BlogU

  • The NYTimes: A Remembrance

    By Joshua Kim March 17, 2011 11:00 pm EDT

    I'm going to miss the New York Times. Without the Times, I'll be a less informed educator, citizen and parent. The NYTimes has been a part of my life as long as I can remember, its sections and writers constituting an important part of my mental identity.

    I love the NYTimes. I believe that the NYTimes is one of our most important cultural institutions. I know that producing high quality news and analysis is expensive, and I believe that editors and journalists and all the other professionals that put out the Times each day deserve to earn a good living.

    Come March 28th, however, I will no longer be a NYTimes reader? March 28th is the day when the Digital Subscriber program begins. To continue to read the NYTimes on my iPad and my computer, I'll need to pay $240 a year ($20 every 4 weeks). If I want all access digital (with will include reading on my smart phone), the price goes to $420 a year.

    Non-subscribers get to view 20 articles in a calendar month for free, and browse the home page. I doubt I'll bother, as this paywall comes fast and hard.

    Will you be becoming a NYTimes Digital Subscriber?

    I have no idea if this strategy will for work for the Times. I know it will not work for me, but maybe they will be able to cream off enough paying digital subscribers that they will make more money than on advertising. I have 3 reasons why I will not become a digital subscriber, and 3 ideas for how the Times could have gotten my money:

    Why I Will Not Become A NYTimes Digital Subscriber:

    Fungibility: I'll only pay for digital goods if they are not fungible, not substitutable. I'll pay for an e-book or an audiobook because I have no way of getting that same book for free from another source. Same goes for my monthly Netflix subscription, which is moving towards all digital. Without the NYTimes I'll have to work a bit harder to get quality news, and aggregate more news sources myself, but the web will still have a surplus from which to mine.

    Sunk Costs: I'm willing to buy e-book through Amazon since I've already started paying when I bought my Kindle. The Kindle is worthless without the books, so the price (as long as it is considerably lower than paper versions) seems reasonable.

    Digital Savings: If I buy digital, I only want to pay for what I want. With audio books from Audible it costs me about $10 a book. Same for e-books. Netflix is a flat fee, but it is only $10 a month (and digital is cheaper than the plans that send more discs out at a time). The digital price needs to feel less than the price for a physical object.

    How the NYTimes Could Have Gotten My Money:

    Bundle with Something Physical: I would have happily paid $75 to get a very nice NYTimes branded leather Smart Cover with my iPad 2. These Smart Covers must have something like a 90% profit margin. The NYTimes Smart Cover would have announced to the world that I'm a NYTimes subscriber, and given me a way to buy something tangible while pushing money to the Times. This is less money than the $240 a year, but I bet an offer like this would convert many more people than the Digital Subscriber plan will.

    Make the App Cheaper: Maybe $240 a year just feels like too much. The NYTimes on an iPad is an app, and apps are less expensive. I would have paid $20 for the app, even if it was a 1 year app. This is again much less money, but I wonder how many more people would buy.

    Bundle with Local Papers: I do pay $362.96 to get my local paper, the Valley News, delivered to my house 7 days a week. A local paper feels like it needs to be in paper form, so the family can pass it around and so we can all read different sections at breakfast. The NYTimes could make deals with many local papers, offering a local subscription option for a bit more money (say $450), that throws in digital access. The Times could even open a new business by offering to host the local news content on their digital platforms (web and app). An instant presto hyper local strategy, without the need to buy lots of local papers.

    What would it take for the NYTimes to get your money for digital content?

    In the education industry we need to pay attention to what is going on in the news industry, as we are both fundamentally information industries.

    All information industries are shedding their legacy connections to physical goods, just as money is moving beyond bills and coins. We will all be disagregated, unbundled, and inverted. This trend may be a bad thing and it may be a good thing (or both at once), but however we evaluate this future it will still inevitably arrive. Campuses and paper newspapers will not disappear, but they will be luxury or specialty items. Plays and musicals are still put on, but the overwhelming proportion of the entertainment economy is delivered via some screen. We still go to hear live music, and some superstar performers can make most of their money performing live, but most of the music that is actually consumed is delivered digitally.

    The NYTimes is trying to figure out how to adapt to our digital now, and we should be paying close attention, as the Times' present is our near future.

