Keith Bellows, EVP/Editor-in-Chief of National Geographic Traveler and Travel Media ended day two of presentations at the ACT 5 Experience on Oct. 8. Click below to watch his presentation.
Archive for October, 2014

The Future of Digital Starts With Print; Or Does It? Keith Bellows’ ACT 5 Presentation
October 14, 2014
Single Copy Sales: A View from Norway. An ACT 5 Experience Presentation.
October 14, 2014Espen Tollefsen, CEO of Interpress, Norway, presented a view from Norway on single copy sales and distribution. His presentation took place on Oct. 8 at the ACT 5 Experience at The University of Mississippi’s Magazine Innovation Center. Click on the video below to watch his presentation.

Magazine Covers and The Single Copy Sales: A MagNet ACT 5 Experience Presentation
October 14, 2014Gil Brechtel, president of MagNet, and Joshua Gary of MagNet presented the MagNet latest research on covers and single copy sales. Click below to watch their presentation on Oct. 8 at the ACT 5 Experience.

Building and Managing Magazine and Magazine Media Audiences: An ACT 5 Experience Presentation
October 14, 2014John Harrington, publisher of The New Single Copy newsletter and a member of the advisory board of the Magazine Innovation Center @ The University of Mississippi moderated a panel discussion on Oct. 8 during the ACT 5 Experience. His guests were Malcolm Netburn, CDS Global, and John Phelan, Rodale. Click below to watch the panel discussion.

The Future Of Publishing Is Found In Its Youth: Reflections on ACT 5 Experience
October 14, 2014From the Foredeck of the Titanic
by Joe Berger
I vividly remember my reaction to Dr. Samir Husni’s announcement that he was forming the Magazine Innovation Center at Ole Miss University. It was the winter of 2009. The economy was deep into a slump. The smoldering wreckage of Anderson News was still wreaking havoc on newsstand distribution. It seemed like every day there was another article in the industry trades about the death of print magazines. The web was full of snark and Schadenfreude and the Reaper at Magazine Death Pool was getting more coverage than most writers who covered the magazine world.
Dr. Husni had an interesting response to this roiling mess. Thoroughly fed up with the news that another magazine was shutting down, he announced that he was fighting back. The Magazine Innovation Center at the University of Mississippi was going to be a place where publishers could re-imagine, amplify, clarify and testify to the future of print.
I don’t think anyone would ever say that Samir Husni isn’t bold. My reaction that day was a fist pump, and loud “Yes!” that startled the cat.
A year and a half later, after a job transition, several client changes, and more non-stop bad news in the industry trades, I made my way down to Oxford, MS for the very first ACT I conference. Two thoughts crossed my mind as I looked at the agenda during the first full day of the conference:
“I had never attended a publishing conference that wasn’t thoroughly dominated by the largest magazine companies in the industry.”
And “I had no idea that so many students still wanted to go into magazine publishing.”
Over the next three days, an Ole Miss student and a young startup publisher and me swapped notes, ideas, advice and hope while we listened to a panel of speakers that included consumer, B2B, custom and foreign publishers. We learned about the potential, promise and pitfalls of digital publishing. We learned that in the world of print publishing, the future didn’t have to be an early grave and a post in the Reaper’s Blog if we were nimble, willing to change, willing to work hard and produce quality publications.
That was the best feature of the conference. Not that the speakers weren’t excellent. They were. Not that the speakers spoke about a diverse series of topics ranging from custom publishing, digital editions, social media and e-commerce. They did. But for the first time in a long time, I was able to interact with the next generation of magazine publishers and it was revitalizing to see how committed they were to their career paths.
Last week I landed in Oxford again for ACT V. ACT stands for “Amplify, Clarify and Testify” and there were surely plenty of speakers who attested to that fact. The keynote address was from Michael Clinton of Hearst who gave a good case for how and why Hearst’s print magazines and their digital cousins co-exist and mean so much to each other.
