Slideshow transcript
Slide 1: The Future of Media - ‘Media Nation’ A Presentation to the Toronto Association of Law Librarians March 22, 2007
Slide 2: Today
Slide 3: Today 1. Introduction
Slide 4: Today 1. Introduction 2. How Did We Get Here?
Slide 5: Today 1. Introduction 2. How Did We Get Here? 3. The Future of Media
Slide 6: Today 1. Introduction 2. How Did We Get Here? 3. The Future of Media 4. Some Challenges
Slide 7: 1. ntroduction I
Slide 8: www.hyndmanlaw.com
Slide 9: www.robhyndman.com
Slide 10: www.meshconference.com
Slide 11: 4 laptops, no newspapers
Slide 12: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007
Slide 13: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007 •Tinto, on Roncesvalles, for brunch
Slide 14: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007 •Tinto, on Roncesvalles, for brunch •No newspapers
Slide 15: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007 •Tinto, on Roncesvalles, for brunch •No newspapers •Free wireless + 4 laptops
Slide 16: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007 •Tinto, on Roncesvalles, for brunch •No newspapers •Free wireless + 4 laptops •Headphones
Slide 17: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007 •Tinto, on Roncesvalles, for brunch •No newspapers •Free wireless + 4 laptops •Headphones •iTunes, blogs, chat, YouTube
Slide 18: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007 •Tinto, on Roncesvalles, for brunch •No newspapers •Free wireless + 4 laptops •Headphones •iTunes, blogs, chat, YouTube •(No Canadian content)
Slide 19: 4 laptops, no newspapers •May 18, 2007 •Tinto, on Roncesvalles, for brunch •No newspapers •Free wireless + 4 laptops •Headphones •iTunes, blogs, chat, YouTube •(No Canadian content) •All < 40
Slide 20: Message:
Slide 21: We are standing on the threshold of a revolution - a profound transformation in the way we create and consume media
Slide 22: It is going to change everything.
Slide 23: Why?
Slide 24: •Media production is being democratized
Slide 25: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized
Slide 26: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging
Slide 27: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social
Slide 28: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social •Media can be distributed from anywhere
Slide 29: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social •Media can be distributed from anywhere •Media can be consumed everywhere
Slide 30: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social •Media can be distributed from anywhere •Media can be consumed everywhere •Media is becoming hyperlocal
Slide 31: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social •Media can be distributed from anywhere •Media can be consumed everywhere •Media is becoming hyperlocal •Media is narrowcasting
Slide 32: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social •Media can be distributed from anywhere •Media can be consumed everywhere •Media is becoming hyperlocal •Media is narrowcasting •Media has utility: search and linking
Slide 33: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social •Media can be distributed from anywhere •Media can be consumed everywhere •Media is becoming hyperlocal •Media is narrowcasting •Media has utility: search and linking •Media reproduction has zero marginal cost
Slide 34: 2. How did we get here?
Slide 35: In the Beginning, there was the Book
Slide 36: Yet another revolution
Slide 37: And then there was the newspaper ...
Slide 38: “Check it out,” I said, “It’s a different kind of news delivery technology. It’s called a news- paper.”
Slide 39: “How does it work?” he asked.
Slide 40: “They have giant printers in Denver that print up thousands of these every day with news that was current as of something called ‘press time,’ and then they truck them out to towns, divide the truckloads into cars, and drop them on subscribers’ doorstep.”
Slide 41: “You paid for this?…” he frowned, shaking his head. “How do you search it?”
Slide 42: “It’s not really searchable, but it’s scannable. See, you can open up the pages wide and see lots of stories.”
Slide 43: “Looks like mostly ads.” ... - Amy Gahran, PoynterOnline.org
Slide 44: And then there was film ...
