Andrew Zaleski

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Some People Do Read, You Know

Tags: "andrew zaleski," "Loyola," "writer," "editor," "journalist"
Byliner, digital media, iPad subscriptions, paywall, The New Yorker Posted August 4th, 2011 in Innovation, Journalism, Reconsider This | 0 Comments

A New York Times story about The New Yorker and its success online crossed my Facebook news feed, courtesy of my film-reviewing friend Jenn Ladd.

While the staffs of glossy magazines have deployed, for more than several months now, numerous resources toward not only pushing their printed pages into the digital landscape via the iPad, but also cajoling and convincing their advertisers (and, to some degree probably, themselves) that new media devices can augment, not threaten, a printed publication’s popularity and profitability, The New Yorker appears to have seized a small triumph, announcing it has roughly 100,000 iPad readers, 20,000 of which are paid subscribers at $59.99 per year. “Several thousand more people,” the article says, purchase single issues of The New Yorker for $4.99. What’s notable about these statistics is the fact that The New Yorker just released its iPad version this spring.

Granted, several elements of this particular print publication have perhaps influenced heavily The New Yorker‘s success in the digital realm. Readers of the magazine tend to be the affluent, over-$100,000 crowd, economically and by leisure equipped to not only spend money on an iPad and a subscription, but also make abundant use of the product so as to make the money spent on it and the subscription actually worthwhile. (Whereas, if I purchased an iPad and a New Yorker subscription, I’d be several months out on money for groceries.) New Yorker readers, furthermore, have been conditioned to do one thing: read columns of text. Unlike other glossies under the Conde Nast umbrella—Wired or GQ, for instance—people turn The New Yorker‘s pages pursuing the next word, not the next graphic, illustration, photograph, and the like.* This means converting the printed form over to a digital platform becomes relatively simple; the audience has already expressed its loyalty to a form, one with which—with 100,000 digital subscriptions—it’s satisfied. There’s no need for flashy infographics or interactive material because New Yorker readers want to do simply that: read.

Beyond that, however, The New Yorker itself appears to be doing everything correctly, insofar as there’s a “correct” way to approach journalistic innovation in the twenty-first century. It has hired a news editor to ensure that daily content on bigger breaking news stories (for instance, the death of Osama bin Laden) makes its way to the website; its content, for some time now, has been protected behind a paywall (which is another conditioning mechanism for its audience—readers have come to expect to pay for what The New Yorker sells); and it has done some interesting things with Facebook-only preview content, like making an essay by Jonathan Franzen available, in all of its 12,000 words, available for free days before the magazine itself was available for purchase—on the condition that you “Liked” The New Yorker on Facebook.

In some ways, The New Yorker has begun to prove what journalists ourselves are overly fond of thinking: that people will pay to read our work, in print or online. Of course, all things being considered, it’s not every writer—nor every publication—that claims New Yorker-caliber writing and reporting.

That, surely, will continue to remain to be seen, whether journalism survives another ten or ten-hundred years.

*I’m not insisting that you low-brow purchasers of Wired and GQ cannot, or refuse to, read. But, generally (those damn generalizations), a portion of the time spent with a magazine is focused solely on flipping through the pages, implicitly admiring the aesthetic quality of the package. The New Yorker, by contrast, forgoes aesthetic niceties; to put it the way an English professor of mine once did, its appeal is all above the neck.

5 Reasons to Love Byliner

Tags: "andrew zaleski," "Loyola," "writer," "editor," "journalist"
Article Lineup, Byliner, Byliner Originals, Esquire, GQ, in-depth stories, innovation, Jon Krakauer, long-form journalism, shuffle, The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair Posted June 21st, 2011 in Innovation, Journalism, Reconsider This | 0 Comments

Byliner, the new, online warehouse of long-form, narrative journalism reads, fully launched today. With it comes new hope for masses of journalists and readers despairing about the future of investigative and in-depth reporting. Conceptually, Byliner is simple enough to grasp: recruit a solid base of established, proven long-form journalism pros; have them write original material—for Byliner’s standards, this means articles between 10,000 and 35,000 words in length—that can be sold as print-on-demand books, or as single article purchases on Amazon’s Kindle reader; and then serve as an online hub for readers of long-form journalism to find their preferred writers and publications. The Atlantic‘s Alexis Madrigal posted an interesting piece on Atlantic online today: a breakdown of the publications whose content Byliner features most prominently.

