Archive for April, 2007

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Hot and new this week…take 2

April 13, 2007

Once a week, I highlight three new magazines on my web site www.mrmagazine.com. This week the three new magazines are First Home, Good Food and National Geographic Little Kids. Read here about these new launches. To be considered for review on my web site, please send a copy of your first issue to Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni, Department of Journalism, The University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677.

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Some stats on the new mags of 2006

April 13, 2007

The latest edition of Samir Husni’s Guide to New Magazines (see cover here samir-husnis-07cover.pdf) will be out in four weeks. The book will be over 200 pages and will cover every category of new magazine launches from last year. It will have a picture of every new launch, stats about each category of new magazines from Art to Youth for the last decade, addresses and concepts for each magazine, and all the related information about frequency and price. The book this year will also include a special supplement on Launch Your Own Magazine: A Step by Step Guide to Succeeding in Today’s Marketplace, and a special section on the 30 most notable launches of the year. All at a price of $49.00. The book is published by The Nautilus publishing group.
For a little preview, here are some essential stats from the new book:
Total number new magazines: 901
Total number of pages in a new magazine: 112
Total number of ad pages in a new magazine: 14
Average cover price of a new magazine: $6.83
Average subscription price of a new magazine: $24.24
All these stats and how they compare to previous years will be in the 22nd edition of the Guide, coming soon to a bookshelf near you. Order your copy here.

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I could say I have told you so…Teen People RIP, in print and online

April 12, 2007

July 26, 2006 the headline in MediaPost read: Teen People Folds in Print, Remains Online. The article went on to say, “Time Inc.’s move comes several months after Hachette Filipacchi closed Elle Girl’s print edition in April. Like Teen People, Elle Girl kept its online presence. Both companies have indeed cast a continuing Web presence as a profitable alternative to print publications…” My comment in Erik Sass’s article (click here to read) was, ” The beauty of the Web is it gives magazine publishers the excuse, ‘We’re not killing the thing, we’re staying on the web.’ If people could survive on the Web, don’t you think Playboy would have folded its print edition long ago?” Well today’s headline in Foliomag.com reads, Teen People Can’t Make It Online or In Print. The article went on to say, “the site was not generating enough traffic to keep it going as a standalone.” (click here to read). The site is now folded into People.com, a very successful web site that complements the weekly’s print edition. The problem that I have with publishers folding their print edition and going online only, has nothing to do with the technology, rather with the content. The web is a great place to be, but it is not print and should not replicate the print editions of the magazines. It is not an alternative to print, it is a must-have complementary medium to your print edition. Just think, that if you cannot survive in print, there is no way you are going to be able to survive online alone. If you think you have competition in print, think how much more competition you have on the Web. The problem is not with the technology or the method of delivery, the problem is in having a product that is relevant to the reader whether it is in print or on the Web. It is the content stupid… just keep that in mind the next time you try to convince your readers that the reason you are folding your ink on paper edition to live in the bliss of pixels on the screen. If your readers are not there for a printed copy, I can assure they will not be there for a digital or online copy alone. I don’t mind being proven wrong, just show me the proof… if the proof is in the pixels on the screen only that is, after being published first in print. Now, if you only an online publication from the beginning, well that is a different story for a different day.

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You own it, we report it: The Land Report

April 12, 2007

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Do you know what is in common among the following people: Ted Turner, Archie Emmerson, the Irving Family and the Singleton Family? Well, you are in good company if you did not know the answer until now. The Land Report, the new magazine of “The American Landowner,” lists the four aforementioned names at the top of its list of the “100 Largest Landowners in the United States.” Each one of the four owns more than one million acres of land. The editors promise that the premiere issue of The Land Report and every monthly issue after that will differ from the hundreds of shelter magazines out there by going “one on one with passionate landowners and get them to share their dreams and laugh at their mistakes…” every single issue. In addition to their signature story on The Land Report 100, the first issue contains features and photos that explain the many aspects of taking care of the land and showcases the gorgeous beauty of different property throughout the United States. The name and cover of this magazine may not look like the Godiva’s box of chocolate, but the inside sure taste like the best Godiva chocolates money can buy. To learn about the remaining 96 largest landowners in our country click here to access the listing of the nation’s largest landowners. The magazine is the latest publication of the Dallas based Patience Publishing group.

