The Death of the Magazine
The magazine industry is declining, with many popular titles ceasing publication. National Geographic's shift to short-form content reflects a trend prioritizing engagement over quality, pushing readers towards individual writers for journalism.
Read original articleThe decline of print magazines is a significant trend in the media landscape, as highlighted by Ted Gioia. Unlike other industries that have seen growth, magazines have consistently shrunk in size and influence. Historical comparisons reveal that many of the most popular magazines from 1960, such as Reader’s Digest and Life, have either gone bankrupt or ceased publication. The rise of digital media has not salvaged the magazine industry; instead, it has led to layoffs and a shift towards short-form content, often at the expense of quality journalism. National Geographic serves as a case study, having transitioned from a respected publication to one that prioritizes social media engagement over long-form writing. This trend reflects a broader issue within legacy media, which has lost confidence in quality writing and has not adjusted pay rates to attract top talent. While a few magazines like The New Yorker and The Atlantic maintain high standards, many others, including online platforms, are struggling. The future of journalism may not lie in traditional magazines but rather in direct relationships between readers and writers, as audiences increasingly seek out quality content outside of established periodicals.
- The magazine industry has seen a consistent decline in circulation and quality.
- National Geographic's shift to short-form content exemplifies the broader trend in legacy media.
- Many once-popular magazines have ceased publication or gone bankrupt.
- Quality writing is increasingly sidelined in favor of quick, engaging content.
- Readers are turning to individual writers and platforms like Substack for quality journalism.
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- Many commenters note the competition for attention from digital platforms, leading to a decline in magazine readership.
- There is a recognition of the value of niche magazines that cater to specific interests, contrasting with the struggles of general publications.
- Several users express nostalgia for the quality and depth of traditional magazines, lamenting the prevalence of ads and superficial content in modern issues.
- Some suggest that the rise of individual writers and platforms like Substack is reshaping the landscape of journalism and content creation.
- Comments highlight the ongoing existence of magazines in niche markets, indicating that while the industry is changing, it is not entirely disappearing.
I used to edit a newsstand leisure magazine here in the UK. It was founded in the 1970s. We sold about 18,000 copies a month in our peak, making us the market leader.
I'm not the editor any more (I went off to do something else) but the magazine is still going. It won't surprise you to learn that it sells much less than it used to.
But that's not because the magazine has got worse. It hasn't. The writing is still as good as ever, the news reporting still pretty sharp. It's not because the market has changed. It's not because you can get the same information online for free. Much to my amazement, in 20+ years, no one has really catered for this particular market online - there's a lot of chuntering on forums and Facebook groups, but no one really doing compelling content. We were turning over £1m+ a year. I don't think anyone is even turning over £50k writing about this subject online.
So what changed? I think it's ultimately about attention. When I edited the magazine (c. 2010), people still chose to spend part of their leisure time reading about one of their hobbies. We were a fun way to do that. Today, people don't need to spend £5 to happily while away a few hours: they can just scroll through their phones. The magazine habit has gone.
Crucially, it's not that the information has gone online. It really hasn't. I read all the various forums and groups, and still when the magazine plops onto my doormat every month, I read it and find a load of stuff I didn't know. It's just that the time that was once filled with reading magazines is now filled with something else.
And the trend of "replace in-depth well paid work by cheap short term attention catching hooks" keeps spreading.
It's very very strange to witness that kind of social waves.
The cycle didn't start with publishers shrinking page count and cutting back on long-form content - publishers started shrinking page count and cutting back on content after they started losing money (at least in many cases).
Print publishers were/are competing for attention as much as dollars, and there's so many other things that grab people's attention. There's so many other sources of information. Advertisers have many, many more venues and -- sadly -- they tend to choose the venues that they can track over the ones they can't.
I used to write for several print magazines in the tech space -- and I watched their ad budgets get hollowed out by online options because (generally) buying ad space in a magazine is an act of faith vs. "we ran this online campaign and we see we have this conversion rate and can track that 1,023 people downloaded our ebook and that this marketing 'touched' 75 accounts that closed or renewed deals for more than $1m."