But the next day, it was the students who responded enthusiastically to the presentation by Vanessa Bush, the eloquent and engaging editor of Essence Magazine.* Billy Morris, the CEO of Morris Communications connected the dots between magazine publishing and the need for continued journalistic integrity. Greg Sullivan, one of the founders of the successful startup Afar Magazine, kept the audience spellbound with his description of how the magazine got started and all of the other avenues, many digital, that the magazine has taken the publishing company into.
For me the experience was much like going back to college. And sitting next to the schools undergraduate and graduate journalism students reminded of how important it is for our business to recruit the talented, the dedicated, the enthusiastic, the committed. A few snarky comments written by a reporter who’s never spent five minutes understanding the intersection between social media and circulation shouldn’t control the future of magazine publishing. Clearly these kids don’t think so.
If the future of our industry lies in the hands of the four talented, engaging, thoughtful and interesting women and men who joined me for dinner last Thursday night, our business has nothing to fear and nowhere to go but up.
This week, it’s back to work. It’s back to the grind of airlines, presentations, galleys, reports and Account Executives. That’s fine. I’m armed with a bevy of information, hope and excitement for the future.
*Note: Essence Magazine is the creator of the Essence Festival, a live event the magazine hosts each year. The Festival features performers, speakers and a wide range of activities that attracts African American families from all over the country. This year, the event was hosted in New Orleans and attracted over 500,000 participants. That’s larger than ComicCon, Coachella, South By Southwest and Sundance. Considering that this event doesn’t get mainstream media buzz, can anyone wonder or deny the power of branded magazine publishing?

The Magic and Marvel of the ACT Experience: BoSacks Speaks Out.
October 13, 2014By Bo Sacks
BoSacks Speaks Out: On Hearst, Mt. Olympus, Oxford and Great Publishing Conferences
You would think that a guy who goes to a dozen publishing conferences a year and is also the writer/publisher of a daily newsletter on the subject of media, would find it easy to explain why the annual ACT magazine events at the University of Mississippi are so compelling. My problem is that it is hard to exactly define magic, and this special event is filled with magic and marvel. It is hosted by my good friend and industry debating partner Professor Samir Husni, who continuously attracts a world-wide concoction of diverse speakers. But it is not exactly the diversity of the presenters that makes it so special. If that was all it took, it would be easy to replicate, but nobody has an event quite like this one.
Perhaps the most unique thing about the conference is the intimacy of the event along with the interchange with the students. As conferences go it is probably the smallest by population, yet the biggest in comradery and geniality. The auditorium is filled with 40 professional speakers and about the same amount of journalism/media students. We are an intentionally mixed group sitting randomly in the journalism school’s cozy auditorium, senior publishing professionals hobnobbing side-by-side with the next and soon to be leaders of the noble enterprise we call media.
As a professional speaker I think that what I like and look forward to the most is the odd blending of presenting simultaneously to professionals and students. It is a special process to be able to mentor the young and eager and the seasoned professional in the same talk. It has to be detailed enough to keep the interest of the professional and exciting enough to entrance the apprentice.
The list of luminaries was impressive. It started with a keynote by Michael Clinton, President, Marketing and Publishing Director of Hearst Magazines. Michael gave a truly passionate account of what Hearst is up to in this age of publishing transformation. He started with the declaration, “Our children and grandchildren will still read print.” He advised us all interestingly enough with the same advice delivered by Brian Hoffman of Hoffman Media two days later, that you should design your covers and content based on what you know your readers want and urged that we get into the “pulse of the zeitgeist” to know what Americans are looking for.
Michael questioned, “If print is dying, why was the 2014 launch of Hearst’s Dr. Oz, the Good Life such a fantastic success? Its first issue sold out on newsstand and it achieved 300,000 subs in 4 months.” He pointed out that magazine readership has been relatively constant at 187 million, even while there is massive disruption in other mediums such as TV audiences. (I actually disagree with the implied serenity of that conclusion, but my reasoning will have to be discussed in another Bo-essay, at another time.)
