Steve Forbes, billionaire owner of Forbes magazine, is in London to connect a new European edition and shows that its website, Forbes.com, has 20 million unique visitors now - and has been profitable since 2003. The secret? Forbes started and ran separately from the printed version, which says there is no integration, no journalists or managers constantly changing from one medium to another.
What lessons, meanwhile, can draw from the rise in the Daily Mail line of 65 million unique visitors per month? The Courier sings a tune forbesi: separation, not integration. The web is one thing and not another printing.
Meanwhile, in the Journalism School of Columbia University in New York, Emily Bell, former Supreme Guardian and Observer digital academic again, meditate on new survey forms of the newspapers on the web. "In the past 10 years, news organizations that many have assumed that integration is the right way - and some may be - but the evidence shows that often the requirements of a completely different business are best served by a single point focus.”As a size, apparently, a thesis does not fit all.
Who writes the speeches Alexander Lebedev? "In Moscow, my grandparents were academics," he told an audience in Oxford last week, in the delivery of the first conference of Gorbachev in the freedom of the press. "I remember my grandfather cutting Pravda after he had read from cover to cover and then carefully stacked in the bathroom for use as look paper ... How ironic that today is the impression of thousands of acres of paper . . . and now I can use conventional toilet paper. But what has not changed is our hunger for knowledge and our desire to release. "
So get rid of your fish and chips wrappers. And walk own freedom hail the Evening Standard under the property to be "free of cost, or as I prefer to describe it, is priceless."
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