5 Things Journalists Ought to Know About Tablets

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blog.batteryfast.co.uk

30/11/2011 08:50

5 Things Journalists Ought to Know About Tablets 5 Things Journalists Ought to Know About Tablets

http://blog.batteryfast.co.uk/5-things-journalists-ought-to-know-about-tablets/

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Journalists and photographers need to rethink how they package – and how they get paid for – their work when it comes to tablet computers. Tablets, predicted to become the reading device of choice in the next few years, will change the demand and market for information. Those are some of the takeaways from a “Hacks and Hackers” meetup held at Storify headquarters in San Francisco called, “New rules of storytelling: The rise of tablets.” Talking about the burgeoning demand for touchscreen-friendly information were John Knight, a cofounder and editor of Closed Mondays, whose recent tablet projects include Al Gore’s “Our Choice” and Tim Ferriss’s “4-Hour Chef.”

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Here are five more points worth touching on for journalists and photographers when it comes to tablet publishing.

1. There’s No Money in Tablet Publishing – Yet Once Magazine, launched in September, has a revenue sharing model that will hopefully pay journalists and photographers decent rates for their work. Readers currently pay $2.99 for each edition. When answering a question from the audience about whether tablet publishing provides a decent paycheck, Once‘s Knight said, “No! Just kidding. Sometimes. Well, it could… If we have 20,000 subscribers, it would be decent paycheck. I mean, if we could pay $2,500 for the photos and $1 a word, that would be decent. First, you have to establish yourself. The onus right now is on contributors to market… There’s not a market for us right now any more than there is for contributors.”

2. Your News Organization Is Interested in Them Back in January, Forrester research predicted that U.S. consumers would buy more tablets than computers by 2015. In addition to launching hundreds of dedicated apps, news organizations have heeded the call to create content consumable on tablet computers with initiatives ranging from Rupert Murdoch’s iPad-only publication The Dailyto a Philadelphia media group subsidizing tablets for readers. The result? The Economist recently reached100,000 subscribers for its iPad version.

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