Michael went on to familiarize us with Hearst “Unbound” and how magazine brands should now exist on a global scale and on many platforms with social media, you tube videos, websites, mobile applications, tablet editions and narrowed targeted editions; for example, Cosmo for Latinas.
Michael also went into some details about how the size of the audience matters more than the measurement of ad pages, (another conclusion that I reserve the right to explore and discuss at a later date.) He previewed the now available “Magazine Media 360,” which is the MPA’s new measurement tool for capturing how readers are connected to magazines across multiple platforms, and not only the print product. This is a bold attempt to combine total magazine reach, a combination of digital audiences and print circulations.
Michael discussed the many paths that Hearst is traveling down other than their core print products. The list of adventures and undertakings at Hearst is as huge as it is possible to imagine and an outside inspiration for publishers everywhere.
A few days later on in the event, when it was my turn to stand before the audience, I offered the following observations: “We heard from Michael Clinton on Tuesday night. His talk was enthusiastic, and uplifting. Indeed Hearst is doing many wonderful things. But he is from a group of Publishing Olympians. If you have as much money as a Greek god, it makes the transformation of our industry look pretty damn easy. They (Hearst) and the other Olympians, such as Time Inc, Meredith, Conde` Nast, Bonnier and a few others can afford to fail many times without effecting the long-term bottom line.
As wonderful as it is to hear of what is possible in the extreme, there are 9,000 other titles working down here on the planet earth, who oddly enough don’t have Olympian resources and yet some are still doing quite well anyway.
After that observation, I focused my discussion in an attempt to make a case for the students to understand that in the midst of the downward trends of print in today’s market place there still continues to be many success stories. In the next session, when I moderated a panel of printers, including Publisher’s Press, Democrat Printing, and Shweiki Media, they confirmed the same thought and took it a step further. The printers brought to everyone’s attention the many thousands of unaudited titles that exist in their shops and the vitality of free circulation magazines.
A thought worth remembering is that when it comes to counting magazines that are produced, it is the unaudited titles that are in the majority and the audited magazines in the minority. And that ratio is by a very large margin.
There is much more that is worth discussing, but I am writing this on my plane ride home and will have to end my recap here. In the next few days I will attempt to go over the many other highlights of this terrific conference.
Post Script: One part of the conference is the assignment of student “shadows” whose job it is to meet, greet and work with all the professionals for the duration of the event. A special note of thanks to my articulate, hard-working and impressive shadow, Jared L. Boyd, with whom it was a pleasure to work and mentor.
Here are just a few of the people and the notes that I’ll be writing about:
William Morris III (Chairman, Morris Communications):
* We’ve moved from information scarcity to information overload
Vanessa Bush (Editor in Chief, Essence Magazine):
* Print is giving birth to countless abundant opportunities to engage with our audiences
John Harrington (Publisher, The New Single Copy)
Malcolm Netburn (Chairman, CDS Global)
John Phelan (Executive Director Consumer Marketing, Rodale):
* Predictive data is the connective tissue between an issue and its readership
* The distance between content and audience must narrow
* We don’t know how to measure success right now — digital tools and platforms are changing everything
Gil Brechtel (President, MagNet)
Joshua Gary (MagNet):
* There’s turmoil in the newsstand but there can be a predictability to be made from it
* 15% of magazines sold are now bookazines, which are starting to flood the market
Espen Tollefsen (CEO, Interpress, Norway):
* Magazine markets are declining
* International titles are declining as well as domestic titles
* #1 reason for large drop is not mobile — it’s a decline in “in-store” focus and distribution issues
Keith Bellows (EVP, Editor-in-Chief, National Geographic Traveler and Travel Media):
* We’re still in the middle of the bridge between print and digital — still driving “dazed and confused”
* Natl Geo is not a media company — we have only 3 mags — rather it’s all about Natl Geo’s mission to teach people about the planet
* The era of relying on subs and advertising to keep the company profitable is over
* The stories are what drives media — don’t lose sight of that
Roy Reiman (founder, Reiman Publications):
* The Act conference brings together people who are “doers instead of dreamers” who are not afraid to share both their mistakes and their successes

The Passion for Magazines: Vanessa Bush, Editor in Chief, Essence Magazine. An ACT Experience Presentation.
