Posts Tagged ‘advertising’

‘Local is still up for grabs’

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

I was going to link to this article because of its conclusion that media site subscriptions fees (I refuse to call them “pay walls” any more) can work in today’s conditions. But the following paragraphs were more relevant TellPeoria Online Media.

According to the Pew study, efforts by media companies to own local are not working. To be sure everything from the now ancient BackFence, to tbd.com, have failed to take off. I’m underwhelmed by Patch’s potential to do real reporting. And Adrian Holavaty’s relaunched and newly social EveryBlock looks great – but in the end it’s a utility, not a news provider.

Yet the ad market is there. Online ad spending is up from 30% to 40% of the market in just one year. So who will win in local? I’m going to bet here on legacy media…if they move NOW. Public radio and local newspapers have the tools, the physical presence, the people, the brands, and the relationship with the community. Do they have the will? Will they take the risk? Will they make an investment in a down market? Will they disrupt their core businesses? For signs of hope look no further than right here in Austin where Public radio station KUT is attracting record audiences on the radio, expanding its journalism, while partnering with Texas Tribune, expanding aggressively on digital platforms and raising money in the process.

A news site is only as good as the journalism it produces.  And I don’t see GateHouse Media (the owner of the Peoria Journal Star) putting any more money into local papers.

A newspaper can produce mediocre journalism because no one else in town owns a printing press.  Broadcast towers are expensive, too, and better yet, the government let just anyone have a license. In other words, entry into the world of media used to be limited to those with money already in their pockets.

But anybody can afford to put up a Website and start reporting on their community. You don’t even have to pay for hosting if you are willing to be hosted on Blog*Spot (one click will also put Google Adsense on your site). You don’t even have to pay for an Internet connection, if you are willing to blog from the library or glom off free WiFi at the coffee shop.

And now that newspapers have instituted subscription fees for viewing online content, it’s possible for online competition to do that as well without being undercut by Big Media sites giving it away for free. Or, news startups can give it away for free and remain a low-cost  alternative.

TellPeoria Online Media exists to help budding journalists create online news sites and then monetize them with advertising, and if they wish, use Pay Pal to create a subscription program.

 

Sorry, Lindsay and Paris: Hard news beats celebrity fluff when it comes selling ads on new sites

Monday, October 18th, 2010

From Ad Age:

Maybe serious news on the web has a prayer after all.

Newspaper websites get more ad revenue from articles about serious stuff like the Gulf oil spill than from traffic bait like stories on celebrity scandals, according to an analysis by Perfect Market, a company that aims to help publishers become more visible and profitable on the web.

I certainly don’t see people buying ads on Tell Peoria because a site mentioned Lindsay Lohan or Paris Hilton. But an article on, say, immigration issues?

A lot of the difference had to do with automated text ads that are keyed to the content on a page, ads that can be overshadowed by the big display units that newspapers’ sales teams typically sell directly. Articles about immigration, for example, are magnets for text ads promoting immigration lawyers.

“The rates paid by advertisers on Google AdSense for immigration-related terms are higher than the celebrity-related stuff like Lindsay Lohan,” said Robertson Barrett, chief strategy officer at Perfect Market. Mortgage lenders want to put text ads in front of people reading about mortgages, he said, but there aren’t as many advertisers trying to sell celebrity memorabilia.

Retro-Tech: $25 off any PC

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

TellPeoria member Retro-Tech is advertising that they are offering $25 off any PC.

Big jump in pageviews on Wednesday

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

I’m still looking for the cause in the increase in visits and page views we experienced on TELLPEORIA publishers on Wednesday. Visits to PeoriaPundit were stable, and The Community Word was higher than usual but not enough to explain an increase of more than 2,000 pageviews:

statcounter05052010

Click to enlarge.

We have been promoting the sites more than before, so I,m not surprised by the increase in readership.

Welcome to TELLPEORIA

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

If you’ve stumbled across this site , you’ve no doubt been able to figure it out. It’s a citizen journalism site, with a built-in advertising component. In fact, it has quite a few built-in advertising components. We’re rolling our own Adsense-like ads here, and providing a directory service AND blogs for businesses.The goal is to fund the site (and make a profit) by giving small, local businesses an entryway onto the Internet.

The word “synergy” is overused in the online world, but this time it applies. We’re selling advertising space AND we’re giving businesses something TO advertise. AND we’re nurturing citizen journalism sites that can publish the ads.

And we’re not going to be stingy. Any central Illinois blog or Internet site publisher can get paid to publish our clients’ ads. The “affiliate” payout is 75 percent of all incoming revenue.

But as I write this, we are not quite ready to go. Check back in a few days.

Until then, feel free to click on some links. Contact us if you are interested in anything we’re offering.