Slide 45: Newsreel
Slide 46: And then there was ... “Internet” (1993)
Slide 47: CBC on “Internet”
Slide 48: Old Media:
Slide 49: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting)
Slide 50: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs
Slide 51: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs
Slide 52: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs • Defined schedules
Slide 53: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs • Defined schedules • Centralized editing
Slide 54: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs • Defined schedules • Centralized editing • Limited functionality and useability; one dimensional
Slide 55: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs • Defined schedules • Centralized editing • Limited functionality and useability; one dimensional • Difficult to share
Slide 56: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs • Defined schedules • Centralized editing • Limited functionality and useability; one dimensional • Difficult to share • Often not relevant to “me” - not “my” media
Slide 57: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs • Defined schedules • Centralized editing • Limited functionality and useability; one dimensional • Difficult to share • Often not relevant to “me” - not “my” media • A few “big” brands, dominating clearly defined different forms of media: newspapers, TV networks, music labels, radio stations ...
Slide 58: • Based on geographical monopolies, gov’t licences and high barriers to entry (equipment, cable infrastructure, broadcasting) • High production costs • High distribution costs • Defined schedules • Centralized editing • Limited functionality and useability; one dimensional • Difficult to share • Often not relevant to “me” - not “my” media • A few “big” brands, dominating clearly defined different forms of media: newspapers, TV networks, music labels, radio stations ... • = concentrated ownership; formulaic content; “mass” media
Slide 59: 3. The Future of Media
Slide 60: •Media production is being democratized •Media production is being atomized •Media formats are converging •Media is becoming social •Media can be distributed from anywhere •Media can be consumed everywhere •Media is becoming hyperlocal •Media is narrowcasting •Media has utility: search and linking •Media reproduction has zero marginal cost
Slide 61: Media production is being democratized
Slide 62: “The people formerly known as the audience” - Jay Rosen, PressThink.com
Slide 63: “Once they were your printing presses; now that humble device, the blog, has given the press to us. That’s why blogs have been called little First Amendment machines. They extend freedom of the press to more actors.”
Slide 64: “Once it was your radio station, broadcasting on your frequency. Now that brilliant invention, podcasting, gives radio to us. And we have found more uses for it than you did.”
Slide 65: “Shooting, editing and distributing video once belonged to you, Big Media. Only you could afford to reach a TV audience built in your own image. Now video is coming into the user’s hands, and audience-building by former members of the audience is alive and well on the Web.”
Slide 66: “You were once (exclusively) the editors of the news, choosing what ran on the front page. Now we can edit the news, and our choices send items to our own front pages.”
Slide 67: “A highly centralized media system had connected people “up” to big social agencies and centers of power but not “across” to each other. Now the horizontal flow, citizen-to-citizen, is as real and consequential as the vertical one.” - Jay Rosen
Slide 68: “Give the people control of media, they will use it. The corollary: Don’t give the people control of media, and you will lose. Whenever citizens can exercise control, they will.” - Jeff Jarvis, BuzzMachine.com
Slide 69: Why does this matter?
Slide 70: “Vote Different”
Slide 71: Anonymously created
Slide 72: March 5 - 22: ~2.3M views on YouTube
Slide 73: “... anybody can do powerful emotional ads .... It will no longer be a top-down candidate message; that's a 20th century broadcast model.” - Simon Rosenberg, New Democratic Network
Slide 75: The tools:
Slide 81: Media production is being atomized
Slide 82: Numbers
Slide 83: Numbers •Technorati: approx 57,000,000 blogs; many not counted; some inactive
Slide 84: Numbers •Technorati: approx 57,000,000 blogs; many not counted; some inactive •YouTube: serves > 100,000,000 videos every day
