The Changing Way We Read
Media consumption has always changed over time as new technologies are developed, from fireside storytelling shifting to printed novels, or radio to the evening news on television. For years now, we have adjusted to reading on screens, but today, we are at the brink of a fundamental shift in the way we read.
Earlier this year, Rupert Murdoch suggested that News Corp would restrict all its content within paid walls, perhaps going so far as to remove their content from search engines. With Google responding by very publicly stating how they can help newspapers and adjusting to allow publishers to limit users to view five pages a day without registering, it would seem that media giants still hold power. But this is less a complete collapse of media channels and more a merging of media with new reading platforms – desktop, browser, e-reader, mobile, tablet, etc. Publishers are just now starting to innovate on these mediums, developing new experiences and new ways to read.
The e-reader market has been picking up a lot of steam recently – Kindle just had their biggest sales month since launching and Barnes & Noble’s Nook joining the market, which, despite recent reviews, has continued to pique consumer curiosity. Apple is rumored to be releasing a tablet early next year, and companies such as Vook (a LaunchSquad client), are creating new reading formats. Just in the past few weeks, we’ve seen publishers left and right announce new initiatives that respond to this e-reader and tablet excitement.
Condé Nast announced last month its Digital Magazine Initiative starting with an e-reader version of Wired magazine, and the publisher has also been experimenting with iPhone app formats for its content, in the form of GQ’s Men of the Year issue. Early this month, Time Inc. released a demo of a new digital version of Sports Illustrated, complete with photo libraries, video and interactive ads. While its own physical tablet prototype has been developed, like Condé Nast, they’re not committed to any one particular platform yet. Hearst, just last week, announced a partnership with Sprint to launch Skiff, an e-reader platform and digital store focused on connecting publishers with marketers, in 2010. To top it all off, the five major periodical publishers – Condé Nast, Meredith, Time Inc., Hearst and News Corp – are coming together to create a “Hulu for magazines,” a digital news stand where readers can purchase and manage their subscriptions. The main challenge will be to develop digital standards and formats, so that their varied content can be viewed equally on a wide variety of devices – soon-to-come color e-readers or more multi-media friendly tablet computers.
Similar to the changing way we approach reading novels and longer-form magazine pieces, the way we consume the news is still taking shape. Customization is the new way to take in news – whether it’s your Tumblr community or your Facebook feed, we are hearing about and reading news in an instant and curated way. Twitter, for some, has come to replace RSS, news sites and even search as a main source for breaking news, and with its newest lists feature, it’s even easier to filter the stream and be selective about how you skim and read. PubSubHubbub is working with blog and social networking platforms to bring these updates and posts instantaneously to your networks and companies like ShareThis (client) are helping media fit into this new “sharing economy,” allowing them to capitalize on the virality and engagement of forwarding, retweeting, liking and voting. Even Google is trying to adjust old-world media to find a place in the online way of reading, with Living Stories, which is a new project in collaboration with the New York Times and The Washington Post that presents on-going, evolving stories in a new online format. All these means are helping us stay informed of content through a closer social circle or curated set of sources.
Mobile devices, and especially iPhone and Android platform, take real-time and personalization to another level by putting the content in your hand wherever you are. Apps from local news sources like Fwix (a LaunchSquad client), Outside.in or Topix show what’s happening in your neighborhood, and Fwix’s even allows users to “report news” in real time, directly from their phones. In addition to news and e-reading, there are also many apps that are useful for saving, noting or commenting on what you read. Instapaper is an iPhone app and bookmarklet that allows users to save articles and blog post to read later, a task that it invaluable for anyone that is keeping track of news during their busy work day. Evernote (another LaunchSquad client) is another great app to save and organize not only your own notes and photos, but Web pages and text from articles. This mobile reading is a shift beyond your typical browser reading – it’s not passive reading and goes beyond the conversation, it’s also personalized, localized and relevant to what we are doing in the physical world.
Technology is changing the way humans are interacting with text, with content. There’s no standard yet as ubiquitous as unfolding the morning paper, but it’s not for lack of trying. Give it some time though, and a few platforms will start to emerge as front-runner in this nascent market. Whatever does emerge as the new way we read, it’s going to be a whole lot different than unfolding that paper.
