Web site less than two years after terminating an earlier online-subscription service ..more
The Future of Newspapers
donderdag, 11 december 2008
The Future of Newspapers It has been a hellish week for the newspaper industry. Tribune, owner of the LA Times and the Chicago Tribune, filed for bankruptcy, while The New York Times Company hocked its new Renzo Piano-designed skyscraper. Worse still was the… more