Slide 85: Numbers •Technorati: approx 57,000,000 blogs; many not counted; some inactive •YouTube: serves > 100,000,000 videos every day •Latest Flickr photo is approx #426,922,000
Slide 86: Numbers •Technorati: approx 57,000,000 blogs; many not counted; some inactive •YouTube: serves > 100,000,000 videos every day •Latest Flickr photo is approx #426,922,000 •Number of MySpace “users” > 100,000,000; active users perhaps approx 50,000,000
Slide 87: Numbers •Technorati: approx 57,000,000 blogs; many not counted; some inactive •YouTube: serves > 100,000,000 videos every day •Latest Flickr photo is approx #426,922,000 •Number of MySpace “users” > 100,000,000; active users perhaps approx 50,000,000 •Number of english Wikipedia articles > 1,690,000
Slide 88: Numbers •Technorati: approx 57,000,000 blogs; many not counted; some inactive •YouTube: serves > 100,000,000 videos every day •Latest Flickr photo is approx #426,922,000 •Number of MySpace “users” > 100,000,000; active users perhaps approx 50,000,000 •Number of english Wikipedia articles > 1,690,000 •In January 2007 Libsyn served > 63,000,000 podcasts
Slide 89: Old Media
Slide 90: New Media
Slide 102: A perfect storm
Slide 103: A perfect storm •Inexpensive tools •Digital cameras •Cameraphones •Camcorders •Blogging platforms •Digital recorders
Slide 104: A perfect storm •Inexpensive tools •Broadband + High penetration of internet •Digital cameras usage •Cameraphones •Camcorders •Blogging platforms •Digital recorders
Slide 105: A perfect storm •Inexpensive tools •Broadband + High penetration of internet •Digital cameras usage •Cameraphones •Web 2.0: Ajax, open API’s •Camcorders •Blogging platforms •Digital recorders
Slide 106: A perfect storm •Inexpensive tools •Broadband + High penetration of internet •Digital cameras usage •Cameraphones •Web 2.0: Ajax, open API’s •Camcorders •Wireless •Blogging platforms •Digital recorders
Slide 107: A perfect storm •Inexpensive tools •Broadband + High penetration of internet •Digital cameras usage •Cameraphones •Web 2.0: Ajax, open API’s •Camcorders •Wireless •Blogging platforms •Inexpensive, powerful •Digital recorders laptops
Slide 108: A perfect storm •Inexpensive tools •Broadband + High penetration of internet •Digital cameras usage •Cameraphones •Web 2.0: Ajax, open API’s •Camcorders •Wireless •Blogging platforms •Inexpensive, powerful •Digital recorders laptops •iPod
Slide 109: Democratization & atomization tap into basic human needs
Slide 110: Democratization & atomization tap into basic human needs • Desire to express oneself
Slide 111: Democratization & atomization tap into basic human needs • Desire to express oneself • For some, digital narcissism
Slide 112: Democratization & atomization tap into basic human needs • Desire to express oneself • For some, digital narcissism • A need to hear from ‘people like me’
Slide 113: Democratization & atomization tap into basic human needs • Desire to express oneself • For some, digital narcissism • A need to hear from ‘people like me’ • “The internet flatters us with attention in a way that Hollywood no longer can” - Steve Bryant, ReelPopBlog.com
Slide 114: Democratization & atomization tap into basic human needs • Desire to express oneself • For some, digital narcissism • A need to hear from ‘people like me’ • “The internet flatters us with attention in a way that Hollywood no longer can” - Steve Bryant, ReelPopBlog.com • To be told the truth - Old Media are often complicit in the ‘stories’ that ‘BigPolitics’ and ‘BigBusiness’ tell us • Ann Coulter / John Edwards • Trent Lott / Strom Thurmond • Iraq War
Slide 115: Why does this matter?
Slide 116: Anyone can produce media
Slide 117: The ‘audience’ is fragmenting
Slide 118: Newspaper circulation is falling; accelerating
Slide 119: (“Journalism is becoming a smaller part of people’s information mix. The press is no longer gatekeeper over what the public knows. Journalists have reacted relatively slowly. They are only now beginning to re- imagine their role.” - State of the News Media 2007 Report)
Slide 120: Magazines are closing
Slide 121: TV news audience is falling
Slide 122: CD sales are plunging (-20% from last year); sales of digital singles are growing (+54%)
Slide 123: And next ...
Slide 126: Note: OldMedia doesn’t ‘get’ the Web
Slide 127: OldMedia websites are awkward, unattractive, inefficient and hard to use
Slide 128: Content delivery is clumsy
Slide 129: Are they capable of adapting?