October 13, 2014Vanessa Bush, editor in chief of Essence magazine, delivered the morning keynote address of day two (October 8) of the ACT 5 Experience at the Magazine Innovation Center @ The University of Mississippi. Click below to watch her presentation.

“Magazine Media 360” Explained. The Mr. Magazine™ Interview With Mary Berner, President & CEO, MPA – The Association of Magazine Media.
October 13, 2014Capturing Demand For Magazine Media Content By Measuring Audiences Across Multiple Platforms And Formats.
“What this does is make us the first-ever media to capture as an industry, basically the cross-platform demand by brand. No other industry does this.” Mary Berner
Magazine Media 360 is a newly created industry metric that captures demand for magazine media content by measuring audiences across multiple platforms and formats (including print/digital editions, websites and video) to provide a comprehensive and accurate picture of magazine media vitality. Magazine Media 360° uses data from leading third-party providers and from the reader universe. This is the first time ever by any media to measure and communicate cross-platform consumer demand by brand.
Mary Berner, President & CEO, MPA – The Association of Magazine Media, believes in the driving force of this new metric that can measure platforms as a whole, rather than just from the print side.
I reached out to Mary recently and our conversation was focused on the new consumer centric and audience-first mentality Magazine Media 360 promotes and advocates. The time for this type of thinking in the magazine media industry, Berner believes, is one that has finally come and will help to change the reality of the way the industry measures and monetizes the many platforms offered to the consumer today.
So sit back and enjoy the Mr. Magazine™ interview with Mary Berner, President & CEO, MPA.
But first the sound-bites…
On the purpose of Magazine Media 360: For us as an industry, this is a game changer. What it does is reflect a very seismic shift away from communicating and capturing print-only metrics to a whole ecosystem metric.
On the timing of the new measuring system: I don’t think the industry was ready for it yet, I think we needed some critical mass in terms of multi-platform distribution content and frankly the third party research providers weren’t yet ready to get the data; so I think the time is right now.
On whether she believes the magazine media industry’s problems have all been self-inflicted: I would say that print is a part of the consumer consumption experience, an extremely important part, but I would say that we haven’t told the story in regards to consumer demand up to this point.
On the major stumbling blocks she believes will be encountered along the way: To be truthful, our attention in trying to figure out all the things that could and might go wrong ahead of time and addressing any and all challenges before we actually launched this, puts us in a position where we’ve asked and answered many of the stumbling blocks.
On what’s next for Mary Berner and Magazine Media 360: This is just the beginning. I think it’s a good first step, but what we need to show is engagements, because we know from research in various companies the engagements in these brands of these multi-platform experiences are really extraordinary.
And now the lightly edited transcription of the Mr. Magazine™ interview with Mary Berner, President & CEO, MPA… Keep in mind, that since this is a brand new tool the MPA is using in measuring the strength of magazines and magazine media I’ve opted for a full explanation and presentation that Mary shared with me. It is essential to document and understand this new milestone marker in the history of magazines and magazine media..
Samir Husni: Explain Magazine Media 360 and the reasons behind this new magazine media measurement plan.

Mary Berner: For us as an industry, this is a game changer. What it does is reflect a very seismic shift away from communicating and capturing print-only metrics to a whole ecosystem metric. And as such when you look at the data, it actually redefines the state of magazine media. We believe that consumer demand also means money.