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To Go or not to Go…is the question

April 11, 2007

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Well, the answer is to Go. Mariah Media, the publisher of the 30 years old Outside magazine, has just launched the premiere issue of the new quarterly Outside’s Go: Travel & Style for Men. The new magazine comes on the heels of Outside’s other spin off Outside Traveler. Go joins a crowded travel magazine field, but adds a double twist of its own to that market. Style and Men. Aimed at an upscale (the metallic cover says it all, although it is hard to see the logo on the newsstands under the neon lights of the stores… the only form beats function page in the magazine) male audience the premiere issue delivers great content in great style. Something that is not foreign to the editors of the multiple-award wining Outside magazine. The magazine is definitely not aimed at the armed chair traveler, nor the 48 states tourist. To paraphrase Dr. Seuss “I don’t care how you go…just Go” seems to be the motto of this new magazine. And go you shall…from A (as in Australia) to Y (as in Yemen) and every thing in between, Outside’s Go is a must for the traveling man with style. So if your future plans call for travel, now is the time to stop reading this blog and run to your nearest newsstands and pick up a copy of Outside’s Go. You will be glad you did.

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Good (Make that Better) Housekeeping

April 10, 2007

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Rosemary Ellis has done some good housekeeping on the May issue of Good Housekeeping magazine. The magazine sprouts a new look and a lot of new additional departments, all in time for Mother’s Day. One of my favorite pages is the Index page. The Index page offers you Good Housekeeping’s content for that month by topic. It gives the magazine the fastest search engine available. Check the category you are interested in from Beauty & Skin Care to Food & Nutrition, to Tech and you will find the name of the article and the page number next to it. Even the recipes are divided into Sides and Salads, Main Dishes and Desserts. An easy to use approach with a lot of consideration to today’s busy woman, the magazine provides “good” information in less time and less space. The May issue of Good Housekeeping is dedicated to “all the wonderful mothers” like Rosemary’s own mother who, in Rosemary’s own words, “kept Good Housekeeping on her night table for roughly half a century, and she learned I was coming here as editor only a couple of weeks before she died.” A great Mother’s Day gift and a wonderful tribute to all the moms of the world who make our homes a better place to be.

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Magazine BLU debuts in digital format… for now

April 9, 2007

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Lately we have been reading about magazines folding shop in print and claiming to stay alive on cyber space. FHM, Teen People, Shock, Info World and Elle Girl, to name a few, decided to cease the ink on paper editions and concentrate on pixels on the screen. Kimberly Toms spotted this trend and decided to do the opposite. Rather than publishing her new magazine BLU (a magazine for single men and women) in print first and face all the problems of a new launch such as the cost of printing and production, no advertising, low sale through numbers and a lot of waste, Toms opted for the pixels on the screen. She said that the “Magazine BLU is in digital format for the first five bimonthlies (through the December 07 edition) for brand-building and working out of the design/inclusion kinks, then monthly and in hard copy (with distribution already lined up) as of January 2008. The next issue is June/July 07 with a major launch event in Philly in July.” To say that Kimberly is having a love affair with this magazine concept will be an understatement. Kimberly told me that, “This has been the concept that would not die, no matter how much I wanted it to some days!! It has been the most difficult, yet most rewarding journey, and I look forward to every day it presents as Magazine BLU.” I only wished that the passion that Kimberly has for the magazine and the magazine busniess is evident in her first issue. A digital magazine with all the type and design that BLU offers makes it hard to read and enjoy, but I am sure that Kimberly knows that since she mentioned the ongoing work on the design kinks in the magazine. A digital magazine should not be a replica of the print magazine or an imitation of it. It does not even need the space for a UPC. The screen viewers are not the same as the page viewers. To view the first issue of BLU magazine click here, and to see a great example of a digital magazine click here to read Felix Dennis’s magazine Monkey click here. Magazine BLU is not the first magazine to publish via the web first and turn to print next, and it will not be the last. I continue to believe that, in this day and age, if you are really going to survive and make a profit, you have to pay your dues in ink on paper. If you think the competition to establish yourself in print is tough, then you do not know how big is the competition in the virtual space out there. It is good to dream big… but one day you have to wake up (and smell the ink…)

