The keiretsu-cooperative: a model for post-Gutenberg publishing

04 March 2010The paper outlines a suggestion for a profitable, post-Gutenberg publishing model, one that puts bloggers at its centre. It avoids the chief risk of implementing pay-for-content plans, which is reducing site traffic, thereby reducing publishers' attractiveness to advertisers.

Communication by printed media has reached its limit as an agent of democratisation. Only a privileged minority had access to tools of printed mass communication at the close of the Gutenberg era, and before the widespread availability of inexpensive digital media, including the Internet. At the end of 2009, printed book publishing was a business in decline after years of low or no growth. Newspaper publishers were searching for business models to replace a modus operandi in which most of their revenue – which rarely covered operating costs – was derived from commercial advertising, with newsstand purchases and subscriptions in the US and UK commonly accounting for no more than a fifth of their sales. This paper will outline a suggestion for a profitable, post-Gutenberg publishing model, one that puts bloggers at its centre. It avoids the chief risk of implementing pay-for-content plans, which is reducing site traffic, thereby reducing publishers’ attractiveness to advertisers. Its pay-to-own scheme allows digital media to live up to their democratic potential in the highest degree.

Noticeboard

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The Attorney-General, the Hon Nicola Roxon MP, has announced the appointment of Professor Jill McKeough as Commissioner in charge of the ALRC’s Inquiry into Copyright Law.

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