Title: Jo Van Croonenborch
1The Newspapermarket
a strategic view
- Presented by
- Jo Van Croonenborch
- CEO VUM n.v.
29th May 2002
2- 1. VUM-Media
- 2. Triangular crossfire
- 3. Product life-cycle
- Interlude Ubiquity versus scarcity
- 4. Unique Value another triangular
crossfire - 5. Conclusion
31. VUM Media
4VUM media
OTHER MEDIA
COMMERCIAL PRINTING
NEWSPAPERS
De Standaard Het Nieuwsblad Het Volk Vers lAvenir
Radio T.V. Internet Magazines
Heatset Coldset Sheet-fed
5VUM media
NEWSPAPERS
- DUTCH readership 1,34 mio
- speaking part
39,2 - FRENCH readership 0,37 mio
- speaking part
19,2
6CONSOLIDATED TURNOVER
000 EUR
300.000
250.000
200.000
150.000
100.000
50.000
0
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
72. Triangular Crossfire
- Declining advertising revenues
- Increasing paper-price
- High fixed costs
83. Product Life-cycle
9THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE
Sales volume
Introduction Growth Maturity
Decline
10THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE (cont.)
Introduction
Growth Maturity Decline
Product/service Product/service Market needs
Market needs
first introduced gains market
start to be largely met
to market
acceptance fulfilled
Volume Slow growth
Rapid growth Sales slow Sales
decline
in sales in sales volume down
and
level off
Variety of product/ Possible high
Increasingly Emerging
Commodity service designs
customizing standardised dominant
standardisation
of frequent
types
design changes
Dominant operations Flexibility
Speed Cost
Cost performance Qualtiy
Dependability Dependability
objectives
Quality
113. Product Life-cycle
12READERSHIP IN FLANDERS
readers
133. Product Life-cycle
14EVOLUTION ADVERTISING NEWSPAPERS
190
180
170
I N D E X
160
150
140
130
120
110
100
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
YEAR
15EVOLUTION ADVERTISING NEWSPAPERS
190
180
170
I N D E X
160
150
140
130
120
110
100
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
YEAR
16ADVERTISING IN MAJOR MEDIA
BELGIUM
Market share ()
Bron Media Explorer
17ADVERTISING EXPENDITURE IN MAJOR MEDIA
SWEDEN
Market share ()
Dailies
TV
National
Local
Other
media
Evening
Bo-Christopher Lundquist - TidningsUtgivarna
18INTERLUDE
Ubiquity
scarcity
versus
194. Unique Value
20UNIQUE VALUE another triangular
crossfire
Loss of young readers
Record Every day
Age 1972 1982 1993
2000
20 - 29 46 37
23 19 30 - 39
73 48 35
27
Source John Bartolomeo
21UNIQUE VALUE another triangular
crossfire
USA
Loss of young readers
50
40
30
Read Every Day
20
9
10
0
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
Year
22UNIQUE VALUE another triangular
crossfire
BELGIUM
Loss of young readers
Record Every day
Age 1988-90 1991-93
1995-98 1999-01
15 - 17 55,7 53,3
47,3 45,5 18 - 20
61,3 55,5 53,3
51,8 21 - 24 59,4 55,4 54,0
56,9
Source CIM-Media Study
23UNIQUE VALUE another triangular
crossfire
Loss of young readers
Loss of credibility
Marketing
24UNIQUE VALUE another triangular
crossfire
How to manage the unique value ?
- 1. Make it clear what the newspaper stands for.
- 2. Dont frustate the casual reader.
- 3. Put some pace in the newspaper, make it clear
what isessential and what is incidental. - 4. The newspaper must stimulate the reader to
interact with his or her environment it is not
simply a one-to-one relationship.
25UNIQUE VALUE another triangular
crossfire
How to manage the unique value ?
- 5. The newspaper must keep a balance between
giving thereader what he wants and also taking
him by surprise. - 6. The newspaper must stimulate the relationship
betweenthe reader and the paper by giving space
to the readersopinion.
265. Conclusion
27The old 4P-Model
- Product- unique value- the reason why we can
ask money for our product - Place- dependable delivery through the existing
channels- the channels through which we get the
money for our product - Promotion- brand franchising strategies brand
and franchising- the emotional factor for
getting our money - Price- stop devaluing the newspaper in
perception and in economical terms- the money
we get for our product
28If change is impossible, we don't need
managers. In that case we only need bookkeepers,
who are much cheaper by the way.
By Th. Levitt
29Thanks
30(No Transcript)