

… and the question whether it should be rebuild or not is limited only to the newsstands in a specific region of the country? I know magazines are using split covers more often these days because the technology make it possible to do that at a very cheap price. The question that I have is should we do something just because it is doable? More than one subscriber told me today that they were surprised to the see the August issue of National Geographic on the newsstands with the New Orleans cover. Their initial thought was that they missed that issue until they reached out and flipped the pages to find it is the same issue they have at home with the Maya story on the cover. Research shows us that people see and remember color first, pictures second and type third. Well, a change in the cover picture and in the type are two strikes against people’s memory and recognition and thus two strikes against National Geographic. If editors feel that a story and an image are worthy of being on the cover of the magazine, it better be on the entire magazine run. Unless the decision to send the almost 5 million subscribers the Maya cover (which is also the cover on the National Geographic website) and thousands of newsstand readers the New Orleans cover is not an editorial decision. My question is “Who is in charge?”
Archive for August, 2007

New Orleans not good enough for National Geographic subscribers…
August 2, 2007
iPhone magazines?
August 1, 2007The folks at Texterity, Inc. have prepared a video demo of their new iPhone magazines. In the demo they use a copy of Popular Science magazine delivered and viewed via the iPhone. Here is the link for you to judge for yourself whether this new method of delivery of a printed product is worthy of your fingers touching the screen. I would love to hear your feed back.

Food for the body, junk for the soul…
August 1, 2007
Come September 18 a new magazine from Multi-Media International will appear on the nation’s newsstands to address the needs of “of the foodie in all of us, where pop culture, and popular recipes infuse together in each and every issue.” Food HQ magazine will combine recipes, celebrities (of course, who can publish without them) and nutrition. The bimonthly will be distributed by Kable Distribution Services and will cost $4.99 an issue. The promotional cover, as you can see above, sports two icons in the food industry Rachael Ray and Paula Deen. Needless to say both of the aforementioned icons have their own magazines too.
