Election Barcelona 2011 – Executive Com- mittee
Transcription
Election Barcelona 2011 – Executive Com- mittee
news Bringing the world of press distribution together DISTRIPRESS CONGRESS TRADE NEWS DISTRIPRESS MATTERS DISTRIPRESS CONGRESS Election Barcelona 2011 – Executive Committee The newly created Executive Committee of Distripress was unveiled at the 2011 congress in Barcelona. You may find the names below. Tony Jashanmal of Jashanmal National in Dubai was Tony Jashanmal December 2011/January 2012 MEMBERSHIP MATTERS elected as President for a second consecutive term and Hinnerk de Boer of Hungaropress Hungary has been voted in as Vice President. The Executive Committee will serve a term of three years and will continue the necessary work of adapting the association to the changing media and distribution landscape. Distripress Executive Committee (without John Seeley) Hinnerk de Boer DISTRIPRESS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 2011-2014 Name Alfred Heintze Hinnerk de Boer Tom Vermeirsch Michael Cedzich Carine Nevejans Tony Jashanmal Martin McEwen Detlef Sauerbier John Seeley Lindsey White Albert Schoeberl Deputy members Lynn Doughty Wolfgang Rick Malcolm Miller Rob Alberts Company Bauer Media Group Hungaropress Ltd. AMP SA DPV Worldwide GmbH Presstalis Jashanmal National Company LMPI Spiegel-Verlag National Geographic Society Bloomberg Business Week Gold Key Media Germany GmbH Country Germany Hungary Belgium Germany France UAE Canada Germany USA UK Germany Category Publisher Distributor Distributor Distributor Distributor Distributor Distributor Publisher Publisher Publisher Ancillary Serv.P. Comag Morawa Pressevertrieb GmbH Miller Distributors Ltd Van Gelderen B.V. UK Austria Malta Holland Distributor Distributor Distributor Distributor 1 DISTRIPRESS news DISTRIPRESS congress December 2011/January 2012 Barcelona 2011 – in retrospect Nearly 1,000 people representing the very best of the international press distribution industry gathered in Barcelona on October 17th for the 56th annual Distripress congress. The congress started on Monday with a well attended day of round tables and speeches. The event was chaired by well known industry expert Jim Chisholm and the theme was recognising the enduring value of the print channel 300 tables were laid out on one floor of the CCIB so that publishers could tour the globe meeting with their distribution partners to review this past year and make plans for next one. For more information please go to the Distripress website www.distripress.net to see our first Distripress Congress video shot in Barcelona between the 17th and 20th October 2011. You will also find a wide range of images of the congress as well as all the presentation from the Forum day. in an increasingly multi channel press industry. Sessions on Spain, Travel Media, Digital printing and new advances in distribution made up a busy day. In the evening all delegates were We are now looking forward to the 57th annual Distripress congress when we meet again in Glasgow on October 1st-4th 2012. This will be our first event in the UK for nearly 30 years and the first time ever our association has been to Scotland. Distripress Congress 2012 A note for your diary: 57th Distripress Congress Glasgow will take place on October 1-4, 2012 taken by coach to the magnificent MNAC overlooking the city for an evening of tapas, wine and conversation. The rest of the week was spent in typical Distripress fashion with a hectic mixture of business discussions and social events. Almost 2 DISTRIPRESS news DISTRIPRESS matters DISTRIPRESS MATTERS Cannes 2014 Distripress recently signed a contract with the Palais des Festivals home of the Cannes film festival for our congress 2014. Cannes last hosted the December 2011/January 2012 PINBOARD Journées Internationales Presstalis Pullman Paris Montparnasse, France March 13 - 14, 2012 DPV Worldwide Meeting Timmendorf/Germany March 20 - 22, 2012 WAN-IFRA Printing summit Berlin/Germany March 21 - 22, 2012 http://www.wan-ifra.org Publish Asia 2012 Conference & EXPO Bali/Indonesia April 2012 http://www.wan-ifra.org/events/publish-asia-2012 World Press Freedom Day May 3, 2012 INMA Los Angeles/USA May 6 - 8, 2012 www.inma.org FIPP WMM, London/UK May 29 – 30, 2012 http://www.fipp.com Periodical & Book Association of America (PBAA) Retail Marketplace 2012 Conference Baltimore Marriott Waterfront/USA June 10-11, 2012 http://www.pbaa.net International Press Institute World Congress Trinidad & Tobago June 23-26, 2012 www.freemedia.at event in early September 1997 during the week of Princess Diana's funeral. Since that time the venue has been significantly refurbished and extended making it a perfect size and location for our congress. The reserved dates are September 29th to October 2nd 2014. Distripress Training Foundation The Board of the DTF decided to offer a traineeship for young distribution experts from South America during