Aggregation Is Competition

from the future-of-news dept

I'm currently attending a workshop on "The Future of News" at Princeton's Center for IT Policy. One of the most interesting things about the conference is that it has proven to be a kind of "meeting of the minds" between the "old media" (the Wall Street Journal and the San Diego Union-Tribune are represented) and practitioners of Internet journalism. One of the frequent complaints we've heard from some of the newspaper folks is that they're losing business to aggregators like Google News. On the surface, this doesn't seem to make sense, because as we've pointed out before, aggregators drive traffic to news sites, and it's silly for an ad-driven website to complain about another site sending them traffic.

Yet complain they do. And indeed, the complaint seems so common that there has to be something behind it. It has become clear that incumbent media outlets hate aggregators because aggregators increase competition. Incumbent media outlets -- especially local newspapers -- grew accustomed to a cozy relationship with their readers in which their readers had few alternatives for their daily news. That meant they could maintain high circulation (and advertising rates) without worrying too much about the quality of their product. When newspapers migrated to the web, they expected to maintain this captive audience.

What aggregators do is make it a lot easier for readers to find new news sources. That's good for an up-and-coming site with a lot of great content, because aggregators enlarge the potential audience for the content. But it's not good for a mediocre site with a large readership based largely on inertia. The easier it is for readers to find news sources of news, the faster mediocre news sites will bleed readers. We tend to think of competition in terms of price, but competition is important even when a business is already giving its product away for free. More competition forces sites to create more and better content, have fewer and less intrusive ads, and offer content in formats that are convenient and appealing. The increased competition enabled by aggregators may be bad for some websites, but it's unambiguously good for consumers. Google News isn't a competitor to newspapers. Rather, Google News forces newspapers to compete with each other. And when newspapers compete, readers win.

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Filed Under: aggregation, competition, news, newspapers
Companies: google


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  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 16 May 2008 @ 5:42am

    I would guess that the competition that you cite is necessary for the news business, for one reason: only after many redundant, lower quality news outlets die off will ad rates climb high enough to fund well-produced journalism and keep it free for the public.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    atroon, 16 May 2008 @ 6:15am

    Wow, Tim. A terrific analysis of news aggregation. I never really thought about it but as I began consuming more news online, I started moving away from the sources I read in print, which were not of the same quality as other sources online. I didn't even really notice, but I do find myself better informed and more clearly able to articulate things that I see in the news than I used to be...either I'm getting older and wiser or I'm consuming better news coverage. Either way, thanks for an insightful post.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Marc Wilson, 16 May 2008 @ 2:14pm

    Newspapers used to be the aggregators. Much to most of the content was wire -- stock listings, box scores, national and international news. That content mixed with locally generated news, sports and features created general circulation newspapers that attracted wide audiences. Newspapers can't deliver wire copy as fast or in-depth as the Web. Local content is now indexed by the new aggregators, and many people don't -- and never have -- gone much beyond the headline and first graf that Google, Yahoo! and others offer. As newspapers shrink, so will the news staffs -- and the aggregators will have less to index, and readers will lose local coverage.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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