Today, the NYTimes announced their digital subscription offering.
In reading through the 6 major bullet-points describing the subscription offering, my initial reactions as a reader are:
- This sounds hard and complicated.
- Can I become a home delivery subscriber and opt out of receiving the paper?
Earlier this week, Elko pointed me to NYTimes Chrome – a non-scrolling, HTML5 implementation of NYTimes’ top news…that looks just like the print edition. Only much, much smaller and harder to both read and navigate.
Take a look at this article: 2 columns spread across multiple pages. We solved this interaction problem thousands of years ago.
The problem I don’t see the NYTimes solving in either of these efforts is relevance, clarity, expertise, and guidance.
I don’t have time or inclination to read every section head, let alone every article. What would a presentation look like that only gave me the stories, coverage, and writers that I find most compelling.
Yes – let me filter and block stories from ever being shown to me.
Today, here’s how I solve this problem:
- Not read NYTimes.
- Wait for someone I trust and respect to point me to a NYTimes story.
What if the NYTimes knew me well enough to be that trusted and respected link source – by not giving me everything – just the most compelling & relevant.
For example – take a look at amazon.com, I’m assuming the sections below the big Kindle ad don’t look much like this to you.
I’m assuming our pages look different because Amazon discovered that promoting different items to different individuals increased overall sales.
And maybe, just maybe, I’ve grown weary of the Fukushima story.
To me that sounds like a compelling, useful, differentiating, chargeable news offering.
Elsewhere:
Update 19 Mar 2011:
I’m intrigued with this notion of charging those whose world-view requires the NYTimes and no one else. Perhaps I’m missing something, but the incentives to migrate into that world-view don’t seem very strong.
As a native New Yorker, I’m a lifelong reader of both the print and, for the past ten years, the web edition. While I would prefer that it remain totally free, I have no objection, in principle, to the NYTimes asking for money. But it isn’t a good value for me, so I won’t pay. And I won’t continue to read articles under a DRM-like regime that counts the number of articles I’ve read for the month, until I reach a limit. (Smacks of mobile phone minutes.)
The prices and payment scheme are way out of whack.
And haven’t they learned anything from the music biz: “Sorry, we know all you want are the single songs, but you have to buy the whole album. Tough.”
If this move does succeed – in a financial sense only – in trading the exclusion of the many in exchange for revenue from the few, then it will be a precedent that I don’t really want to be a part of.
With great sadness, I’m just saying goodbye to the NYTimes. Thankfully Frank Rich just moved on to New York Magazine, I’ll catch up with him there.