The idea for this and I believe you and I talked about it and debated it, but essentially the word magazine was the impetus for this entire idea. The word magazine for most people almost always refers to the print product. And yet every company pretty much operates as multi-platform, multimedia companies.
So the impetus was the shift from being magazine companies to magazine media companies and every single one of them does this and this is an interesting concept, so keep this in mind when you think about our methodology. The one thing that’s unique about magazine media and we’re defining it as a content brand that is anchored in a print magazine, but also disseminates magazine media content across many platforms and formats, so the magazine media content strategy is, for the most part, a platform-specific strategy, which means you create the content specific to the platform, as opposed to, for example, a television strategy which is platform agnostic. And that means you have an everywhere, anywhere strategy where the consumer gets the same content wherever they are, whenever they want it.
And by definition the audience augmenting, or differentiating content has actually been audience augmenting, because any one of these experiences, for example on Sunset, you consume as a consumer on its own and you would do so because you understand the Sunset brand means something, whereas the audience fragmented television strategy is audience fragmenting because obviously, you wouldn’t watch the same program again and again.
And this pretty much applies…this kind of platform-specific content strategy, to just about every brand, at least the major ones. So, for example, I could consume the video content from Woman’s World, which for them would be focused on exercise, without ever being a reader of the print version of the magazine media content. And we’re finding that the numbers bear this out, that digital-only consumers are going to the brand experience under the magazine media brand and this applies to just about all of the major magazines.
Essentially, here’s how we got to where we got to; right now what we have is print metrics and with advertising, for example; out of 10 advertisers only two limit their investment in that brand to the print version, only two. Eight of the others also invest across the multiple platforms. So it’s 80% that do something besides print. Yet a PIB (Publishers Information Bureau) or an advertising paging number only captures one part of it and in no way captures an advertiser’s commitment to a brand. So by definition it’s incomplete and therefore inaccurate.
And that played out again and again this fall. For example, the September issue of one of the big fashion magazines had a PIB number that was down, yet their advertising performance was the best it had been in 15 years, because the advertisers committed to multi-platform packages. In isolation, a print advertising page number just isn’t a great metric anymore.
And ditto for circulation if you look at the AAM (Alliance for Audited Media, the former ABC, Audit Bureau of Circulation) statements. Circulation is basically the counting of copies sold or distributed. Yet, if you add up all the AAM titles, they represent only 30% of the total print magazine audience, which is how planners buy. So, it doesn’t really tell the whole story. And then when you actually apply that to the whole ecosystem, the AAM circulation represents only 21% of the total audience. So using a circulation number in isolation, I think it does certain things, but in isolation by definition, it’s like pegging the audience or the vitality of the Super Bowl based on the number of people in the stadium, it essentially under captures.
Yet, in light of all that, what we’ve asked ourselves is what is the common courtesy and how do we measure what’s really going on, because, this is the data we got for July; we did three months of data and essentially what we’re seeing is that the lion’s share of the business is still print and will continue to be so for the foreseeable future, if not forever, but other platforms and formats are gaining scale. And when you look at the whole ecosystem and you leave out those others: video, mobile, web, desktop, laptop and digital; you leave out 35% of the business essentially. And when you look at the total pie, it was up 7.8% overall.
People say that the lion’s share of revenue and profit is in the print publications and I say, yes, that’s absolutely true for now. However, that is rapidly changing. Look at Meredith; Meredith is up to almost 20% of their revenue coming in from digital sources and that’s kind of an old school company. And it’s rapidly growing. The only proxy really for vitality, I would argue, for current health or future promise would be consumer demand. It’s certainly how brands like BuzzFeed are measured. And it’s also the only common currency among all media. In a world where you can’t define what makes television television, consumer demand is an important one.
So, what we did was we created Magazine Media 360 and essentially it’s an attempt to present a comprehensive picture of consumer demand for magazine brands. And in such, it captures print and digital editions; it captures websites, including desktop, laptop, mobile and video. Next, this month we’re going to release a social media report that’s separate, it doesn’t roll up into that because it’s a whole different animal.
