Everybody knows that Google has won the search-engine war. But what’s much
more important is that Google has won the search war – and the
latest casualty is TimesSelect. The subscriber firewalls at the WSJ and
the FT will be the next to go.
Until Google came along, most content-based websites had a similar business
model: users would come to the site’s home page, search for what they were looking
for, and then find it. So if you wanted a NYT story, you’d first go to nytimes.com,
and then search. If you wanted a Wikipedia article, you’d first go to wikipedia.org,
and then search.
No longer.
When I want to find one of my old blog entries on portfolio.com, I just type
the search terms into the Google window in my browser. When I want to find a
Wikipedia entry, I do the same thing, in the knowledge that Wikipedia’s PageRank
will guarantee that entry a top-two spot. Google’s even very good at finding
books on Amazon.
But Google is very bad at pointing people to anything behind a subscriber
firewall – and rightfully so.
What changed, The Times said, was that many more readers started coming to
the site from search engines and links on other sites instead of coming directly
to NYTimes.com…
“What wasn’t anticipated was the explosion in how much of our
traffic would be generated by Google, by Yahoo and some others,” Ms.
Schiller said.
When was the last time you saw a WSJ or FT article on a web search? As people
increasingly get their information from Google and not from home pages, the
WSJ and FT websites have a choice: go free, or become irrelevant. The WSJ certainly
can’t be happy that Nick Denton, with his shoestring operation, gets more traffic,
and more visitors, than
they do.
As Jeff Jarvis says
today, the really valuable thing that the WSJ and the FT provide is not
their news, but their relationship with their readers.
Having worked in the magazine business, I saw this even at the dawn of the
internet: a magazine has to pay up to $30-40 in marketing costs to acquire
subscribers; it can pay up to $5-7 to print and distribute a copy of a glossy
magazine; it has high editorial costs. Add that up, and a magazine can find
itself in the hole $60 or more per subscriber in the first year of a subscription.
And they get as little as $1 per issue in subscription revenue. Yet clearly,
a magazine can make money because that subscriber’s value to advertisers
is much greater.
It’s the relationship that is valuable. It’s the relationship
that is profitable, not the control of the content or the distribution. That
is the essential media moral of the internet story. It has taken 13 years
of internet history for media companies to learn that.
Well, most media companies, anyway. We’ll see how long it takes for
the WSJ and the FT to see the light. All that traffic from Google doesn’t weaken
the strength of the relationship between media companies and readers, it just
changes the way that readers find their trusted content. If a WSJ story comes
up top of a Google search, people will click on it because they trust the WSJ.
And because people trust the WSJ, WSJ stories will come up top of a Google search.
It’s win-win for all concerned, and, yes, Rupert Murdoch knows it.