and after the congress in Barcelona 2011. The package which has been offered included: • participation in all trade and social programs WAN/IFRA 64rd World Newspaper Congress and 19th World Editors Forum Kiew, Ukraine September 2 - 5, 2012 http://www.wan-ifra.org/ Presse-Grosso Meeting Baden-Baden/Germany September 10 – 12, 2012 www.pressegrosso.de 57th Distripress Congress Glasgow/Scotland October 1 - 4, 2012 www.distripress.net Frankfurt International Book Fair Frankfurt am Main/Germany October 10 - 14, 2012 www.buchmesse.de Logwin Media Meeting Going/Austria November 2012 British Press Meeting London / United Kingdom December 4 - 5, 2012 (Opening Ceremony, Executive Forum, Welcome Reception, EXPO, Farewell Drink) of the Distripress congress in Barcelona • one week practical training at a company in Europe Three trainees from DINAP, Brazil got finally the opportunity for this traineeship. They were hosted by International News, Portugal for one week prior to the congress. Additionally, they attended the Barcelona Congress and could join all the social programme as well as the FANDE meeting. At the DTF meeting they held a presentation about DINAP and about their experience in Portugal. The trainees had a blog during their traineeship: http://distripress.wordpress.com/ 3 DISTRIPRESS news DISTRIPRESS matters Logwin Meeting in Going Distripress attended the 21st annual Logwin Media conference held on November 21/22 at the traditional and beautiful venue of the Biohotel Stanglwirt. December 2011/January 2012 The rest of the conference was taken up with one to one business discussions as per Distripress style until we met altogether for Cocktails and our Gala dinner. The entertainment was provided by two quirky British guys called Mark and Simon (www.marknsimon.de) who have spent the past 30 plus years entertaining German and English audiences with their unique brand of visual comedy, old songs and Ginglish (German/English) jokes. Many thanks to our hosts for a great event and we look forward already to next year. Vietnam’s media market holds a lot of potential This hotel is situated near a charming town called Going am Wilder Kaiser high in the Austrian Tirol surrounded by the freshest air imaginable and (as its name implies) in the shadow of the mighty Wilder Kaiser mountain. Over 100 Distribution industry executives gathered from Sunday onwards to hear speeches, catch up with old friends and to make new ones. Although the German market was naturally well represented this is a truly international gathering with among others the following countries represented: France, Italy, Holland, Spain, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia, Slovakia, Belgium, Austria and Switzerland. The plenary sessions on Monday were very well attended and we heard speeches from Markus Schöberl from ASV Vertriebs on a thoughtful 360 degree look at distribution in volatile markets, an update on Distripress changes from David Owen, a lively update on Mess Inter developments from Dieter Wirtz and Piero Monico and a full review of customs legislation changes and supply chain advice from Erich von Grambusch from Logwin group. A new study by the Association of German Magazine Publishers (VDZ) gives valuable and exclusive insights into a dynamic media market – now available in English (address below). In his 12-page document the author gives deep insights based on his expert knowledge of the country. Please find details on the Author and on the conclusions of the study in the last page of our Trade News section. The study can be ordered as pdf document for the price of 59 Euro (plus VAT) for members and for non-members for the price of 79 Euro (plus VAT) from Mrs. Karina Faust, [email protected] EWIP’s 4th Annual Conference in San Francisco Exceptional Women in Publishing’s 2012 Women’s Leadership Conference is designed to foster greater collaboration in magazine and digital media. All attendees can expect a truly unique experience with ample time to participate in conversations, connect with industry leaders, and learn from exceptional women in all phases of their careers. You will hear about the innovative steps others are taking in this digital age to increase a brand’s reach or amplify an individual’s influence. What is your next step? Join us on March 7. For more information: www.ewip.org. When and Where: March 7, 2012, Parc 55 Hotel, 55 Cyril Magnin Street, San Francisco Union Sqare Obituary – Robert Degois We have the sad duty to inform you about the passing away of Robert Degois beginning of November 2011 at the age of 74. He had a long and successful career in the press distribution industry. Before he retired, Robert Degois was export manager of the French press at NMPP (now Presstalis). The members of Distripress will keep a very fond memory of him. 4 DISTRIPRESS news TRADE news Australia Newspaper circulation falls 3.5 per cent Australian newspaper sales have continued