Friday, October 18, 2019

WHAT FUTURE IS THERE FOR NEWSPAPER IN THIS DIGITAL ERA?



WHAT FUTURE IS THERE FOR NEWSPAPERS IN THIS DIGITAL ERA?

Is it a dim future for print journalism (newspapers)? Have newspapers been dying in a slow motion in this digital age.

Someone once said that in the future all media will be free.

 (NZME Managing editor Shayne Currie told a conference on the news media last year: “We made a big mistake when we made content available free. But there’s no going back.”). These days, people are more likely to reach into their pockets to pay for coffee than news. Popular news is no longer necessarily the most detailed and researched piece. In fact, short and entertaining is often a requirement to go viral and the modern media Internet is filled with this kind of content and for the print journalism the challenge is how to remain relevant in a new audience of people who have infinite amounts of choice in terms of where they get their information.

Are newspapers in crisis? Yes, unless they reinvent themselves because readership is moving away from the printed form. Do they have a future? Absolutely, but it's a future that looks quite different from the one they've been used to. It's a ridiculous thought to think that newspapers shouldn't evolve exactly as society all around them evolves. There's a terrible tendency to hold back to the good old days but not here. Information is freely and instantly, available from so many sources that a newspaper cannot naturally consider itself the first port of call for information.

Are newspapers doomed? Absolutely not. Every newspaper has a great future online. End of story. It's not the death of the paper. It's the morphing of the paper from a print version to online. Do they have a future, “yes I think they do. But I'm about to catch a train from Washington to New York, it's 7.40am, there are 30 people waiting to catch the train, and half of them are either on BlackBerries or mobile phones. Two of them are reading newspapers and that's it. Both the readers are in their late forties. That for me is quite a symbolic illustration of the future.” John Ryley, Head of Sky News.

Newspapers in this country are not dying, they are committing suicide.

 It’s nice to see that the printed word is still, at least for now, the most powerful medium for reporting on the death of the printed word.

How many of you went to your pockets got money and bought a newspaper today? Maybe my guess is as good as yours. Will there be a future for print newspapers, only time will tell, but not very much time.

32 comments:

  1. We still have the senior citizens who read the newspaper on daily basis. The only challenge is the quantity

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think it's fading with the digital migration

    ReplyDelete
  3. In this digital era, we receive news before print media could actually print them

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Can you imagine even before they print we have already received the news

      Delete
  4. New technology manenos

    ReplyDelete
  5. It's on a downward trend.. technology will take over. In 20-30yrs we will be the senior citizens who will be tech-savvy .

    ReplyDelete
  6. This topic is so dear to me and painful but all will be well🙏🏽

    ReplyDelete
  7. I very much agree with akinyi's take

    ReplyDelete
  8. Sasa ziki commit suicide, nyama tutafunga na nini?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Really Ronnie, no nyama tu umekuwa concerned about...

      Delete
  9. Selling news has become very challenging what media sell easily is what comes with the news (advertisements)

    ReplyDelete
  10. But we should realize that newspapers have survived longer than they were predicted to live. History has proved that newspapers will somehow be with us for awhile...

    ReplyDelete
  11. Good comment, technology is disrapting the hard copies how ever talk of the ways in which it has helped in cust cutting, archiving, space 7tilization, ease of access, portability .news paper firms arent going away they will just adopt new strategies to she I've

    ReplyDelete
  12. With the rate news spread this days I truly agree

    ReplyDelete
  13. True though it might take ages. Still got hardcopy lovers

    ReplyDelete
  14. Generations varies,we have both Analogue and digital. Newspapers are not ending anytime soon.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Though technology seems to take over, newspapers life-span would still linger on albeit not as much as the former days.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Some old habits never die out, especially with the elder generation and the fact that anyone can lay hands on a keyboard and disseminate unverifiable news

    ReplyDelete
  17. But again with our lazy reading culture i am worried....how should journalism evolve?? Today's young génération won't read a story that is 2 paragraphs long....It's too long

    ReplyDelete
  18. There is no longer breaking news because the events are captured as they unfold. Everyone has become a reporter in their sorrounding. Needless to say print media is actually fading out. Unless a miracle happen to reverse the trend, print media is almost giving us a printout of what we already know.

    ReplyDelete
  19. There is no longer breaking news because the events are captured as they unfold. Everyone has become a reporter in their sorrounding. Needless to say print media is actually fading out. Unless a miracle happen to reverse the trend, print media is almost giving us a printout of what we already know.

    ReplyDelete