What this does is make us the first-ever media to capture as an industry, basically the cross-platform demand by brand. No other industry does this. Television gives Nielsen ratings when they want to; they don’t give them as an industry, they don’t give them by brand and they certainly don’t give any revenue numbers. So, what we’ve done with this is capture that additional 35% which makes this a comprehensive and a consumer centric and really a more accurate barometer, if you will, of a company and an industry’s vitality.
But how do we figure out how to do this? Well, we decided we had to use third party reputable information, otherwise people would game it. You had to qualify it; you had to actually be multi-platform to qualify. So we used very reputable data from Nielsen, comScore and others and we had a very, very rigorous process about how to get the data and what to pull.
What we’ve essentially decided to do after consultations with many, many experts is we’re pulling, not page views, not traffic, but unique visitors and unique viewers and audience numbers. It’s a more conservative number and it gives us a more accurate picture.
So with third party data we’ve covered the whole pie and the story it tells is interesting. We have 95% industry buy-in, which essentially means we had 30 companies to buy-in and that represents 147 brands. We only had three brands not do it that qualified. One was the Shank titles, the other was a tennis magazine, mostly because they just didn’t respond to emails and the other is Wenner, because you have to also be a MPA member to qualify and there are only two major companies that aren’t, Wenner and Bauer, but it didn’t affect the numbers, even with them not in here, it covers 95% of the magazine reader universe and basically represents the entire industry.
The process works with all 147 brands giving their data to us and they pull it from comScore, Nielsen and other reputable companies. We then aggregate the data and post it publicly, so every single month we will post 147 brands and their consumer-demand number by platform and then a total aggregate 360 number. So it’s really an unprecedented model of transparency and it took an enormous amount of courage, if you ask me, from all these publishers. And we at the MPA will show the trends.
For the first one we launched publicly, it was August over August; we do the same period over the same period; what we saw was a 10% growth in total audience and we saw that was coming from mobile web, a lot of mobile web growth. And print, while it’s a smaller part of the pie, was actually up 1.1%, so it’s just a smaller part of a growing pie.
We’ll soon begin social media reports, which we’ll do toward the end of the month and the response was uniformly positive. Most importantly the advertising community and these are three of the biggest buyers representing three of the biggest agencies and every single one of them was applauding because the concept is you can’t sell what you can’t measure; you can’t sell it to a consumer and you can’t sell it to an advertiser. So, what we’ve done is thoroughly obvious; while it’s not easy to get everyone to agree, it’s obvious we should be capturing consumer-demand across all the platforms. And this is a very, very important indicator. The press was uniformly positive as well and I love what Mashable said because they’re always trashing magazines (laughs) and they said: if we assembled the study in an attempt to refute the assertion that magazine audiences are dwindling, the data vindicates them and that kind of said it all.
Also The Wall Street Journal said: magazine publishers can collectively point to some positive trends. Of course, we’re not saying that there aren’t problems because there certainly are, but we’re saying that the first step is to figure out what the consumers are doing, because there is no business if there isn’t consumer demand. And consumer demand is actually quite robust. Now this is not a report that shows everybody up, about 45 titles were down, so it’s pretty accurate.
That’s what this is all about. It’s really a reflection of how the business has changed, how we operate and how our content is consumed across multiple platforms. It’s the first step in capturing, measuring and communicating those reflections.
Samir Husni: I was just in Cannes at the Distripress Congress and my presentation was about “audience first.” And this is what Magazine Media 360 is saying: let’s focus on and be consumer centric. Why did we wait so long to do this?
Mary Berner: You know why? Because it’s really hard to get 147 brands and 30 CEO’s to agree. And I really didn’t wait that long, I’d been here two years and we got this done in six months. I also don’t think the industry was ready for it yet, I think we needed some critical mass in terms of multi-platform distribution content and frankly the third party research providers weren’t yet ready to get the data; so I think the time is right now.