their decline as readers move to digital platforms, a report says. Audit Bureau of Circulation (ABC) data showed Monday to Saturday newspaper sales fell by 3.5 per cent in the three months to September 30, compared with same period last year. The Newspaper Works, a non-profit body set up to promote the industry, said the decline was less than the 4.2 per cent fall the previous quarter and came in "testing retail conditions and shifting consumer confidence". "The ABC printed newspaper figures only tell part of the story because smartphone and tablet newspaper apps are not yet measured," The Newspaper Works chief executive Tony Hale said in a statement. "There's no doubt that newspaper audiences are expanding and newspaper content is being delivered how, when and where consumers want it, and it's working." During the three-month audit period, Fairfax had released figures showing more than 200,000 apps had been downloaded for its The Age and Sydney Morning Herald newspapers. The slide in circulation was widespread but three metropolitan city newspapers managed to buck the trend. Paid sales at the Saturday edition of The West Australian rose 0.7 per cent, while The Age's Sunday edition posted a 0.9 per cent increase and weekday sales grew by 0.3 per cent. Despite a 4.6 per cent decline, Sydney's Sunday Telegraph retained its place as the nation's top-selling newspaper with 606,101 copies. www.news.com.au, 11. 11. 2011 Austria – Germany Austrian tabloid holds Axel Springer’s interest German print and digital media company Axel Springer said on November 7th it remained interested in Austrian tabloid Kronenzeitung as part of its strategy to buy established print “superbrands” and shift their business to the web. Presenting solid third-quarter results, chief executive Mathias Döpfner said “digitising Kronenzeitung would interest us very much,” although he declined to say if any of the paper’s owners were willing to give Springer a look-in. He said the move December 2011/January 2012 could mirror the migration on to the web of Springer’s German tabloid Bild, whose success already inspired a joint venture with Swiss publisher Ringier to try the same thing in five eastern European markets. Bild’s metamorphosis from a profitable print product to a hugely profitable online portal – offering news, videos, and a litany of Bild-branded products – has helped fund numerous purchases in the digital sphere over past years. Aside from pushing print content on to the web, the company has used these acquisitions to shift its classified-ads and ad-marketing expertise online, leading to a surge in digital revenues as print circulation continues to erode. Springer said third-quarter sales rose 11.5 per cent to €792.6m ($1.08bn) and earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (ebitda) climbed 26.5 per cent to €157.6m, both through acquisition and organic growth. Net profit fell 6.1 per cent to €82m after one-off 2010 gains. After buying French house-sales site SeLoger and German online-shopping site KaufDa, digital ebitda jumped to €40.5 from €15.8m, while digital sales rose 42 per cent to €242.6m – some 31 per cent of quarterly group sales. www.ft.com, 07. 11. 2011 Ecuador Press freedom fears in Ecuador A five-day mission by the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA) in Ecuador has discovered "a bitter conflict between private media professionals and the government and media favourable to the government." The organisation has been monitoring the situation since April and believes that the problem is broader than just attacks on the press, contending that there "seems to be a pattern of criminalisation not only of dissent, but also of social protest." President Raphael Correa has become increasingly critical of the media. His weekly speeches on TV and radio are laced with criticism of journalists, newspapers and publishers. Yet his government controls over 15 media outlets (TV, radio, newspapers, magazines and websites), and this apparatus has been developed into a power- 5 DISTRIPRESS news TRADE news ful propaganda tool. Critics have also been cowed by the use of criminal defamation actions with excessively punitive claims for damages. This serious decline of freedom of expression in Ecuador has been condemned by several international organisations, such as the CPJ (Committee to Protect Journalists), Reporters Sans Frontieres, the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights, Human Rights Watch and others. www.ejc.net, 10. 11. 