Magazine Publishing Innovation: Two Case Studies on Managing Creativity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Contextual Review
2.1. A Brief Industrial History of Magazines
2.2. What Is a Magazine Business Today?
2.3. The Consumer Magazine Business in the Digital Era
2.3.1. The Strength of Print
2.3.2. In the Face of Long-Term Decline
2.4. A Move towards Digital Platforms
2.5. New Magazine Business Models
2.5.1. New Forms of Advertising and ‘Content Marketing’
2.6. Church versus State in Magazine Publishing
3. Innovation and Creativity Theory
3.1. Managing Creativity in Media
4. Methodology and Research Design
4.1. Case Study and Semi-Structured Interview Method
4.2. Case One: The Upcoming
4.2.1. Context and Content
4.2.2. Proxy for Innovation
4.3. Case Two: Style at Home
4.3.1. Context and Content
4.3.2. Proxy for Innovation
5. Findings
6. Discussion
6.1. The Changing Nature of Magazine Editing
6.2. The Increasingly Commercial Focus of the Editor
6.3. The Importance of ‘Managing Creativity’ in Magazine Media
7. Conclusions
- Magazines are adapting well to a shifting economic and industrial context not by ‘going digital’ but by developing new business models across old and new platforms. These are based less on selling advertising space and more on forms of sophisticated ‘content marketing’.
- A new type of editor has emerged in lifestyle consumer magazines, one who is both a journalist and a brand manager. This new editor is a more commercially minded professional who curates and co-creates with agencies, advertisers, and audiences as part of the journalism of commissioning for readerships.
- Given this more complex and entrepreneurial context, the subject of managing creativity (over managing production or journalism) in media studies may better inform future inquiries into what it takes to be innovative in magazine media, pursuing the growing connection between the social science of creativity theory and media management.
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Quote 1 | Quote 2 | Quote 3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Content | It’s not easy turning a reader into a writer. Take someone who is not experienced and turn them into a journalist. Luckily we have very good editors that turn this stuff into content. | Video is complicated if you want to maintain a standard. Even practical things, like the time it take to shoot, and the time it takes to send or upload video. It’s a longer process and it doesn’t pay off. We don’t want to make viral content. We just want to make good content, not catchy videos. | Obviously we cannot compete (with TimeOut) in terms of quantity-they have a huge machine. But we have benefit of people writing for us who are more personal—maybe rawer, ideas you cannot find. |
Advertising and revenue | Clients are fashion, watchmakers, designers. Things like that. Usually it’s through an agency. Rarely we speak directly to the client. 90% of income is from digital marketing agencies. It’s nice for us, as we don’t have to worry too much about finding clients. | We have content advertising–and no other income. A lot of small digital marketing companies have a lot of content they want us published for them. Advertorial basically, like one Cineworld. | Maybe one percent [of content] is branded. Content is the most important we’re not going to give that away. When we do advertorials, we write them for the paper, we may only adjust one sentence for the client, but not the other way around. |
Business and management approach | I need to keep giving people an easy opportunity. Innovation is having a platform online that they can interact with. They don’t just send, then partake in the magazine. | Maybe I should work on a magazine or start a career in publishing. I said ‘Why should I waste my time convincing an editor that I have ideas?’ So I put out an ad, and got like 50 CVs. | The culture editor, she had a different background. Mine is law, she was a professional session musician and also studying psychology. She could detect things I couldn’t see. She had a totally different approach—the same field, but doing things that I couldn’t see before. |
Understanding Audience/readers | [We need] writers who write but who also market their content. | The main thing is having a platform that is easy for readers to access and contributors to work with. I need to keep giving people an easy opportunity. Innovation is having a platform online that they can interact with. They don’t just send, they partake in the magazine. | It’s easy to get data. But the tricky thing is to analyze this amount of data. You get these figures about percentage returning, and then see what they read about. Theatre reviews for example were found to be popular, so we started to do more of that. Cover more concerts and plays then the Guardian. |
Quote 1 | Quote 2 | Quote 3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Content | Style at Home creates some bespoke content, but around 60% was repurposed. We did research into Ideal Home. | It’s about seeing how far you can stretch something, pull different content from different places and see if you can get a feature out of it. | There’s nothing to be ashamed of wearing a bargain. People are proud of saying I’ve got a bargain. When did you last go to Pizza Express and not have a voucher in your pocket. |
Advertising and revenue | The ad market has changed so much in the last couple of years—you have to know where the line is between advertorial and editorial, but also look at profit. It’s not just my job as editor, it’s everyone’s. | Print is not dead in the homes market. We went from 0 to 54,000 and now we’re nearly selling a 100,000 copies. | [we have an] umbrella site online. We started with individual brand sites, but agencies want to buy a targeted reader. We have launched a blog called Cushy Number. All about cushions FB, Twitter. |
Business and management approach | I’m a print journalist. But now I’m a brand curator. | Being editor on the new launch, we made a profit in year 2. Other new launches may take five or 10 years to break even. | [We work in] small teams, share ideas. We all have a blurred view between life and jobs. We all live in the lifestyle. |
Understanding Audience/reader | We discovered that first-time buyers were at least 34+, so what’s happening before then? Do they not want to ‘kit out’ their rented houses? They do. | There was a shift I acknowledged. Social media and all sorts of things have precipitated a shift in which hints and tips, sharing and the ‘look what I’ve done’. | Peer to Peer involvement. Sense of a club. We have stylists at home. When I started we had people on TV as home and style experts. Now it’s a reader. |
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Das, S. Magazine Publishing Innovation: Two Case Studies on Managing Creativity. Publications 2016, 4, 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4020015
Das S. Magazine Publishing Innovation: Two Case Studies on Managing Creativity. Publications. 2016; 4(2):15. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4020015
Chicago/Turabian StyleDas, Simon. 2016. "Magazine Publishing Innovation: Two Case Studies on Managing Creativity" Publications 4, no. 2: 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4020015
APA StyleDas, S. (2016). Magazine Publishing Innovation: Two Case Studies on Managing Creativity. Publications, 4(2), 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/publications4020015