Slide 130: Or do they need to be ... replaced?
Slide 131: Media formats are converging
Slide 132: Is Slate.com a magazine, a radio station, a TV network, or a town hall meeting?
Slide 133: Magazine
Slide 134: Radio
Slide 135: TV
Slide 136: Town Hall
Slide 137: What about The New York Times?
Slide 138: News
Slide 139: TV
Slide 140: Radio
Slide 141: Other media also: radio stations in the U.S are starting to host video on their websites
Slide 142: Why does this matter?
Slide 143: The Web is format agnostic - any message can use any medium
Slide 144: Traditional media formats are competing with each other as never before
Slide 145: Media is becoming social
Slide 146: Media feeds our internal lives
Slide 147: But media also enriches our relationships
Slide 148: And relationships enrich our use of media
Slide 152: Why does this matter?
Slide 153: Overlaying the mediascape with a network that connects us elevates the role of media in our lives
Slide 154: Media becomes more relevant and useful
Slide 155: Media can be distributed from anywhere
Slide 156: In 1990, we read, watched, and listened to what was worth delivering to us
Slide 157: Today, ‘The World is Flat’
Slide 158: Today, media must compete beyond borders
Slide 163: Media is now competing across geography
Slide 164: (more fragmentation)
Slide 165: Media can be consumed everywhere
Slide 166: Media Nation
Slide 167: Media Nation •iPod nation
Slide 168: Media Nation •iPod nation •Satellite radio
Slide 169: Media Nation •iPod nation •Satellite radio •Wi-fi and laptops
Slide 170: Media Nation •iPod nation •Satellite radio •Wi-fi and laptops •Mobile video and audio
Slide 171: Media Nation •iPod nation •Satellite radio •Wi-fi and laptops •Mobile video and audio •3G networks are coming
Slide 172: Media Nation •iPod nation •Satellite radio •Wi-fi and laptops •Mobile video and audio •3G networks are coming •Municipal wi-fi is coming
Slide 173: Media Nation •iPod nation •Satellite radio •Wi-fi and laptops •Mobile video and audio •3G networks are coming •Municipal wi-fi is coming •Video iPods
Slide 174: Media is becoming hyperlocal
Slide 175: We are starting to see more local media
Slide 176: All news is local / all politics is local
Slide 177: Blogs + digital cameras + podcasts + online video
Slide 183: (more fragmentation)
Slide 184: Media is narrowcasting
Slide 185: narrowcasting = media for ‘me’
Slide 186: highly ‘targeted’ media
Slide 190: Recommendation engines narrowcast, too
Slide 193: RSS = syndication for ‘me’ - ‘MyMedia’
Slide 194: there is media for every audience
Slide 195: and an audience for all media
Slide 196: (more fragmentation)
Slide 197: Media has utility: search and linking
Slide 198: Underneath the proliferation of content there is another reason for the growth of content online
Slide 199: It’s better
Slide 200: Online content is more useful than offline
Slide 201: Search, archive, copy, paste, link, rip, mix and burn
Slide 202: Do more with your media
Slide 203: Media reproduction has zero marginal cost
Slide 204: Not only are the fixed costs of creating digital media plummeting, but (except for bandwidth costs), the cost to serve one additional customer with digital media is zero
Slide 205: Abundance economics: when MC~0, give it away for free (loss leader)
Slide 206: Bands are giving away music for free to generate live event interest and ticket sales
Slide 207: The price of much new media is now zero
Slide 208: But Old Media doesn’t cost zero
Slide 209: So what happens next? Who pays for all of this?
Slide 210: Subscriptions?
Slide 211: For some services, it makes sense - music, Flickr Pro, WSJ, Joost, etc.
Slide 212: But new competitors keep driving cost down
Slide 213: And somewhere on the internet there is always someone ready to give it - or something almost as good as it - away for free
Slide 214: And most user-generated content is free
Slide 215: (The internet is the most efficient machine created for squeezing profit margins to zero)
Slide 216: And it’s not working for everyone
Slide 217: The Globe and Mail Insider? New York Times Select?