2011 France French government scheme to give free newspapers to young people enters its third season On October 5 the French ministry of culture and communication launched season three of 'Mon Journal Offert' ('My Free Newspaper'), an initiative established in 2009 as part of a government bailout of the press, aimed at encouraging people between the ages of 18 and 24 to read daily newspapers in print. The scheme allows any citizen of France or one of its departments, aged between 18 and 24, the chance to claim a free daily newspaper - selected from a range of 61 titles - one day a week for a year. Admirable as this scheme is, what the rest of the world will be asking is: does it work? Are young people becoming more engaged in current affairs and, most crucially, more interested in print publications as a result? A survey undertaken in June and July this year seems to indicate the scheme has managed to raise interest in current affairs, as 64% of those questioned stated they were more interested in current affairs than before taking part in the scheme. After having taken part in 'Mon Journal Offert', 41% of young people interviewed stated they neither want to subscribe to a paper nor buy it at a press kiosk. This figure isn't encouraging, but it is an accurate reflection of the difficult times the newspaper industry is facing. www.editorsweblog.org, 05. 10. 2011 Lagardère warns of 12% fall in full-year profit Lagardère warned that full-year profit might be 6 December 2011/January 2012 lower than previously forecast as the French media conglomerate widened the range of an expected drop, citing concern over its sports-related businesses and the overall economic outlook. Full-year operating profit is expected to fall by up to 12 per cent on a constant exchange rate basis, down from previous guidance in August that this would be in the range of 5-7 per cent, the group said as it reported third-quarter results. Net sales in the three months to September 30 were €1.98bn ($2.7bn), down 5.8 per cent compared with the same period last year, although up 1.3 per cent on a like-for-like basis owing to the impact of selling the international magazines business to Hearst in January. www.ft.com, 08. 11. 2011 Paris headquarters of Charlie Hebdo set on fire The offices of French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo were partly destroyed by a deliberate fire in the night of November 1. The fire was presumably caused by firebombs thrown by Muslims, as a protest against the issue heading to the newsstands the following morning, being subtitled to „Charia Hebdo”, as a reaction to the instauration of Charia in Libya, and „co-edited by prophet Muhammad”. The issue had the caricature of the prophet on the cover, threatening with „100 whip-lashes if you don’t die laughing”. The complete electronic system and all PC workstations were burned. „Everything was destroyed”- said the editor in chief and director Charb, who also expressed that Charlie Hebdo published a caricature of Muhammad almost every week, so it was not understandable why this particular issue provoked so much. The director also refused being specifically antimuslim, as the weekly has always been heavily criticising all major religions, mainly the catholic church. The website of Charlie Hebdo was also hacked, highlighting a message „No God but Allah”. The editorial office gathered in the hall of the destroyed office the next day and started immediately to work on the following issue. lemonde.fr, 02. 11. 2011 DISTRIPRESS news TRADE news Germany WSJ launching German digital-only editions Dow Jones is building its German-language news wire service in to a full-fledged Wall Street Journal edition for Germany. Published on web, mobile and tablets, the edition is due to launch in January and shows what is now likely a strategy for many media companies - launching in new markets, but not with analogue media. The service will include both free and subscriber-only content from WSJ and Dow Jones. WSJ already has a Europe edition plus local language services in China and Japan. But Germany’s place as Europe’s key economy is only increasing. www.paidcontent.org, 19. 10. 2011 Global Newspapers to disappear by 2040, UN agency chief forecasts Newspapers will disappear and be replaced by digital versions by 2040, the UN intellectual property agency's chief said in an interview published at the end of September. Francis Gurry, who heads the World Intellectual Property Organisation told the daily La Tribune de Geneve that "in a few years, there will no longer be printed newspapers as we know it today." "It's an evolution. There's no good or bad about it. There are studies showing that they will disappear by 2040. In the United States, it will end in 2017," he said. Gurry noted that in the United States there are already more digital copies sold than paper copies of newspapers. In cities, there are also fewer bookshops. A key problem is the revenue system. "How can editors find revenues to pay those who write these articles?" asked Gurry, noting that "the copyright system must be safeguarded as a mechanism to pay these writers.” http://news.yahoo.com, 02. 10. 