A rotary press is always a major investment item for a newspaper operation. That is why every effort must be made to ensure careful planning at all project stages in order to guarantee an optimum result.
On the face of it there’s not much to interest publishers about a new mobile phone operating system (OS) – after all, few users would be able to tell you what OS they have on their phone. So why should you care about Android? The ‘G-word,’ that’s why.
Newspapers worldwide, and the United States in particular, have adopted aggressive growth strategies to reverse their declining stock prices.
Young readers represent the future of the newspaper industry. This report describes what newspapers are doing and must do to capture the time and interest of the new generation, no matter what the channel.
Many newsrooms are creating new and developing current editorial products across multimedia platforms and working out ways to handle the precarious balance between cost and time with quality, creativity and innovation.
Twenty-two experts envision the newspaper industry’s future in 2020 in a variety of ways: As tailored newspapers, glossy magazines and networks of news generators and digital news hubs. Could the correct prediction include all of the above?
The study presented here was conducted between September 2006 and March 2007 at the Media Science Faculty of Trier University. The research project was realised with the support of Ifra and the Axel Springer publishing corporation.
World Press Trends 2007 is the most complete overview of newspaper markets worldwide since the first edition published in 1987.
In the next ten to fifteen years people in Northern America and Europe will look different in the truest sense of the word.
2007-06-04. Shi Tao, the Chinese journalist who was imprisoned after Yahoo provided information to the Chinese authorities that led to his arrest, has been awarded the 2007 Golden Pen of Freedom, the annual press freedom prize of the World Association of Newspapers (WAN), to be presented at the World Newspaper Congress and World Editors Forum next year in Cape Town, South Africa, on 4 June, 2007.
2006 was for many of the world’s newspapers a turning point. Web revenues continued to increase, while print revenues and circulation suffered gradual declines in much of the developed world.
The constant bombardment of change in the newspaper market has resulted in newspaper publishers striving to sustain a balance between delivering quality editorial products and running newsrooms efficiently whilst trying to keep costs down.