すごいね、この「右肩下がり」は。- 米新聞(紙)広告料、ついに1950年代の水準まで減少。- 2011年約210億ドル vs 2007年 460億ドル/ピークはやはり2000年前後(630億〜640億ドルくらいあったみたい)。
The U.S. newspaper industry was built to support $50 billion to $60  billion in total advertising with the kind of staffs that a $50 billion  industry can abide. The layoffs, buyouts, and bankruptcies you hear  about are the result of this massive correction in the face of falling  revenue. The Internet took out print’s knees in the last decade — not  all print*, but a lot.

theatlantic:

The Collapse of Print Advertising in One Graph

Call it creative if you want, but this is what economic destruction looks like. Print newspaper ads have fallen by two-thirds from $60 billion in the late-1990s to $20 billion in 2011. You sometimes hear it said that newspapers are dead. Now, $20 billion is the kind of “dead” most people would trade their lives for. You never hear anybody say “bars and nightclubs are dead!” when in fact that industry’s current revenue amounts to an identical $20 billion.So the reason newspapers are in trouble isn’t that they aren’t making lots of money — they still are; advertising is a huge, huge business, as any app developer will try to tell you — but that their business models and payroll depend on so much more money. The U.S. newspaper industry was built to support $50 billion to $60 billion in total advertising with the kind of staffs that a $50 billion industry can abide. The layoffs, buyouts, and bankruptcies you hear about are the result of this massive correction in the face of falling revenue. The Internet took out print’s knees in the last decade — not all print, but a lot.
Read more. [Image: Mark J. Perry]

すごいね、この「右肩下がり」は。- 米新聞(紙)広告料、ついに1950年代の水準まで減少。- 2011年約210億ドル vs 2007年 460億ドル/ピークはやはり2000年前後(630億〜640億ドルくらいあったみたい)。

The U.S. newspaper industry was built to support $50 billion to $60 billion in total advertising with the kind of staffs that a $50 billion industry can abide. The layoffs, buyouts, and bankruptcies you hear about are the result of this massive correction in the face of falling revenue. The Internet took out print’s knees in the last decade — not all print*, but a lot.

theatlantic:

The Collapse of Print Advertising in One Graph

Call it creative if you want, but this is what economic destruction looks like. Print newspaper ads have fallen by two-thirds from $60 billion in the late-1990s to $20 billion in 2011. 

You sometimes hear it said that newspapers are dead. Now, $20 billion is the kind of “dead” most people would trade their lives for. You never hear anybody say “bars and nightclubs are dead!” when in fact that industry’s current revenue amounts to an identical $20 billion.

So the reason newspapers are in trouble isn’t that they aren’t making lots of money — they still are; advertising is a huge, huge business, as any app developer will try to tell you — but that their business models and payroll depend on so much more money. The U.S. newspaper industry was built to support $50 billion to $60 billion in total advertising with the kind of staffs that a $50 billion industry can abide. The layoffs, buyouts, and bankruptcies you hear about are the result of this massive correction in the face of falling revenue. The Internet took out print’s knees in the last decade — not all print, but a lot.

Read more. [Image: Mark J. Perry]

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    print advertising (enforces innovations what comes to journalism).
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  29. zolf reblogged this from theatlantic and added:
    This is interesting, but I REALLY don’t believe that this is all digital disruption. I’d bet that first dip around 2000...
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