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2007 ASBPE National Editorial Conference Slideshow
Highlights from the American Society of Business Publication Editors' August 2007 conference, including quotes from speakers and links to more information
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- Slide 1: Highlights from ASBPE’s
National Editorial Conference
Aug. 2-3, 2007
www.asbpe.org
Slide show copyright © 2007 American Society of Business Publication Editors
- Slide 2: Publication-services provider and rexblog author Rex Hammock emphasized
that Web technologies like blogs, video and picture sharing, and slideshows
are simply tools that help us tell stories better. They also can help us connect
with our audience more deeply, and help users connect with one another.
The end result of all this: Users can make better decisions.
- Slide 3: BusinessWeek editor-in-chief
Steve Adler listed some
unexpected benefits of going
online:
• Content flows both ways—from
online to print as well as vice
versa.
• People who were getting jaded
doing the same thing for 20 years
have been re-energized.
• It forced BusinessWeek
managers to think harder about
how they staffed the organization.
• It led to a flatter organization.
- Slide 4: Putting it all together: Our panelists on integrating print and Web (l-r):
• Elizabeth Glagowski of 1to1 Media said 1to1’s readers have become more
sophisticated. They expect more channels of distribution, including the web,
and they don't want to be dictated to. They’d rather have reference material.
• 1to1’s Tom Schmalzl reminded editors that reader feedback can guide new
product development: phone calls to readers, events, focus groups, metrics,
letters to the editor, surveys, and editorial advisory boards.
• Andy Wright explained how ENR made paid web content work. A free trial and
the right pricing were key. The magic numbers for ENR: $4.95 per article, $9.95
for a month’s access, or $82 for a year. Users get a 7-day free trial.
- Slide 5: At the Azbee Awards banquet
on Aug. 2, plaques lie stacked,
waiting to be given out.
Fuel magazine’s Silver Award
for New Publication Design is
at the top of the pile.
Hanley Wood’s Digital Home
took home the Gold Award for
in that category.
The Bronze Award went to
Rejuvenate, a magazine for
meeting planners.
- Slide 6: The two international winners of
the ASBPE/TABPI
Young Leaders Scholarship:
• Vanessa Chris, associate editor,
Canadian Mortgage Professional;
• Vincent ter Beek (far right),
editor, Pig Progress.
The scholarship paid their
conference registration fees.
There also were five American
winners.
With Vanessa and Vincent: past
ASBPE president and current
president of Trade, Association,
and Business Publications
International (TABPI) Paul Heney.
- Slide 7: At the banquet (l-r): Paul Heney with scholarship winners Travis Stanton,
Deborah Cassell, and Vincent ter Beek. Also pictured is ASBPE Chicago officer
Tina Barbaccia.
- Slide 8: Designer Alex White introduced the
winner of this year’s
Lifetime Achievement Award – his
father, publication designer Jan White.
Though the award celebrated the
importance of design, Alex argued that
design still is not always integrated
with editorial as it should be.
At too many publications, the design
staff’s position near the bottom of the
masthead reflects its position in the
organizational hierarchy.
- Slide 9: Lifetime Achievement Award winner Jan White receives his award from ASBPE
associate director Robin Sherman. White, who calls himself a visual journalist,
said publication’s design must do two things: Establish its character so it can
be recognized at a glance, and immediately establish its intellectual value. The
intellectual content is the journalistic part of the equation; the immediate
communication of it is where good design comes in. More on Jan White.
- Slide 10: ASBPE President Roy Harris
accepted the
Stephen Barr Award for
individual writing on behalf of
freelancer David McClintick.
McClintick won for his story
“How Harvard Lost Russia” in
Institutional Investor.
Said one judge: “This article
provided a very rare view of
the process of moving to a
market-based economy …”
The award carries a $500 prize.
More about David McClintick
and his award-winning story.
- Slide 11: PC World editor-in-chief Harry
McCracken shows off his publication’s
Web Site of the Year award.
The judges said:
“The presence of video for describing
tips, test drives, and case studies,
coupled with interactive attributes
such as polls and tips from readers,
enable PCWorld’s Web site to be one
of the most useful Web sites of its
kind.”
- Slide 12: Public CIO editor Todd Newcombe (right) accepts a
Magazine of the Year Award. The magazine won in the under-80,000-
circulation category.
Said the judges: “Top tier — compelling information — brings ordinary
subject matter to higher level — great magazine without flaunting itself —
appears effortless.”
- Slide 13: Builder editor-in-chief Denise
Dersin receives the
Magazine of the Year award for
a publication with circulation
of 80,000 or more.
“Editorially challenging —
takes gutsy approaches to
issues — examines major
national issues and their effect
on readers — transcendent
reporting,” were among the
judges’ comments.
- Slide 14: Consultant Lou Ann Sabatier
spoke about increasing the odds
for the success of a new launch.
Sabatier said lead generation
alone is not enough to predict
which new products will succeed;
in the future we may use systems
that predict what consumers will
want next.
- Slide 15: B2B “media watchdogs,” left to right:
• Folio:’s Matt Kinsman: “As editors, we have to claim our ownership online. Unlike
print, [other departments] think online is their playground as well.”
• Ellis Booker of BtoB and Media Business said the most powerful predictor of
purchase decisions is peer recommendations. “If you can embrace that
conversation … that's an extremely powerful channel.” A story in the Aug. 13 BtoB
details media companies’ goals and budgets for web projects.
• When it comes to motivating staff to take on web projects, Jeremy Greenfield of
min’s b2b advised, “Promote, incentivize, and give massive raises to those who
respond well.”
- Slide 16: Details on selected conference sessions — including the
keynote address by former Time Inc. editor Norman Pearlstine —
can be found in the September/October issue of
ASBPE’s member newsletter.
More information
ASBPE’s National Editorial Conference
ASBPE Azbee awards program
ASBPE membership information
ASBPE home page