A forum for the print and
digital publishing industries
- 7 CRM Strategies That Create Revenue!
Let’s face it. Even ad sales rock stars can still leave money on the table. After all, we’re human beings, not machines. We need technology to see what the human eye can’t. Perhaps that’s why CRMs have become so popular.
- Facebook’s Instant Articles Are Falling Out Of Favor With Publishers
A big story of the week was publishers’ changing use of Facebook. In some areas they’ve become displeased with the platform’s offerings, but in others they’re still happy with the massive scale as a testing ground for what works.
- Can Quality Publishers Finally Sell Quality?
The storyline in advertising in the last few weeks is how advertisers are running away from toxic adjacencies on YouTube…
- Can Podcasts Give Print Media A New Life?
Is print dead or is it merely being revitalized? It’s a question that everyone in the media industry has been trying to figure out for some time now.
- 5 Tips For Setting Your Digital Media Priorities
Publishing used to be a pretty simple business: Write stories your audience wants to read, look after your advertisers, pay attention to paper, print, and postage costs.
- Outside Magazine And Rei Team To Release All Women Issue
To celebrate the many achievements of women on all fronts, Outside and REI have teamed up to put out the May issue of Outside that features, and is put together, almost entirely by women
- Dujour Aims To Leverage Its Reach, From Social To Print
DuJour Magazine is rolling out a new offering to advertisers, which company founder and chief executive officer Jason Binn has devised in order to compete in the changing media landscape.
- Print It: Introducing Dizzy, A New Magazine By Arvid Logan And Milah Libin
Influences for the new magazine Dizzy created by New Yorkers Arvid Logan, 22, and Milah Libin, 24 run the gamut from ’90s graffiti ‘zines and art and children’s journals to forgotten publications sourced from junk shops.
- Coastal Living Magazine Celebrates A Milestone
We mentioned that the industry is changing, but readers are changing as well.