2011 A positive financial outlook of print’s long term future Ron Davis, vice president and chief economist, Printing Industries of America, has released a financial report focusing on the long term future of print and December 2011/January 2012 print markets. The report explores how leveraging multiple functions of print can increase the longevity and viability of a printer’s success in the marketplace. The report breaks down print products and services into three different categories: * Print intended to inform or communicate factual and editorial information such a magazines, newspapers, books, and reports. * Print providing product logistics to manufactured products - packaging, labels, wrappers, and product user manuals. * Print intended to market, promote, or sell various products, services, political candidates, positions, or ideas - marketing and promotional print such as catalogs, direct mail, and brochures. Of the three functions, only one - print logistics - is not subject to competition and substitution by digital media. Conversely, print's "inform or communicate" function is subject to the highest risk of substitution from digital media. Print as a marketing, promotion, and sales media appears to be in the middle. Davis says: The key conclusion from this analysis is that there can be a very positive future for print and printers. Today's printers that are aware of the emerging industry environment and crucial business strategies and tactics have a very bright future. Printers can create their own positive future by understanding and taking advantage of the emerging changes - the changes that are shaping the printing industry of today and tomorrow. AAIND News, 12. 10. 2011 Study: 'Tabloid-broadsheet divide has blurred' Research by PR company Clarion Communications claims the once clear distinctions between quality newspapers and the tabloids has been eroded over the last 25 years. Clarion analysed editions of The Sun, Daily Mail, Daily Telegraph, News of the World, Sunday Express and The Sunday Times in July 1986 and July 2011, looking at column inches over the first six pages. The closure of the News of the World in mid-July meant the Sunday Mirror and the People were substituted in its place. The research concluded that papers across the tabloid-broadsheet spectrum now broadly reported “identical content”. This is largely a result of the “digital revolution”, the study found. 7 DISTRIPRESS news TRADE news The main findings were: * Celebrity and celebrity-related TV, film and music news has rocketed in terms of coverage across all titles, particularly the Sundays, since 1986. * At the same time, older newspaper story staples such as court reporting have sharply declined, again particularly in Sunday papers. * International news across all papers receives 25 per cent less coverage across 2011 than it did in 1986 (from 4 to 3 per cent). The study claimed “tabloids are now more likely to give space to hard news” but that broadsheets are “increasingly covering celebrity and other populist news stories”. “And while newspapers attempt to keep up with digital rivals, their news coverage has become homogenised - as tabloids and broadsheets move closer than ever before in terms of style, content and subject matter, with once clear distinctions between newspaper types becoming eroded,” it added. www.pressgazette.co.uk, 17. 10. 2011 Newspapers increases show Sunday readership One underreported story of the contemporary newspaper industry is the success that many newspapers are experiencing from targeted efforts to grow Sunday circulation. More consumers are recognizing the value of their Sunday products through relevant content, special promotions and community events that boost brand awareness, resulting in increased Sunday home delivery and single-copy sales. For many papers, Sunday is the most profitable day of the week, given heavy advertising spending in both display and preprint advertising to reach a broad, local audience. In addition to the traditional Sunday print edition, newspaper publishers are launching free opt-in products to nonsubscriber audience segments highly valued by advertisers. “The latest data confirm there are a number of clear success stories emerging in terms of Sunday circulation and readership growth,” says John Murray, vice president and audience development at the Newspaper Association of America. “These are the newspapers that have made thoughtful, 8 December 2011/January 2012 strategic investments in the quality of their journalism, improved their marketing expertise, and developed new distribution channels to meet consumer preferences. It also helps that the Sunday newspaper has become a great example of value in a tough consumer economy.” AAIND News, 14. 11. 