Media
Future is online, AP chief
'I just go to the Web sites, it's right there, everything
you need to know. I don't like reading newspapers."
- youth. CBSNews
Nov 14, 2004
Los
Angeles - The future of news is online, and traditional
media outlets must learn to tailor their products for consumers
who demand instant, personalised information, the head of
The Associated Press said Friday.
The
growth of high-speed broadband connections is leading to
a future in which computers are always on "and so are
the users," Tom Curley, president and chief executive
officer of the world's largest news organization, told the
Online News Association conference in Hollywood
The
Internet is picking up the readers and viewers that newspapers
and TV news shows have been losing, Curley said.
It also
has changed the balance of power from news providers to
consumers, who use Web-surfing programs and video recording
devices to control what they want to know and when and where
they'll learn it.
Curley,
who was publisher of Gannett Co.'s USA Today newspaper before
becoming the AP's top executive in 2003, offered a scenario
in which a "news enthusiast" would download to
various electronic devices an array of news - sports scores,
headlines, financial reports and analysis - from a variety
of sources.
In the
world of personalised news, "the content comes to you;
you don't have to come to the content," Curley said.
"So, get ready for everything to be 'Googled,' 'deep-linked'
or 'Tivo-ised.' "
"You
have to let the content flow where the users want to go,
and attach your brand - and maybe advertising and e-commerce
- to those free-flowing 'atoms,' " Curley said.
That
already is leading to changes in how news is covered.
For
example, Curley said AP is furnishing US bureaus with cameras
to provide video for multimedia use and is increasing coverage
of news of interest to young audiences.
News
media also may need to consider nontraditional services
for the Internet.
Curley
noted one site in Kansas already offers a Web cam service
local college students can use to see how long the lines
are at a pizza parlor.
More
media companies will have to learn how to make their Web
operations profitable when many consumers are used to getting
their news for free, he said.
The
market is out there, Curley said, citing a recent study
that found 29 percent of Internet users - about 43 million
people - go online to get news three or more times per week.
Stephanie
Busack, 22, a journalism student at Ohio University who
attended the conference, said she gets most of her news
online.
"I
just go to the Web sites, basically ... it's right there,
everything you need to know," she said. "I don't
like reading newspapers."
Curley
also touched on Internet users who disseminate news and
ideas through Web logs, citing one recent estimate that
there are 4 million "bloggers" making 400,000
posts per day.
"That
works out to roughly 16,000 posts an hour, or about as many
stories as the AP sends out in an entire day," he said.
"It
will get even tougher to be heard above the roar of the
Internet crowd, and the business bets will have to be for
greater stakes."
Still,
Curley predicted current news giants will survive.
"The
bloggers need a baseline of facts and professional analysis
on which to base their work," he said.
"Imagine
Drudge without somebody to link to, or Wonkette without
somebody to poke fun at."
CBSNews