The other question people ask is why don’t other media do it and my response is: they should. But it requires consensus, it requires industry consensus. And that’s a heavy lift.
Samir Husni: It’s as you said, magazine media is unlike any other medium, and you don’t get the same experience. If I’m watching a video, regardless of which platform, it’s the same video, where the magazine experience is completely different.
Mary Berner: All the content is created under a brand umbrella. So if I’m a Vogue person, the brand gives me permission to experience a whole lot of things under that umbrella. We’re the only media that’s actually set up well for that. CBS isn’t a brand. Other media are; I think ESPN is a brand; they actually do a great job at it.
Samir Husni: The new buzz phrase today is: print isn’t dead, it’s just in decline, but it’s still the cornerstone of our industry? Do you agree?
Mary Berner: I would say that print is a part of the consumer consumption experience, an extremely important part, but I would say that we haven’t told the story in regards to consumer demand up to this point. And when you do that, when you don’t tell the whole story, what fills that vacuum is a relentless and inaccurate story about one part of the business.
It’s inaccurate, like circulation. Everyone harps on newsstand. Newsstand is 8% of the total, 8%. And at its peak, 20 years ago, it was less than 20%. So there’s a kind of common narrative around print. Advertising paging over the last five years is down less than 8% in total. So, print has its challenges, but what isn’t even captured in those numbers is the migration of advertising dollars to other platforms. Therefore, it doesn’t tell an accurate story. We haven’t told an accurate advertising story or an accurate consumer-demand story yet.
Samir Husni: What do you think will be your major stumbling block? The honeymoon has been great, the reaction has been great; do you think it’s going to be smooth sailing from here or are you expecting some turbulence along the way?
Mary Berner: To be truthful, our attention in trying to figure out all the things that could and might go wrong ahead of time and addressing any and all challenges before we actually launched this, puts us in a position where we’ve asked and answered many of the stumbling blocks. Many of them had to do with methodology or transparency, things like that, so the only thing that I can imagine is maybe somebody won’t like their numbers.
I think the opportunity is that what we’ll see is a set of tools that will start people talking about it. How do we figure out how to use this to help us to buy?
Samir Husni: What are some of the criteria that you’re now going to use at The New York Times box score?
Mary Berner: It’s already changed. We’ve affected with this, just look at the numbers. They’re all up, two weeks in a row, a 100%. Let me tell you why The New York Times doesn’t use ad pages and why the entire industry was behind that, because it doesn’t tell an accurate story, by definition it tells an incomplete story. So, we don’t have something to replace that with, in terms of the advertising performance. We don’t, but until we do we have an obligation, in fact a responsibility, to stop reporting inaccurate data, because it is used to peg the vitality of an industry and it doesn’t do that. You could have had a spectacular PIB month and had a terrible advertising month. You could have had a terrible PIB month and a spectacular advertising month. It only captures the print performance. And as such, it’s just not comprehensive. And the reaction to that has been a little bit of, well, what am I going to use? But once I explain it to analysts and reporters, everybody gets it. You can’t argue with it, because it’s true.
Now what people will argue about is, they’ll say we need to get some replacement advertising data and what I’d like to remind the world of is, we’re the only industry that has released advertising data for decades as an industry. No other industry does it. We’ve been doing it and we’ve been doing it up to the point where it’s not accurate anymore. We had enormous transparency. Think about television, there’s no revenue numbers. They talk about the upfront when it’s good, but they don’t do it as an industry. Radio doesn’t, digital doesn’t; none of them do.
So we were in the forefront of transparency, but now that it’s not representative of the advertising performance of a brand, company or the industry, we have a responsibility to stop promoting and communicating it.
Samir Husni: You have a very nice feather in your cap now, so what’s next for Mary?
