Title: Prepared for the
1Where have we come from?Where are we going?
- Prepared for the
- Western Public Radio ConferenceNovember 16,
2004
Mark Fuerst, Exec Director, IMA
2Aims of this Presentation
- Review the evolution of online service within
public radio - Make some observations about Where we are
- Provide some general recommendations for moving
forward
3Flashback 1 A Sense of Potential
Public radio approached the Internet era with
great expectations.
- Our educated, highly-professional audience was or
would be wired. - Our appeal seemed well matched to the times
people in the technology industry listened to
public radio. - We gained confidence from our collective reaction
to the Gingrich threat. - Many industry leaders were early adopters.
- Many stations were connected to educational
institutions that provided infrastructure
support.
4Flashback 2 The Age of Hubris
Major Players try to Sieze the Day
- PRI organizes twenty stations that invest
50,000 each to create Public Interactive - NPR and MPR announce the formation of eXplore
Radio - The NPR Board proposes formation of a new
corporate structure that could attract private
capital. - NPR and PBS create the Internet Summit
- MPR, WBUR, WGBH, KQED and a few others make
multi-million dollar web investments/commitments.
5Flashback 3 The Inevitable Fall
Expectations sink under the weight of reality
- The burst of the Internet bubble
- Confusion about upside potential
- Experience with web production Only a few
stationscan produce significant amounts of
original content - Divisions among the networks PI cannot deliver
NPR news - Uncertainty about sustaining revenues
- Internal organizational stresses
- Stations need to focus on broadcasting issues
- Divisions compete for resources
6Where does that leave us today?
Five years later, we find ourselves in a
compromised position
- We have no system-wide online strategy.
- We are spending relatively large amounts of money
for online, but the impact is muted by our
structure. - The system is divided into several pieces/groups
- NPR.org is gaining momentum.
- A small number of larger-market stations are
approaching the web aggressively, but remain far
from break-even. - A much larger number of medium/small market
stations have modest web service and no plans to
change. - We have hundreds of station and program-specific
sites scattered across the web.
7Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- We need to recognize that we are still in the
early stages of a transition - From traditional media forms to new media,
- From real time delivery to delivery on demand
Many students of technology-driven change have
observed People generally over-estimate the
speed of technology change, and under-estimate
its long term impact.
8June 2003 Andres Mendes Chief Tech Officer, PBS
for NETA
9Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- Aggregation of resources and content is
essential for meeting this challenge. - Only a handful of stations have the capital or
human resources needed to develop the needed
content and technology. - Even our networks, alone, do not have the level
of funding and staffing required to be strongly
competitive.
10Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- Shared technology could strengthen our service,
extend benefits to smaller stations and set
the foundation for expanded revenue. - Some level of outsourcing will be required even
at the largest stations. How can we gain
economies of scale? - Stations need to concentrate their efforts on
local service opportunities and local content
development. - We can ignore these optionswe can continue with
a highly decentralized systembut continuation of
the status quo will continue to have significant
down-sides.
11Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- We have identified 4 revenue sources that
can be developed for long-term support
12Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- We have identified 4 revenue sources that
can be developed for long-term support
13Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- We have identified 4 revenue sources that
can be developed for long-term support
14Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- Large-scale industry forces are supporting both
UW and Paid Content - On every level of the advertising and marketing
industry, there is increasing interest in and
budgeting for online. - There is a continuing transition in the
entertainment industry from ad-supported
distribution to subscription distribution. - Many of the top online sites have been developing
various forms of paid content.
15Key Elements of a Forward Strategy
- The amount of money required to develop a strong
system is already in our hands. - CBC.ca has a budget of 10 million and a staff of
approx. 120. It is now the number one online
news destination in Canada. - BBC World Service online in 28 languages has a
budget of under 30 million.
Our problem with new media is not How do we get
the money we need? Its How are we spending
the money we have?
16What Has to Change?
Begin a transition to a world of user choice
User Centered
What I want, when I want it, how I want it.
What we offerwhen we offer it.
From the presentation at the Leadership Forum
17Who could we serve?
- Broadband users at work News online is now a
habit for millions of professional office
workers who use the Internet during the workday. - People seeking depth and balanceNPR.org/Statio
n.org where news is explained and interpreted. - People seeking quality, non-commercial music
Preserve our franchise and own these formats
online Classical, Jazz, Blues, AAA, Folk,
Celtic - A slightly younger audience. A subset of our
current audience, rather than a new audience.
From the presentation at the Leadership Forum
18What Content and Service?
- Local, National and International News
- Delivered in a way that complements on-air
programming - More text and pictures
- Prepared on a common publishing and storage
platform - Substantially Improved Search
- Organized by standard meta-data
- Searches all local and national
- Program and Schedule Information
- Local Connections and Events
- Audio on Demand and Expanded Audio Options
- Current Audio On-Demand and Archives
- Expanded News, Talk and Music Streaming Options
From the presentation at the Leadership Forum
19Organizing Principles
- Create a common publishing platform designed
for the end-user. e.g., Stations, NPR, MPR, PRI
and indie content PI technology. - Aggregate content Listeners need convenient
access to all programming-related content in one
place, online. - Build a foundation for sustaining revenues.
- Maximize economies of scale. Shared
infrastructure, software, streaming capacity. - Develop web metrics to guide activity and
investment. - Use the Satellite Service as a corporate model.
- Common ownership, elected management
- All stations share the costs. All contribute. All
benefit.
From the presentation at the Leadership Forum
20Thank You
- To the people running our sites and
working to improve our public service online. - We hope these strategies and principles
can help you achieve your goals.
21Follow-up
These slides and all presentations and
reportscan be found at the iMa
website www.integratedmedia.org
IMA Public Broadcasting Internet ConferenceSan
Francisco, January 26-28 Contact Mark Fuerst
(845) 876-2577 markfuerst_at_earthlink.net