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Hot and new this week…

April 9, 2007

Once a week, I highlight three new magazines on my web site http://www.mrmagazine.com. This week the three new magazines are Be Well, Real Simple Travel and Stock & Custom. Read here about these new launches. To be considered for review on my web site, please send a copy of your first issue to Samir “Mr. Magazine™” Husni, Department of Journalism, The University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677.

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Going Bonkers? One issue at a time…

April 8, 2007

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Back in 1998 Margaret Harold Roberts and Wendy Danforth launched Going Bonkers (ISSN 1067-1366) magazine from Palm Beach, Florida. The magazine was a wonderful collection of self-help, health and humor topics. Margaret and Wendy had hard time making a go from the self-help and funny magazine, so they changed it to a dog humor magazine. That did not work too. Well, now J. Carol Pereyra is editing a magazine with the same name and same theme. The tagline of the new Going Bonkers? (ISSN 1933-7752) magazine is “The self-help magazine with a sense of humor.” The new magazine (second issue shown above and is now on the newsstands) looks and feels like the 90s publication. I really do not know whether the new Katy, Texas Going Bonkers LLC is related to the first Going Bonkers folks or not, but I know one thing for sure the two magazines have in common: Problems getting advertising. So, rather than going bonkers the editors of the new magazines opted to go ad free with there second issue. They told the readers in an “Important Message to Our Readers” on the inside back cover of the magazine that they “chose not to accept paid advertisements” in this issue. They went on to say, “Most magazines depend on ad revenue to cover the high costs of production. We rely on the support of our subscribers. Future issues may contain paid ads — but for now — please enjoy this tranquil white page! Subscribe today. Thank you!” Well for the sake of staying sane, let us hope this “tranquil” space will help Going Bonkers? survive the madness of new magazines and their struggle to survive without any paid advertising…

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A tale of two magazines…or two companies?

April 7, 2007

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Quick&Simple, Good Housekeeping’s women’s weekly was launched two years ago to be only the second women’s service weekly magazine on the market place and to compete directly with Bauer’s Woman’s World, the first women’s weekly that started the Bauer empire in the United States back in 1980. Compared to the magazine field worldwide, the American market has the least number of women’s service weekly magazines. In fact Bauer ruled that field (and continues to rule it) for more than 25 years without any competition. Bauer is also credited by revitalizing the newsstands through paying complete attention to the newsstands and introducing different promotional gimmicks like the In Touch Weekly “thank you issue for 25 cents”, and the introduction of additional weekly titles such as Life&Style Weekly and the soon to be published Cocktail Weekly. Hearst, Quick&Simple’s publisher took a page from Bauer by first, launching Quick&Simple to compete with Woman’s World, second Hearst is doing the same with the magazine’s cover prices strategy. They charged 25 cents for the first issue of Quick&Simple, then they priced the magazine at $1.49, same as Woman’s World current cover price, and later they increased it to $1.59, and this week Hearst dropped the price to 25 cents for its Easter (April 10) issue. Didn’t someone once said that imitation is the best form of flattery! The six million dollar question now is whether Hearst will ever think of launching a celebrity weekly to compete with the rest of the Bauer lines of weeklies? Let us wait and see.