Mary Berner: This is just the beginning. I think it’s a good first step, but what we need to show is engagements, because we know from research in various companies the engagements in these brands of these multi-platform experiences are really extraordinary and that is a differentiator for magazine media and so, how do we do that? And I really wasn’t looking for a feather in my cap, I really wasn’t. (Laughs) But you can’t change the narrative about magazines until you start capturing and talking about magazine media. You have to start talking about the business the way the business is now.
Samir Husni: Thank you.

This Is The Most Exciting Time To Be In The Media Business: ACT 5 Experience, Day Four.
October 10, 2014By Lisa Scott, Executive Director, PBAA
Today we witnessed that the “TM” after Mr. Magazine™ doesn’t only mean he’s trademarked his name- it clearly describes his passion and expertise- as a teacher and mentor to his graduate and undergraduate students of the past 30 years. Successful graduates demonstrated their talent and insights and skills, and were a testament to the value of the service journalism program at Ole Miss. The program closed with a short recap, and a conversation between the students and the recap “team” about career, passion, personal branding, and professionalism. Thanks to Samir, his staff, the students, the graduates, the speakers and the attendees for the best “Experience” yet.
Jonathan Graham (HP Graphics & Solutions, Germany):
• We are at an “event horizon”- the beginning and the end of everything
• You can’t escape the sheer mass of the web- there are now over 1 billion websites
• 76% of Americans still prefer reading on paper
• Human natural tendencies are attracted to print
• Germany has a strong “slow media” program- strong culture of reading
• We’ve gone through the hype- looking at better ways to go
• Direct marketing on email- open rates are incredibly low
• Print is the new 1:1
• Sustainability is the intersection of environment, social, economic… the same is true for sustainable communication but content is at the center of these three, a holistic approach
Clinton Smith (Editor, Veranda Magazine)
Garreth Blackwell (Digital Magazines and Commercial Printing)
Alex McDaniel (Alabama Media Group):
• All graduates of the service journalism program at Ole Miss
• In college, learned:
o How to destroy things on purpose: change is a powerful thing, provided you have a good reason to do it
o How to write a business plan that doesn’t suck: thriving in the business needs understanding of all aspects of it so you have something to add to the conversation (you can’t be naïve)
o How to adapt when everything goes to hell: getting set in your ways or expectations will only serve to hold you back
• Love print
• Build business focus on the things you need to have happen, not the medium itself
• Made experiences: connections that people can be a part of
• Shamelessly self-promote
John Harrington (Publisher, The New Single Copy)
Bob Sacks (Precision Media)
Lisa Scott (Executive Director, Periodical and Book Association of America):
• Recap thoughts
o Diversity of opinions, lots of useable information, no one answer to challenges, but celebrate
o Spread your horizon, invigorated, impressed with our leaders of tomorrow
o Students are the best part of the conference for all the attendees and speakers
o A different kind of digital/replica product will emerge in the future
o The progression of media has gone from Radio to TV (radio with pictures), etc. The transformative process will be to find the things that print can do best
o Anything done well will work
o You don’t need to know everything about everything, but you need to know enough to understand the process of our work
o Need to break out of silos but still need to know the rest of the business
• Advice to students re: career, work, passion, preparation, networking, self-promotion
• Follow up with the people you met here- on paper!
• Attitude is critical- never have a bad day, be authentic
• THIS IS THE MOST EXCITING TIME TO BE IN THIS BUSINESS!

Words of Wisdom: Roy Reiman and Publishing Magazines in the Digital Age. An ACT 5 Experience Presentation.
October 10, 2014The opening act of the ACT 5 Experience was reserved for Roy Reiman, founder of Reiman publications and publisher of Our Iowa and Our Wisconsin magazines. Roy, who is also a member of the advisory board for the Magazine Innovation Center, opened the ACT 5 Experience on Oct. 7. Click below to watch his presentation.