Just from clicking around on the site this afternoon, I’m wildly impressed. Indeed, if just for today, Byliner has shored up my confidence in the future of journalism—good, well reported, well researched, long-form journalism. And while I’m sure there are many features of Byliner I’ve yet to discover, here’s a quick rundown of five features that make Byliner so good:

5. The Article Lineup

When you first open Byliner, you’re met by a Top 10 list of articles, which are curated by the Byliner team and can match your particular interests depending upon the specific sub-category that intrigues you (Art, Politics, Business, Crime, Sports, Travel, Science, Tech). What’s especially great is the “Editors’ Pick” feature, which is self-explanatory enough, but it’s nice to know that the Byliner team is reading through these articles to make suggestions and recommendations. I can spend time focusing on articles that seasoned journalists have vetted (though, undoubtedly, the entire swath of Byliner’s collection has merit). What’s also nice is how Byliner provides you the option to toggle between recent articles—those having been published June 2011—and popular articles, which, I’m presuming, sorts itself according to the number of reads per article by Byliner users.

4. Everyday I’m Shufflin’

Byliner, like our friendly pal iTunes, has a shuffle feature. You can use this to mix up the articles displayed in the Article Lineup, a handy way to ensure some variability in your reading. For instance, I regularly turn to Esquire, GQ, Vanity Fair, and The Atlantic for my long-form journalism, but in one day, Byliner has already forced me to read several articles from Outside and The New Yorker.

I suppose it’s only coincidence that the following was the first article that popped up after I used their “Surprise Me!” shuffle the first time:

Again, more long-form journalism from a source I don’t regularly read (Technology Review).

3. History is a Blessed Thing

The archives are a thing of beauty. If you want to read an article written by F. Scott Fitzgerald and published in 1936—you can.

2. The Community Feeling

Like Twitter, Byliner offers you the option of following writers (something I’ve yet to dabble with); you can also follow readers, a unique tool that, with time, will allow Byliner users to create sub-communities of readers interested in the same types of articles, the same magazines, the same writers, and so on. And, signing up to Byliner allows them to track what you read, and then make further recommendations according to your reading preferences. Moreover, for journalists themselves, Byliner allows you to track how many followers you have, as well as how many submissions you’ve made to the site. Additionally, Byliner provides an e-mail blast—similar to The Atlantic Wire’s “Five Best Columns” e-blast—that delivers fantastic long reads straight to your inbox.

1. Byliner Originals

Byliner recruits damn good journalists to write damn good articles. These original articles, written by the likes of Jon Krakauer and William Vollmann, are exclusive to the site and can be purchased as single articles for easy reading on your Kindle reader. This is the true pay-as-you-go model for journalism, and this illustrates the genius that underlies Byliner (admittedly, time will tell whether this system works adequately). Namely, an understanding that journalism is a cost; good journalism, moreover, is costlier, and those costs must be met in order to produce it. But with an online community of rabid readers who enjoy and value well-written, long-form stories, paying $1.99 for a great read will probably (hopefully) be nothing but chump change—oftentimes when I buy magazines, I skip a good portion of the front-of-book material just to get to the lengthier, meatier articles in back. Now, you can get straight to it. (Whether this will create some friction between Byliner and magazines who survive on subscriptions and bookstore purchases—let alone iPad subscriptions—is yet to be seen. Obviously.)

  • Whose Voice Is It?

    Andrew Zaleski is a freelance writer, as well as the reporter for Technically Baltimore. He blogs about journalism, new media, bourbon, and other curmudgeonly matters. Comments are encouraged; yelling in all-caps is welcome; and getting so angry you toss your laptop out of your window will make my day.

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