2011 Russia Allure Magazine to launch in Russia Allure has become the leading beauty media brand in the world since it was launched in the United States in 1991, says Condé Nast International. Russia will become the third market for Allure, joining the US title, which has a circulation of just over 1.1 million, and Korea, where Allure was launched in 2003. In addition to the printed title, there will be an Allure website and digital products. Allure will become the eighth magazine title published by Condé Nast Russia, a wholly owned division of Condé Nast International, which began in 1998 with the launch of Russian Vogue. Other magazine titles include Glamour, Gentlemen’s Quarterly (GQ), GQ Style, AD, Tatler, and Condé Nast Traveller. There is also a digital division producing several websites and tablet editions including Glamour and GQ. www.arpp.ru, 02. 11. 2011 United Kingdom Lebedev to stop printing overseas copies of Indy titles Alexander Lebedev is set to axe printing international editions of The Independent and The Independent on Sunday, cutting around 50,000 copies off its monthly audited figure, mirroring a recent move by Guardian News & Media (GNM), publisher of The Guardian and The Observer. The dropping of the international copies comes as the Independent titles owner and other newspaper publishers move to cut costs across their businesses. According to Audit Bureau of Circulations figures (ABCs), The Independent published an average of 23,558 daily overseas copies, not DISTRIPRESS news TRADE news including the Republic of Ireland, in August, out of an overall headline circulation of 180,470 copies. The Independent on Sunday published 27,597 overseas daily copies, discounting the Republic of Ireland, out of a headline circulation of 164,518, in the same month. The two papers are printed in France, Spain and a number of other northern European countries. In July, GNM announced that it was axing international issues of The Guardian, around 19,000 copies, and around 18,000 copies of The Observer. Quality rivals, The Times and The Daily Telegraph still publish overseas copies. The Times published 33,265 overseas copies out of a headline circulation of 414,153 in August. In the same month, The Daily Telegraph published 24,936 overseas copies, out of a total of 632,070 copies. www.mediaweek.co.uk, 04. 10. 2011 Resources from axed Guardian international edition transferred to digital projects Editorial resources from The Guardian’s axed international edition are to be focused on digital projects such as the iPad edition, according to the paper’s readers’ editor Chris Elliott. These resources include the journalists involved repackaging content from the UK paper for the slimmer international version. He reports that The Guardian has responded to 75 complaints since stopping the international version of the paper last month and he has also provided some transparency about the circulation figures. While the foreign edition added between 12,000 and 15,000 copies a day to The Guardian’s ABC sales figure - it turns out that just 3,500 to 5,000 of these were actually sold. Due to a quirk in the ABC rules, all copies distributed abroad count towards the ABC sales total - even those which haven’t been sold. Elliott believes that other papers’ international editions are set to follow suit. “International editions were always more costly to produce, and eventually the costs were disproportionate in an era when all papers are facing declining revenues.” www.pressgazette.co.uk, 17. 10. 2011 December 2011/January 2012 FT Group revenue up 6% Pearson has reported a 6% year-on-year revenue increase at FT Group, the division that publishes the Financial Times, announcing that ebook sales at Penguin have more than doubled in the first nine months. Pearson, which owns an extensive educational publishing operation as well as Penguin, said that paid-for digital subscriptions at the FT have increased 30% year on year to almost 250,000. By the end of September the company said it had seen 790,000 users of the FT's new web app, with mobile devices now accounting for 20% of all traffic to FT.com. About 15% of new subscriptions come from mobile devices. Pearson said the rise of eBook sales, which more than doubled in the first nine months of the year, helped offset the decline in physical sales of titles.Publishing highlights in the third quarter included Kathyrn Stockett's The Help in the US, a film version of which is currently in UK cinemas, and in the UK authors including Jamie Oliver and Dawn French. Overall Pearson reported underlying revenue growth of 1% year on year in the first nine months, with operating profit climbing 13%. The company, which said all divisions are trading in line with expectations, reported a sales increase of 6% year on year when taken on a constant currency basis. www.guardian.co.uk, 03. 11. 