Advertisement

Comments on The NYTimes: A Remembrance

  • NYT New Digital Rate
  • Posted by joel cairo on March 18, 2011 at 8:15am EDT
  • I couldn't agree more. To pay $240/yr for the privilege of reading the NYT online is exorbitant and bordering on decadent. They will never get my money, and I will simply have to learn to live with 20 "free" articles per month. However will I do it? Just watch me, NYT!
  • Cheap at the price
  • Posted by Joan on March 18, 2011 at 9:15am EDT
  • I think your objections are bogus. I too have read the Times daily since 1961. I have always paid for a paper copy. Nowadays, by subscription, that costs me $59.20 per month, a considerable savings over buying it day by day on the newsstand. That amount also entitles me to all-digital access. I could save a little by just paying for digital access, but we like having the physical paper for some purposes (like, reading over breakfast). Why should digital access be free? I am happy to pay for the infrastructure that allows the Times to provide its news and analysis, it is in my interests to do so. I do not want to be forced to fall back on inferior sources of information. Just as in the past one could read the paper Times in a library, you could do the same for digital access, but if you want your "own" copy, you should pay.
  • Print subscriber
  • Posted by Jennifer at Utah on March 18, 2011 at 9:30am EDT
  • Fortunately, my husband still enjoys paging through the print edition over breakfast so we are safe for now. I wonder when/if they will decouple? Because I have found value in paying for the Times content for the past 20 years, I know that I would be willing to pay for a digital subscription. I would consider it a compensation for an excellent product. They have to have a revenue stream. Just because you haven't been paying for the content over the past many years doesn't mean that others haven't been.
  • You get what you pay for
  • Posted by Another print subscriber on March 18, 2011 at 10:00am EDT
  • I agree with the poster above. Why should you enjoy this valuable product for free? It is as simple as that. If you value it, pay for it. $240 a year is cheap. You pay more than that for your local paper. As you say, digital should be cheaper than paper, and $240/year for NYT digital is considerably cheaper than a print subscription. This is not an app that has some development costs upfront but will generate app fees for years. This is a major international news organization selling a product that is produced fresh, day in and day out. The business about wanting a "prize" like an iPad cover - c'mon! NYT is providing a product you value and they can't keep doing it for free. Why should they need to hand out swag? If the NYT is truly valuable to you, and has been so for many years, and you think it will be valuable in the future, figure out a way to pay for it. Is it more valuable than your local paper? Can you envision that it costs a heckuva lot more to produce the NYT content than the local paper Compare the costs and decide. I cannot see any reason why they should continue to provide it for free.
  • culture of entitlement
  • Posted by Matt Johnson on March 18, 2011 at 10:30am EDT
  • I echo Joan's comments. Additionally, all too often these days, thanks to the intersection where the Internet and consumer culture meet, Americans increasingly seem to think they have a constitutional right to cheap or free access to just about anything they want.

    Speaking of cheap access: I've had a subscription to the paper edition of the Sunday Times for years at the educator discount rate, which ends up being about $3.50 or so a week. Under the new plan, this subscription will allow me to continue to access the Times in any format on any device for free. Given what the Times provides, I'd say that's not a bad deal.
  • Posted by Sunday Subscriber on March 18, 2011 at 10:30am EDT
  • What's wrong with the library? I get audiobooks (and with a Nook you could get ebooks) for FREE from my local library so that I don't have to pay for them. You choose to replace these free options with Audible and Amazon, contrary to your statement about substitutable items.

    I subscribe to the Sunday Times because it has the most article that I want to read for business, pleasure, and plain diversion.

    I do hope that they sort out something for businesses and educational institutions because I know that I rely on certain pages for work-relevant news and information.
  • Print not long for this world...
  • Posted by Adjunct in NJ on March 18, 2011 at 10:30am EDT
  • We've seen foreshadowing of The NY Times demise in print for the past few years. The Sunday Magazine section got smaller, special supplemental sections have been combined all for cost savings. I read the NY Times both online during the week and in print on Sundays. I will mourn the day when I can no longer physically page through the various sections inhaling the ink with my mug of coffee on a Sunday morning.

    Those of us who have been reaping the free access during the week with have to retreat to the inconvenient recesses of academic databases in order to gain some entry.

    Since a great many economically challenged students reads the paper for personal and academic use, a pricing structure for this sector of readers should exist. The paper should not shut out this important demographic.
  • No thanks
  • Posted by Steve Foerster , an adjunct IT instructor at a Midwestern community college on March 18, 2011 at 10:45am EDT
  • Why would I pay the New York Times for content when I can get the equivalent content for free somewhere else? Unless every major English-language online news source in the world colludes to erect a paywall simultaneously, there will never be good reason for me to shell out to any of them.
  • I will pay for what I value
  • Posted by In Minneapolis on March 18, 2011 at 10:45am EDT
  • I am troubled by your post and the message you promote. It strikes me as short-sighted and individualistic, among other things. While it's been a nice ride for all of us that the Times has been free, the truth is, this incredibly valuable product *costs a great deal of money* for the Times to produce. The Times has reporters all over the world putting their lives at great risk to bring the news to me and my fellow citizens (see: 4 journalists lost in Libya this week, for instance). They employ the top analysts of our day who lead me to reflect and engage on my world in ways I would not have otherwise. I will pay for this experience. Unlike you, I do not believe what the Times provides is replaceable. Yes, they try to wring as much as possible out of advertisers to get it to readers at as low as cost as possible. However, many of us (including myself) block ads. I believe we should pay for what we value. I'm not a wealthy person by any measure. But I put what money I do have toward what I value. I donate to NPR and I'll pay for the New York Times because I believe they have earned, many times over, every last cent.
  • Inconsistent
  • Posted by Another sunday subscriber on March 18, 2011 at 3:00pm EDT
  • Your arguments are inconsistent, and you should look more carefully at your own motivations.

    Fungibility: Ebooks, audiobooks, and movies (a la Netflix) are most all available "for free", via piracy. Yet you willingly pay for them. Why? Convenience, I expect.

