paidContent.org - The Economics of Content

Current Story

FOBM Video: After The Deal: Gordon Crovitz on the NWS-DJ Transition

By Staci D. Kramer - Thu 15 Nov 2007 11:16 PM PST

Given Rupert Murdoch’s comments this week about expecting WSJ.com to go free, we thought we’d share the video of a Q&A by executive editor Staci D. Kramer with Gordon Crovitz from our recent conference on the Future of Business Media. Crovitz, a former journalist, is the publisher of the WSJ Franchise and EVP, Dow Jones (NYSE: NWS). (The original coverage of the session is here.)

The session is shown here in two roughly 15-minute segments (RSS readers will have to click through online):

-- Part 1: Crovitz explains the current hybrid premium-free model for WSJ.com and the WSJ Digital Network; profit margin for online versus print; using WSJ.com to extend the print edition—almost every new subscriber is a subscriber to both; the strategy being evaluated now: “Is there a way for use to be both the best and the biggest?”; premium services—“DJ brings in a half-billion in subscriptions services revenue;” the MarketWatch acquisition two years later --"extraordinarily successful” for us; cross-platform ad sales.

-- Part II: Creating more online verticals; News Corp. effect on DJ’s own re-org; News Corp. funding; journalists’ salaries—“If the highest-paid journalists don’t work at DJ where would they work? ... I expect significant investments in the Journal; Fox Business Network-CNBC; gaining traffic through portals; emphasizing the journalism—“It is incumbent on us to figure out how we maintaining large, sophisticated news departments in a world where we’re compared with others who don’t have that expense;” MKTW-Fox Business Network collaboration; DJ’s global operations and how News Corp. will help with global expansion—“we’ll be able to do at a much more rapid pace.” Also, when will the Journal go free? 


Posted in: Companies, News Corp., WSJ-DJ, MKTW, Countries, Media, Newspapers, Conferences, FOBM

Tags: gordon crovitz,

Check our our new Social Media Deals Report, which examines the categories, number and size of VC and M&A deals into social media

Related Research from Alacrastore.com

1 Response:
  • From Stone Fri 16 Nov 2007 03:52 PM

    Murdoch needs to fire Crovitz. He simply doesn’t understand the Internet and dealmaking on the web. He’s unqualified to work for News Corp. at the level he’s currently at. Mark my words that he’s fired within 6-months.

Post Your Comment

Mobile Options

» Mobile App
» Mobile/WAP Site

Send a News Tip

About

paidContent.org, flagship of the ContentNext Media network, provides global coverage of the business of digital content.

Rafat Ali
Publisher & Co-Editor

Staci D. Kramer
Co-Editor

David Kaplan
Senior Correspondent

Joseph Weisenthal
Correspondent

Robert Andrews
U.K. Editor

Amanda Natividad
Editorial Producer

EconCeleb Conference - The Economics of Celebrity. July 23 at the Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood

Featured Report - 2008 Social Media Deals Report

front page of report

The economics of social media continue to heat up, with ever more buzz created in new and growing market categories. This report examines the categories, number and size of investment and acquisitions into social media and the resulting value created from 2007 through 2008. Order your report today to analyze deals made by Yahoo, Disney, Google, AOL, CBS, Hearst, Microsoft and many more.

Learn more or purchase now.

New Media/Interactive Job Listings

Post Job
More Jobs

Generous Supporters