I love print. Love it. But I also have realized that, honestly, I have very little time for reading the print magazines I subscribe to. I subscribe to a few sci-fi print publications and they just gather dust. I have a Mother Jones print/online subscription. Usually the print version goes into recycling without ever looking at it.
What is lacking here is any suggestion of a solution. He gestures at the problem being cutting content, but then closes with a "we need to work on building something else" without actually describing the something else worth a damn.
Another advantage is that the content of an issue of the magazine doesn't really get old.
MagCulture [1] has 600 zines in stock and Printed Matter [2] has nearly 8,000
At present I'm enjoying n+1, The Baffler, Granta and The Fence
Counter-intuitively, a zine can be an easier way for writers and creators to get niche/unusual content seen than battling the algorithm online
[1] https://magculture.com 270 St John Street, London
[2] https://www.printedmatter.org 231 11th Avenue, Manhattan
As a reader, I am more than satisfied with the current state of niche magazines (e.g., guitar, drones, motosports, and lifestyle), where the access to the internet in those places became some kind of meta-curation on interesting topics.
For the general magazines, I feel bad about how this trend is going. For instance, in South America, magazines used to cross-communicate with some points of society (Class A, B, and a bit of C), and the rest of the society (Class D and E) used to have some of this work downstream via night news.
Another thing is that wristleblowers knew that the enditorial support in magazines is way higher than in TV news channels, since the latter used to be more compliant with some of the power systems.
Back in the day, it would be impossible for any TV news editor to ignore any history from the magazines (that in this time was upstream), and the lifeblood of this kind of vehicle was to denounce corruption of the government, investigative reportage, and obvious discussions related to societal trends. The sad thing is that only the latter is happening.
business wise, the closest analogy today is podcasts, not because of writing, but they're the curators of the discourse. now Fridman and Rogan are each a one man Atlantic or Harper's, providing the platform for ideas and selling attention and wielding influence on it. we don't need journalists to tell us stories when the people doing the things can just tell their story themselves.
we've lost some of the insight that came from writing as a craft and those insights formed the previous culture and identity, but we get these direct now.
maybe writing polarizes, where only writers who can do fiction well can add any value or insight into anything real.
The Spectator has been growing both in print and online. The editor wrote about this, in the wake of the title's sale, this week:
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-spectators-new-owner...
> In this trade, there is always pressure to go for the digital ‘quick wins’ (clickbait articles, advertorials, etc.) but we rejected this as a false economy – so commercial that it’s uncommercial. It would take us downmarket, deform our character and, ergo, reduce the company’s value. So we went the other way, using our success to double down on the magazine’s finest traditions in the belief that quality of writing matters above all. We did a lot that went against the conventional digital wisdom. We put together a different business model and a unique way of working, based on close collaboration between all departments and journalists equally comfortable with print, digital and broadcast.
> When other publications were shedding sub-editors, we poached the best ones we could find. When newspapers shrank their books sections, we proudly kept Sam Leith’s at ten-plus pages and gave him a podcast. We created a research team who apply perhaps the most robust pre-publication scrutiny on Fleet Street (mindful that it matters more than ever that readers can trust the facts they read). When other weeklies started cutting costs by not printing over Easter and the summer, we put more effort than ever into the issues released in those holiday periods.
> The digital temptations that can lure publications to their grave (‘The world has changed! Look at the clicks! Drop the opera review!’) are dangerous as they come dripping in what looks like supportive data. You can end up not just being edited by algorithm but stripping a publication of nuance, variety and soul. Our belief was that if we innovated, and used the proceeds to double or treble down on what makes The Spectator different, we would maximise the value of the company as well as serve our readers. Much of what we did could be seen as uneconomic on an individual basis – but put it all together and you get a five times valuation uplift.
