Tag Archives: digital magazines

Thinking about Paper Magazines: What’s Irreplaceable?

16 Feb

Paper Direction Icons-3

Yes, I’m blogging about paper. My digital magazine conversion, a conversation with a student yesterday, and this article from Folio – about SPIN’s new print/digital strategy – are making me think more about the dead-tree stuff. What do I miss, even just a little, about paper magazines? What qualities truly can’t be replicated in digital formats (always with the caveat…yet)?

I think that print magazines will become more and more rare, and those that persist on paper will be the few whose content either truly necessitates or successfully capitalizes on the unique qualities of paper that cannot be replicated in digital forms.

To me, those unique qualities include:

  • Physical feel of the texture of paper: dependent on the paper stock used by a publication; could (or even should) be distinctive for different types of magazines; adds another layer of sensory experience that can interact pleasantly with content
  • Immediacy: no power switch, no downloading, no crashing, no delay; content is immediately available
  • “Flippability”: the ease of flipping through pages; currently tedious with digital formats
  • Status symbols: the desire to display one’s magazines publicly; the iPad’s Newsstand icon just wouldn’t satisfy if this were a concern
  • Collectibility: the ability to create a visible, physical collection of a magazine’s issues, for the sheer pleasure of gathering them; may or may not overlap with their status symbol function, depending on the magazine and the individual
  • Visibility: the physical presence of a magazine in a room has an effect (I have been known to finish reading, but not immediately recycle, fitness-related magazines because leaving them around the house reminds me to strive for good health, and because I’m weird like that); physical presence may also be a more obvious reminder to engage with the magazine/brand (e.g., simply to read it, as opposed to having to check with an app for a new issue)
  • Shareability: the capacity to easily give someone else the ability to read content; still not fully integrated into many digital magazines
  • Contemplation: related to visibility; some content may lend itself better to sustained viewing on paper rather than a backlit or E Ink screen, such as art
  • …and others?

A number of these qualities are reflected in Folio’s description of SPIN’s new strategy. Despite the advantages that an all-digital format would so obviously provide a music magazine, SPIN will continue publishing in print, alongside various digital products. However, it will use heavier paper stock (enhancing its physical feel); it will publish less frequently (enhancing its perceived value for status/collectible purposes); and it will aim for a blend of magazine and “coffee table book” (enhancing the status, collectibility, visibility, and contemplation qualities). To me, all of SPIN’s moves make sense as ways to anticipate both the diminishing role of paper and the intensifying need to justify the expense and environmental impact of its use.

Are there other qualities we should add to this list to capture the specific aspects of paper that only it as a medium can provide to a magazine, from the reader perspective?

Finally, a Satisfying iPad Magazine Experience

15 Apr

So I decided I might like to get a subscription to Bloomberg Businessweek. It’s a magazine that’s popped up on my radar a few times lately, both for some interesting longer stories and for its innovative design.

March 22 cover, via AisleOne.net

I explored my subscription options:

  • Through the Businessweek website: 50 issues plus 4 “bonus issues” for $40, including a free subscription to digital iPad editions ($ .74/issue)
  • Through Zinio, the digital magazine newsstand company: $46 for 51 issues, digital replica-style ($ .90/issue…wait, 22% more for digital only? Nope.)
  • Through the new Bloomberg Businessweek+ app for iPad (iTunes link): $2.99/month, charged automatically each month through the Apple in-app purchase function. (free for print subscribers, or about $ .75/issue for non-subscribers)

I really wanted only a digital edition because this weekly magazine will hit my recycle bin so often, and because business isn’t a huge personal interest for me. The price is reasonable. (Businessweek will get $2.09/month after Apple’s 30% cut.)

While it might not let me experience the magazine’s intriguing print design, the iPad app is a good deal comparatively – and received rave reviews on iTunes – and so I tried it out.

I have to say: I’m impressed. The first issue did take a few minutes to download, but far fewer than the 11 minutes required by the free May iPad edition of Wired (iTunes link) that I downloaded this morning. A few interesting moments in the app are below:

Provide my personal data to Businessweek? Hmm...

Downloading my first issue (bottom right), with previous issues available for individual purchase

Watching an introductory video linked to the cover images, with editors explaining the chicken on the cover

Finding topics connected to the names mentioned in the story and realtime data through the Related button

Integrated social media connections...yes!

So far, I’m pretty impressed with the app. It provides enriched content, beyond just a digital replica, that is smartly designed for greater usability, not mere novelty. It’s reasonably priced, easy to access, and has clean design. It will automatically alert me to new issues.

It lets me stay in my social reading mode that I have come to enjoy so much, rather than putting me in the “walled garden” so common among digital magazines to date.

And, finally, there’s just the right amount of interactivity – enough that it’s interesting and suits the iPad, but not so much that I’m distracted from reading, which is still – obviously – a major draw of magazines.

My only tiny issue? I wish there were pagination for stories, not just scrolling; personally, I’m a more effective reader in Instapaper’s pagination mode, and I’d prefer it here too. But I can live without it for now.

Worth $ .75/week? Time will tell – but this is an auspicious start.

Two more reviews are here and here for some additional perspectives. Add your thoughts in the comments.

Magazine Industry Terror

4 Feb

So I saw this interesting little graphic over at the Association of Magazine Media (formerly the MPA) E-Reading blog, and it brought only one thing to mind:

Hmmm…

[A more substantial post next week, I promise!]

Research Ideas: Digital Magazine Publishing for the Masses

26 Jan
Collecting Magazines

The bin of leftover magazines...its days are numbered in the digital age.

I’m contemplating the best angle for a new research project about the world of digital magazine publishing. I’m including here not just the magazines that have released iPad and other mobile apps, but also web-based publishing like that offered by Zinio, Yudu, Texterity, NoLayout, and others.

I’m interested in to what degree these digital magazine publishing opportunities are democratizing magazine publishing. Though I find print-on-demand a fascinating trend as well for magazines whose content and design implies the value of a lasting hard copy, the high cost of purchasing many of these publications means that they will likely be restricted for some time to a more affluent audience. But the opportunity for small publishers to whip up a magazine in PDF format, then post it online, seems to open up a whole realm of possibilities.

No longer are independent publishers relegated to blogs or mere websites; the ability to publish a polished, slick, easily accessible digital magazine is now within reach. Any magazine can be available on the web or even on the iPad using a newsstand app like Zinio, or through HTML5 using a service like NoLayout (though the latter concentrates on fashion and art topics).

So who is taking advantage of this opportunity to present a polished look at their subject matter? I’d like to know the breakdown by size and topic of the independent publishers who are crafting new projects online. I’d also like to know, more specifically, whether and how many activist or politically oriented digital-only magazines there are. An initial exploration of just Zinio’s listings suggests, interestingly, that there are many more ethnic or international magazines that might fit the “activist” label than English-language publications of this variety. As someone interested in how magazines affect or enable various social and political movements and identities, I also want to know whether and how digital magazines are playing a similar role to print magazines’ role in past movements. (I did a study on the role of National Review in mobilizing the conservative movement, though mine is just one of numerous studies in this area.)

I’ve previously explored the role of social media in adding to political/activist print magazines’ engagement of readers in this MediaShift story. The research study I’m anticipating now would likely examine the role of smaller, exclusively online activist publishers in directing, enabling, or mobilizing the causes they’re associated with through this new medium, as well as the reasoning behind their decisions to use digital magazines for this purpose.

If you have thoughts or suggestions along these lines, or suggestions of specific digital magazines I should explore, please leave a comment. I am excited about the opportunity to have some dialogue around this topic before I set out a concrete plan for the project.

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