Slide 218: 66% of NYT Select members get it free with their print subscription
Slide 219: Advertising?
Slide 220: RPM = “revenue per mille” = $ of revenue - whether by impression, or click, or result - per thousand impressions
Slide 221: •Many general sites can get only a $1 RPM
Slide 222: •Many general sites can get only a $1 RPM •Some demographic targeting: $5 RPM
Slide 223: •Many general sites can get only a $1 RPM •Some demographic targeting: $5 RPM •Quality demographic with ‘extras’: $20 RPM
Slide 224: •Many general sites can get only a $1 RPM •Some demographic targeting: $5 RPM •Quality demographic with ‘extras’: $20 RPM •To generate $50M annual revenues: •$1 RPM: 50 billion pageviews a year •$5 RPM: 10 billion pageviews a year •$20 RPM: 2.5 billion pageviews a year
Slide 225: •Many general sites can get only a $1 RPM •Some demographic targeting: $5 RPM •Quality demographic with ‘extras’: $20 RPM •To generate $50M annual revenues: •$1 RPM: 50 billion pageviews a year •$5 RPM: 10 billion pageviews a year •$20 RPM: 2.5 billion pageviews a year •Microsoft.com: approx 10 billion PVs per year?
Slide 226: •Many general sites can get only a $1 RPM •Some demographic targeting: $5 RPM •Quality demographic with ‘extras’: $20 RPM •To generate $50M annual revenues: •$1 RPM: 50 billion pageviews a year •$5 RPM: 10 billion pageviews a year •$20 RPM: 2.5 billion pageviews a year •Microsoft.com: approx 10 billion PVs per year? •Globeandmail.com: approx 1 billion PVs per year?
Slide 227: •Many general sites can get only a $1 RPM •Some demographic targeting: $5 RPM •Quality demographic with ‘extras’: $20 RPM •To generate $50M annual revenues: •$1 RPM: 50 billion pageviews a year •$5 RPM: 10 billion pageviews a year •$20 RPM: 2.5 billion pageviews a year •Microsoft.com: approx 10 billion PVs per year? •Globeandmail.com: approx 1 billion PVs per year? •$5M in revenues with $5 RPM = 1 billion PVs per year
Slide 228: And, Canadian advertisers are not that interested in U.S. traffic (and globally, vice versa)
Slide 229: And, Canada is a small country - it’s hard to assemble a mass audience
Slide 230: And, the audience is fragmenting
Slide 231: And, impressions are not a great measure of engagement to begin with
Slide 232: And, the medium is not like TV - it’s hard to focus the audience on the message - they multi-task
Slide 233: And, without a focused, passive, mass audience, it’s hard to use online advertising to brand
Slide 234: Selling to people who already have intention is one thing. How do we create intention on the internet?
Slide 235: Advertisers know this, and while online ad spending is increasing, they are wary
Slide 236: This is why advertisers want the internet to be like TV - they want the audience to passively digest
Slide 237: Coming soon to computers near you: the battle over what online video means to advertisers and what it means to audiences
Slide 238: Does this mean that content can’t ‘scale’? Is the end of “mass” media? And / or BigMedia?
Slide 239: 4. ome Challenges S
Slide 240: Viacom vs. Google - what does it mean?
Slide 241: Related: BigMedia trying to create its own captive competitor to YouTube
Slide 242: U.S. copyright royalties on Internet Radio
Slide 243: Measuring traffic and engagement reliably
Slide 244: Unlocking the secrets to branding online
Slide 245: Figuring out how to get paid
Slide 246: Thank you! Questions?
Slide 247: The Future of Media - ‘Media Nation’ A Presentation to the Toronto Association of Law Librarians March 22, 2007
Slide 248: The Future of Media - ‘Media Nation’ A Presentation to the Toronto Association of Law Librarians March 22, 2007




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