2011 British Newspaper Archive goes online The British Library has launched the British Newspaper Archive website which provides access to up to 4m fully searchable pages, featuring more than 200 newspaper titles from the UK and Ireland. The newspapers mainly date back to the 19th century, but include runs dating back to the first half of the 18th century. According to the British Library, they cover every aspect of local, regional and national news. The website was created as part of a 10 year partnership between the British Library and online publisher brightsolid, which was announced in May 2010. Over the past year brightsolid's digitisation team, based at the British Library Newspaper Library at Colindale, has been digitising up to 8,000 pages of historic 9 DISTRIPRESS news TRADE news newspapers each day. The project is expected to scan up to 40m newspaper pages. The British Library said that brightsolid is negotiating with a number of rightsholders to obtain permission to digitise a range of more recent newspaper runs. http://www.guardian.co.uk, 29. 11. 2011 USA – France Huffington Post partners with Le Monde, LNEI on French edition The Huffington Post is planning a French edition Le Huffington Post - with two established partners who will share equity: The Le Monde Group and Les Nouvelles Editions Indépendantes. Confirmation of Le Huffington Post comes four months after HuffPo launched in the UK. Arianna Huffington first mentioned it when she was in Cannes in June as she heralded the coming of a dozen international sites. Other planned expansion sites include Latin America, Australia and India. Le HuffPo will make use of Le Monde’s and LNEI’s local edit resources. In addition to the flagship Paris-based daily newspaper, Le Monde also publishers several weekly magazines, including Télérama, Courrier International and La Vie. The other partner, LNEI, is the holding company of Matthieu Pigasse, which runs the French weekly culture magazine and Les Inrockuptibles group, which shares controlling stake in Le Monde Group jointly with Pierre Bergé and Xavier Niel, and which also holds various stakes in the French media landscape. www.paidcontent.co.uk, 10. 10. 2011 USA Wall Street Journal, USA Today, New York Times top latest circulation report ABC has released circulation figures for the sixmonth period ending Sept. 30, 2011. This is the second reporting period in which ABC is counting circulation differently, so you can’t compare current figures to previous periods. The Wall Street Journal, USA Today and The New York Times top the list of top 25 daily newspapers. The San Jose Mercury News, Dallas Morning News and the Chicago SunTimes all rank high due to the inclusion of 10 December 2011/January 2012 “branded” copies - editions with a different nameplate and some distinct content. For digital editions, ABC also has distinguished between “replica” (identical to the printed paper) and “non-replica.” In that measure, the Journal leads the Times, roughly 537,000 to 380,000; USA Today is well down the list. The Times’ Jeremy Peters reports that growth in digital shows “a growing willingness by consumers to pay for digital newspaper editions.” www.poynter.org, 01. 11. 2011 Vietnam VDZ study scopes potential of Vietnamese market A new study by the Association of German Magazine Publishers, VDZ, gives insight into the Vietnamese media market. The report, Media Market Vietnam, is authored by Florian Tausch, who lived in Vietnam for four years and worked for Burda Rizzoli and Sun Flower Media as head of the development department and head of marketing. In addition to this he has obtained insights by several other experts of the subject for his documentation. “There are many good reasons why the Association of German Magazine Publishers (VDZ) focuses on the media market Vietnam”, said Kai H. Helfritz, Managing Director of VDZ Akademie and also responsible for the resort Foreign Markets within the VDZ: • With an average annual growth of 7.5% in the last decade Vietnam is one of the absolute winners in the boom region Asia. • The population is young and, among other things, with a literacy rate of 93% well qualified. • The number of internet users has risen by 12,000% between 2000 and 2010. 31% of the Vietnamese population is using the internet, two thirds of them on a daily base. More than 40% of internet users are using mobile services. • Interest in media, particularly in magazines, is very high. As an ongoing trend poorly produced titles are still being replaced or complemented by those of higher quality. • Advertising expenditures for magazines are rising. According to an Advertising Expenditure Forecast by Zenith Optimedia they amounted to 57 Mio Dollar in 2011, twice the amount of 2005. www.fipp.com, 04. 10. 2011 DISTRIPRESS news . MEMBERSHIP matters NAME CHANGE Rautakirja Oy, Finland new: Pressco Trade Services (PTS) Oy WHO IS WHO Please keep your company’s data on the cutting-edge! Therefore, please, update directly your coordinates on our website or send them to us. The regularly updated contacts of all member companies can always be found on our website www.distripress.net/whoiswho. December 2011/January 2012 IMPRINT Distripress Seefeldstrasse 35 8008 Zürich Switzerland Tel. +41 (0)44 202 41 21 Fax +41 (0)44 202 10 25 [email protected] www.distripress.net Contact: [email protected] 11