Yikes pt.2

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From the New York Times:


In a move intended to save money in the economically pressed business of local television news, two stations in Philadelphia owned by NBC and Fox are combining some of their video operations with a plan to provide the service to all the stations owned by each company.

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Local television stations have experienced sharp decreases in their profit margins as the Internet has cut into their reach with local viewers and many reliable local advertisers, like auto dealers, have been in a severe downturn.

“It’s a tough operating environment,” said John Wallace, the president of NBC Local Media, “This is about cost savings, but it’s also about being smart about local television news.”



Maybe if news stations would start viewing their online presences as their primary mode of distribution and not secondary to its television broadcasting, they wouldn't be siphoning off viewers to their Internet competition so quickly. I'm not saying remove anything from the television end of distribution, but approach it with the mindset that within five to ten years it's entirely possible that online viewing will surpass television viewing. That's really not that crazy of a prediction with 19% of households that watch tv online (doubling within two years), Tina Fey's Palin impression returning relevancy to SNL (only 1/3rd of the audience viewed it live), and even NBC learning from its online experience.

But with local news websites mainly consisting of poor graphic design, poor layouts, content management systems that only allow images up to 180px (are you kidding me?), more garish advertisements, pop-ups, flash ads, etc, it's not a surprise that we are losing the opportunity to create unique daily pageviews.

I'll be posting soon on my take about local news's inept ability to achieve a competitive internet presence.