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Magazines : Magazine Subscription
Sales Affected By The Internet
While
it may be unfair to blame the internet for the decrease
in sales for a whole other medium, it is probably fair to
say that there is some correlation between the decline in
paid sales for magazines and the increasing popularity of
the internet. Though magazine newsstand sales and yearly
subscriptions have been declining for years the internet
has provided a different way of providing information that
readers may prefer.
Magazines, a much older
medium, perhaps comes across as a veritable dinosaur in
the so called information age. When comparing the two it
is easy to see why users have flocked to the world wide
web.
Magazines Are Not
Free
While publishers expect
you to pay anywhere from $3-$5 for a single issue of their
magazine, most information on the internet can be found
free of charge. There are websites, that charge users to
view their content, but most information can be found free
of charge if a user is willing to search. Magazine subscriptions
are priced lower than ever before, as many publishers are
practically giving away subscriptions. However, editors
must work hard to publish a product that will compel readers
to actually pay the purchase price, at a time when the ideology
has changed and people believe that all information should
be free.
Magazines Cannot
Report News 24/7
In addition to being cost
free, the internet is able to provide information as it
is occurring. Most magazines are published on either a weekly
or monthly basis. News magazines in particular have a hard
time competing as the current issue rushed to print is yesterdays
news, and popular portals report news up to the very minute.
By the time readers receive their magazines in the mail
or purchase it from the newsstand, they may have read the
same information or have seen it on the news.
The future of magazines
as a medium may seem bleak. However, there are genres that
have seen sales increases such as the celebrity magazines.
Though the information landscape is changing there are those
who steadfastly subscribe to their favorite subscriptions
year after year.
Publishers have started
to adapt by embracing the internet and using it as a tool
to connect with existing readers and perhaps convert new
readers. Magazine Subscriptions, newsstand sales, and magazine
websites often work in conjunction with one another to create
the complete user experience. To try and combat the existing
decline of subscription sales many publishers offer unique
deals and offers to their subscribers on their website as
a means to get readers to subscribe. Advertising dollars
generated from magazine websites have perhaps sponsored
the continuous lowering of prices on print subscriptions.
It is difficult to say how
the internet will continue to affect other mediums, but
the information landscape is continuing to evolve.
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