    Sunk costs: You throw money after your Kindle because you've already bought into the system. Yet your computer and network hardware are pretty much useless without the Internet on the other side - why won't you pay for things there?

    Digital savings: You're willing (apparently) to pay $10 for an ebook, but approx. $5 for a week of a well-written newspaper (far more 'content' than most any ebook) is too much?

    Oh - and while most music is indeed delivered digitally, the (growing) majority of professional musicians make their livelihood from live performance.
  • Posted by Barbara Fister on March 18, 2011 at 3:30pm EDT
  • Funny. I wrote about this at Babel Fish last night and talked myself into a very different conclusion. Given the alternatives for funding journalism, I don't mind paying. And the new model they are using - bloggers can link, Facebook friends can share, etc. - is much smarter than their previous Times Select paywall.

    If you want to check out an alternative take, it's at http://bit.ly/igVVyY

  • I will gladly pay
  • Posted by Towanda , retired on March 18, 2011 at 4:45pm EDT
  • Joshua Kim must not value his time very much if he thinks the "exorbitant" charge of $240 or $420 is going to be out of reach, causing him to "...work a bit harder to get quality news...".

    It's time that we pay for this. I value the NYT content in countless ways. When they first announced months ago that fees were coming, I committed then. People, except perhaps for Joshua Kim, don't work for free. Quality publications cost to be produced. I'm on board.

  • Local bundling
  • Posted by Michael on March 19, 2011 at 5:30am EDT
  • The idea of bundling with local papers makes good sense; nice idea. Our small daily subscribes to the NY Times wires service, so there's already a display on front porches seven days a week.
  • Should we set up contribution fund for Josh?
  • Posted , Senior Researcher at instructional media + magic inc. on March 19, 2011 at 5:30am EDT
  • Because I live in Oklahoma City where the New York Times is delivered only on Sunday I have been using the digital global edition for five years or more. I find the New York Times more authoritative than other sources. I use the archives for technology and business and articles cited by others. Yes, I read the trade press and it is free. But it appears most have found it difficult to be accurate when writers are so rushed and unbiased when they depend only upon advertising.

    Pricing depends upon value. I have been contributing to the monthly “Intellectual Property Magazine” to be told the subscription fee is US$ 136 per month. As you would expect the articles are carefully selected and somewhat longer that the typical, sharply edited, and superbly formatted with extensive references especially to meet the needs of their readership—patent attorneys, directors of research, and economists.(This has been a learning experience for me. I was asked to contribute after they read some posts on eLiterate). Some quick checking shows the price is not infrequent for academic journals and similar targeted journals.

    I rely heavily on the New York Times for accurate coverage. A quick glance at sources and references is important to some of us and access to the archives worth the price. Since you are a frequent writer, using only the trade press as sources because they are free may convey an impression of questionable quality. Suggestion:Continue to Pay for the New York Times. If you are unwilling to do so, perhaps we should set up a fund and donate for your subscription. We enjoy your work and can rely on it. Sources are important to us for what they say about quality.
  • Here's an option
  • Posted on March 19, 2011 at 11:45am EDT
  • I disagree, very strongly, with this; it's very worth it. And think of this: if you buy a cheap print edition (maybe just Sunday) it'll probably be cheaper than a digital subscription, and you'll get all of the digital stuff as well.
  • Posted by Laurie on March 20, 2011 at 5:30pm EDT
  • Wow, you really hit a nerve with this post! Your commmenters are not going to be too happy with me either, perhaps, for supplying this link:
    http://lifehacker.com/#!5783502/get-around-the-new-york-times-quota-with-this-nyt-firehose-twitter-list

  • Getting it ALL at a good price too
  • Posted by WmFXIR , Dir ITMS at NJIT on March 21, 2011 at 12:00pm EDT
  • I subscribe to the NY Times paper edition and get very good pricing with my .edu e-mail address so I also get free unlimited (including the full archive)access on line. I am not sure that I would otherwise spend $240/yr for the online only access, but I enjoy reading the paper every AM too. The iPad version is also very good.
  • Posted by PB , adjunct on March 22, 2011 at 11:45am EDT
  • I've commonly heard the idea of "Why pay for what I can get for free elsewhere?" when it comes to getting the news. While sound in theory, the basic underlying principle is still that the newspapers should be free. I have no idea why people seem to think this is actually feasible.

    It's almost like we're children. We go into the kitchen, open the fridge, and there's food. We don't have a concept of what it takes to put the food in that fridge, we just like that it's there when we want it.

  • Scarcity commands price, NYT news is not scarce.
  • Posted by Jim on March 22, 2011 at 10:00pm EDT
  • The majority of the worlds newspapers are left leaning and will continue to provide us with ample supply of the "news" despite the fact that the NYT will erect a paywall.

    They will fail because they have forgotten Capitalism.
  • Just subscribe to the Sunday Times
  • Posted by Jessica on March 24, 2011 at 10:15am EDT
  • ...and you'll get digital access included. About $100 a year in my area. Well worth it, especially as the Washington Post gets worse and worse.