A Septuagenarian Blogger

The Washington Post has an article about hotel CEO J.W. “Bill” Marriott and his new blog.

Right now, his is the only Marriott blog, and he dictates his posts into a tape recorder for transcribing. But it’s pretty clearly not just PR spin; you can also listen to the audio version, and these are his thoughts and reflections that are being converted to text.

So if a blog with video is called a vlog, what’s a blog with audio? An alog?

It will be interesting to see where they take this, and whether other employees such as hotel managers start blogging.

They seem to have thought through some of the implications of having a public blog, as indicated in their terms of use when you add a comment. Comments are moderated, and they say that just as they would ask someone to leave if they were shouting at the top of his lungs in their hotel lobby, they are going to expect decorum in the blog.

TechnoratiTechnorati: , ,

More for Your (No) Money

For several months, I’ve thought it was odd that YouTube and Blip.tv let users upload an unlimited number of videos for free, and just put a 100 megabyte limit on each video, while Flickr has a 20 megabyte per month limit on its free service (more than that costs extra.)

Clearly, Flickr was operating more like a traditional business, offering a low level of free service, but then charging for heavy users, whereas YouTube was giving it all away all the time to generate maximum traffic. So, I was working around it by taking screen shots of my photo files (such as those of my daughter’s wedding below), and then uploading them to Flickr, reducing the file sizes by 90 percent or so. And since I was only using Flickr for blogging, I didn’t need the super high resolution.

So, when I was uploading some full-size photos earlier this month, I was shocked to see that after uploading several pictures I had used only 6% of my montly allotment…which led me to see the limit had been raised to 100 megabytes.

So, now Flickr is an even better value: instead of 20 megabytes for nothing, you get 100 megabytes. That’s a lot more for your (no) money.

TechnoratiTechnorati: , , ,

Newspaper Half-Price Sale

Star Tribune logo

I’m maybe a little late to notice this (I’ll hide behind the excuse of my daughter’s wedding), but it’s interesting to see that in just eight years, the Minneapolis Star Tribune has lost half its value, as the paper reported December 27:

The McClatchy Co. capped a year of dramatic changes in the newspaper industry Tuesday by announcing the surprise sale of the Star Tribune, its largest newspaper, to a private investment group.

The $530 million sale will place the future of Minnesota’s dominant newspaper in the hands of Avista Capital Partners, a New York-based partnership of former investment bankers. It also continues a trend that accelerated this year in which large newspaper companies, such as McClatchy, Knight Ridder and Tribune, either winnowed their holdings or put themselves up for sale. Private owners have emerged to bid for many of the big-city papers that have come into play as a result.

McClatchy paid $1.2 billion for the newspaper in 1998. Although its circulation and advertising results in the past several years had run into the same headwinds that other large dailies have encountered, the Star Tribune remains solidly profitable.

McClatchy, in explaining its decision, said the Star Tribune had been underperforming in recent years.

“The Star Tribune did very well for a few years, but recently it has lagged in performance,” McClatchy CEO Gary Pruitt said. “Large metro papers have underperformed smaller ones because they’ve been more dependent on classified ads, which have been most affected by the Internet. The Star Tribune suffered from that.”

While the sale price is far less than McClatchy paid in 1998, the company will also realize $160 million in tax benefits as a result, making the total benefit to McClatchy closer to $700 million.

If anyone doubts that the mainstream media are facing significant economic problems, this is further evidence that is consistent with my posts about circulation and audience declines and layoffs here and here.

Some have suggested that the interesting trend is private firms taking these large public media companies private…that the quarterly earnings focus of publicly traded companies doesn’t let them make the investments they need to transform themselves and flourish in the world of new media. See, for example, Clear Channel being taken private.

That’s an interesting idea, but this recent sale of the Star Tribune gives a rare barometer of the overall health of the old media. Going from a value of $1.2 billion to $530 million in just eight years is a 56 percent loss. Now, some would say that’s not taking into account the tax savings McClatchy gets for selling at a loss…which brings the value to McClatchy of the transaction to $700 million. That brings the loss to “only” 42 percent.

I believe McClatchy is a good capitalist company seeking to maximize value for shareholders, and would have sold to other firms if they had offered more than $530 million. Maybe with the end of the year approaching, McClatchy was a motivated seller, and in the urge to consummate the deal didn’t drive as hard a bargain with Avista as it would have otherwise.

Maybe McClatchy could have gotten a better price if it had advertised the paper for sale on Craig’s List.

As the story says, the Star Tribune does have the dominant position among newspapers in a top-15 market, and I have no reason to doubt that it remains profitable.

But apparently it’s about half as profitable as it was in 1998.

“I’m here today because my partners at Avista and I believe unequivocally that the Star Tribune is one of the great newspapers in the country and that the Twin Cities is one of the great markets,” said Chris Harte, a member of Avista’s executive advisory board and a former Knight Ridder publisher, who will act as chairman of the board of directors at the Star Tribune.

If a profitable, “great” newspaper in a “great” market is dropping this quickly in value, what’s the outlook for papers elsewhere?

TechnoratiTechnorati: , ,

A Good Reason for a Blogging Pause

Rachel and Sisters

I haven’t been active in this blog for a couple of weeks because of the holidays, and particularly the marriage on Saturday of my firstborn daughter, Rachel. She’s pictured above with two of her bridesmaids, my other daughters Rebekah and Ruth. Her brothers were active, too:

Jake
Jake was a groomsman…

Joe
Joe was the head usher (shown here escorting my Mom)

John
and John was a gift carrier (and Dad’s personal attendant).

Here are pictures of the happy couple, and their equally happy and proud Moms and Dads.

Rachel and Kyle Julie Borg and Lisa Aase
Lee Aase and Scott Borg

So, it’s been an all-consuming couple of weeks, and a fantastic end to 2006 (other highlights are here in my first on-line Christmas letter.)

Here’s hoping 2007 is as wonderful for you and yours as 2006 was for the Aase family.

Joining the Persons of the Year

When I presented at the Wisconsin Healthcare Public Relations and Marketing Society meeting in October, I concluded with some recommendations on how to get started exploring social media. For people in communications-related fields, if you haven’t yet taken those steps, now is a good time.

With more than 65,000 videos being uploaded to YouTube each day, and more than 100 million videos served there daily, and with Technorati tracking more than 57 million blogs, communications professionals of all people should be participating and understanding the implications.

Some reports have indicated that the rapid growth of the blogosphere has slowed, and it’s clear the number of blogs can’t keep doubling every six months…but as Time has noted, critical mass already has been reached.

Traditional media will continue to be highly important for communication, and will be particularly cost-effective if you are participating as a newsmaker rather than as an advertiser. They are staking their claim in the on-line world too, but they have lots of company. And with lots of company means smaller communities gathered in their spaces, which has definite economic implications.

Unless you’re Coke or Pepsi and are trying to get someone to buy your product almost every day, the world of tags and links will be increasingly important. When people have a problem and want to check out their options, they will find their solution-providers on the web. And in a Long Tail world, it doesn’t matter how specialized your niche is; in some ways, narrower is better…as long as you are able to serve a geographically scattered population.

TechnoratiTechnorati: , , ,