So I went out to take a look at some magazines both digital and print. It was immediately apparent why they are dying, and it's not just because people read everything on the web for free these days.
Every magazine I checked out was MOSTLY ads. Even during the Super Bowl, the commercials will be less than 1/3 of the total broadcast time. In the magazines the ads took up well over half of the available pages. Who in their right mind would pay money for that?
Magazines back in the day where nothing less than lavish. Elaborate foldouts of maps and photos in NatGeo. In depth strategy guides and customized demo discs on a monthly basis in video game magazines. All that is gone. The modern day magazine is a stack of ads with a few blog posts scattered throughout.
I'm going to guess it's some sort of death spiral. They lose money to the web, so they had less to invest in content and had to take more ads. That resulted in further loss of readership, and so on.
I do believe that a highly targeted and extremely high quality magazine can succeed in the present day. Of course the definition of success won't mean selling millions of copies on newsstands everywhere. It will mean having a loyal subscriber base that provides a largely flat, but sustainable, flow of revenue.
I am most likely ignorant, however. Are there any other Substack publications of the same quality?
Does anyone know good magazines about tech/programming/engineering?
I found CODE Magazine [*], which looks promising, but it is primarily about C#/.NET.
[0] https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/16/business/media/outdoors-p...
Photography budgets have been plummeting for years and there are less paid gigs now than there were even a decade ago.
However, most writers are way out on the long tail of the curve, making next to nothing. I subscribe free to 100's of them, but "upgrade to Paid"??? Nope, nope.
> Nowadays authors at that level would be on Substack, or some other similar platform. That’s because their name would be their personal brand, and they wouldn’t need a periodical—and certainly not a magazine in terminal decline.
They ARE on Substack, and a precious few are like you, Ted: making the big bucks.
I'd be willing to pay for an aggregate of 100 or so of them, where their output this week is omitted if they've got nothing. The catch is, I wouldn't pay huge money for that. This isn't going to bring back the days of Readers Digest and Esquire. There's just too much on the Web that's free to occupy my attention.
> Imagine if you owned the Lakers or the Yankees, and put all the emphasis on the team brand—but kept reducing the pay to actual players. You might continue to sell tickets over the short and even medium term. But to survive over the long haul, you eventually need to support the team brand with commensurate talent at each position—and that talent needs to be nurtured and paid more than peanuts.
There was a time people paid for a cable connection and channels. You might pay extra for more channels, but that was about it. Then we all watched online via Netflix. Then HBo, Hulu, Skyshowtime, Disneyplus and AppleTV+ all came along and now we just shuffle through these subscriptions to see the stuff we want to see, but not whole year round. Most of the people I know will have a subscription for one or two month and then shuffle to the next.
If magazines where that easy, you just subscribe to a separate month or you just buy loose articles from past issues, they could still be making money.
Magazines are still around, but they're addressed to niches.
Related
What Happened to People Magazine?
People Magazine, once known for in-depth stories, now focuses on celebrities. Owned by Dotdash since 2021, it emphasizes SEO-friendly content and shopping guides, catering to digital trends with celebrity updates and viral stories.
The Submarine (2005)
The New York Times discusses the corporate world's return to suits, driven by PR firms shaping media narratives. PR's influence on news content and the evolving media landscape raise uncertainties about its future role.
Journalism has become ground zero for the vocation crisis
Journalism industry faces layoffs, burnout, and news deserts impacting civil society. Economic pressures deter talent from vital professions like journalism, nursing, teaching, and caregiving. Challenges highlight clash between ideals and commercial realities.
To preserve their work, journalists take archiving into their own hands
Journalists are increasingly archiving their work due to news site closures like MTV News and Deadspin. Many lack preservation protocols, prompting freelancers to develop personal archiving systems amid growing concerns.
To preserve their work journalists take archiving into their own hands
As news organizations shut down, journalists are increasingly archiving their work to preserve history. Tools like the Wayback Machine and personal records are vital for safeguarding their contributions.