ContentWise Blog

Job Openings at Music Magazines

Our colleagues at String Letter
Publishing in San Rafael, California, have several positions available
that we thought you might like to know about. SLP publishes, among other
titles, Acoustic Guitar, Play Guitar!, and Strings.
They are looking for:

10 Mistakes to Avoid on the Web: A Virtual Seminar

On January 31 at 11 a.m. Pacific time (2 p.m. Eastern), Michael Gold will be present “10 Mistakes Web Sites Still Make—And How To Fix Them.”

This hour-long virtual seminar will cover the goofs–in strategy, usability, and content presentation–that we see a lot in our consulting work. It will show you how to avoid the typical roadblocks and booby traps that continue to make the Web mysterious and frustrating for the average user.

This is a live “Webinar” with plenty of time built in to answer questions.

For more information and to register, please visit the sites of this seminar’s joint producers: the Stanford Publishing Courses and the Association of Educational Publishers.

Publication Sites That Transcend Print: ConsumerReports.org

Consumer Reports logoHow do you make a publication Web site transcendent? The basic strategy is simple, even if the execution usually demands a lot of effort:

Invent content and tools that are exactly what your audience craves but that can only be presented in the specialized environment of the Web, not in the pages of a print publication.

ConsumerReports.org, the latest addition to our list of the Transcendent 10, follows this strategy big-time. For consumers seeking practical guidance about products, the site is an amazing power tool.

How highly do Web visitors value the online re-invention of this venerable publication? A few numbers tell the story.

  • CR Online now has more than 2.5 million subscribers, each
    ponying up $26 a year. Editorial Director Kevin McKean believes that’s
    the highest number of subscribers to a paid content Web site. For
    comparison, the Wall Street Journal Online has 770,000 subscribers; the New York Times’ TimesSelect service has 550,000. (Consumer Reports
    the magazine has just over 4 million subscribers, roughly one in 10 of whom subscribe to the site as well. <–Please note this correction, from an earlier posting that mistakenly reported “one in five.” A stand-alone print subscription
    also costs $26.)
  • Subscriptions to the site are growing at about 20 percent a year.
  • The site gets 3 million to 4 million unique visitors a month.

Here are two quick examples of what makes this site so transcendently great.

1) Smart slicing and dicing of print content
At one end of
the spectrum of publication Web sites is the “dumb dump.” Text-based
material from the magazine or newspaper or newsletter is simply
shoveled into HTML pages. It’s grey, hard to read online, and
unreceptive to interactive rummaging.

At the other end are ConsumerReports.org’s customizable ratings
charts. Going far beyond the usual searchable archive, these online
charts provide a friendly and powerful way to drill into CR’s wealth of
ratings, reviews, and advice about whatever appliance, gizmo, or tool
you’re thinking about buying.
Consumer Reports online chartConsider, for example, the site’s customizable chart for refrigerators.
(You’ll need to be a subscriber to actually test drive this example.) Using the tool’s
slider bars and check boxes, prospective buyers can customize their
view of CR’s guidance, and shorten or lengthen the list of products
shown, by any number of criteria. These include brands, price range,
overall ratings score, and–most impressive to us as recent
refrigerator shoppers–product-specific features such as cubic feet of
capacity, exterior finish, and the option of a water dispenser.

This is one of the most dramatic examples we’ve seen of transforming
past print material into a tool that simply cannot exist within the
covers of a magazine but becomes a true killer app on the Web.

Granted, not every publication has the raw material to fuel an
online product selector. But most niche publishers are sitting on
treasure troves of text-based information that their audiences would
love to have creatively repackaged into an interactive tool. What have
you got?

2) A video demo worth more than a thousand (text) words
Beyond
the imaginative re-purposing of magazine content, ConsumerReports.org
has recently begun pushing its coverage, and its editors, into a wholly
new medium–namely, video. It makes perfect sense. The magazine does a
commendable job in its printed evaluations. But for someone in the
market for a new vacuum cleaner, for instance, there’s nothing like
watching technicians put a bunch of different models through their
paces over a thick, soiled carpet.
Consumer Reports vacuum chartCheck out the video buying guide on vacuums. In the little box titled “Consumer Reports Video,” click on “View video.” (Even non-subscribers can see this.)

We wish we had watched the guide’s first segment, on “Light
Cleaners,”
before we spent our money on a robotic vacuum. The sight of the little
bot aimlessly wandering the room, blindly bumping into table legs and
walls, and leaving most of the dirt on the floor–that’s some powerful
consumer information. And it’s perfectly suited to an online (as
opposed to in-print) presentation.

Again, not every publication covers a field that lends itself to
such hands-on demonstrations. But aren’t there certain subjects within
your niche that you could explore most effectively using video? In this
YouTube era, it’s a good bet that your Web audience would like to see
some of what your editors and writers are seeing out in the field.

Please let us know how your site and other sites that you like are transcending print. And keep pushing.

Make Your Site User-Friendly

Here are a few annotated website screen shots that we’ve created over the years to help Web publishers appreciate the benefits of living by the rules of smart usability—and the pain of ignoring them.

Each is a stand-alone PDF document that you can print, save, or share. To download, click on the titles.

Weird Navigation: The designer probably thought this scheme was cool. The users probably got frustrated and left. (3/23/04)

Fuzzy Identity: No matter how visitors arrive at your Web site, they need to know instantly what it’s all about and what it enables them to do. (12/20/06)

Vertical Space Hogs: Beware oversized logos, image-heavy banners, and other non-informational elements that squander a Web page’s most precious resource. (1/3/05)

Clear Link Descriptions: Clear labels tell users the payoff. That gets them to click. Here’s a great example. (2003)

Lost Below the Fold: It’s amazing how many Web sites bury important stuff below the first visible screenful. (2003)

We Have a Winner!

Althea Jones, online managing editor of the American Veterinary Medical Association’s site, is the lucky winner of the $500 discount we offered last week for Stanford’s Publishing on the Web course. Thea has been to the course before, and we’re glad she’ll be joining us again this year.

Thanks to all of you who put your names in the hat. We’ll be offering more discounts for future Stanford courses, so stay tuned.

And if you want to pay full freight, Monday, October 9, is the registration deadline.

Win $500 Discount on Stanford Web Conference

Do you know about the Stanford Web publishing course that’s coming up in November? As academic directors of the course, we may be a tad biased. But we believe it’s a great way for non-technical types to get up to speed, take stock, fill in the gaps, and learn about emerging strategies and techniques in the critical areas of Web publishing.

We’d like to offer one lucky reader of our blog a $500 discount on the $1,980 tuition for the course. Just send us a quick e-mail (<– by clicking on that link) saying you’re interested, and we’ll throw your name into the hat.

We must receive your e-mail by midnight (Pacific time) on Friday, September 29. We’ll announce our randomly chosen winner on Monday, October 2–which by the way is one week before the deadline for registering.

Now, here’s the rest of the commercial. Among the speakers lined up for the action-packed, 2 1/2-day conference are:

  • Guy Kawasaki, Managing Director, Garage Technology Ventures
  • Kevin McKean,
    Vice President/Editorial Director, Consumers Union
  • Matt McAlister,
    Senior Product Manager, RSS and Social Media, Yahoo!
  • Igor Shindel, Former Chief Technology Officer of Time Warner Digital Media

Topic areas to be covered include:

  • Content and design
  • Business models
  • Search engine optimization
  • Content management
  • Site monitoring and analysis
  • Hot tech tools

In addition to large-group presentations, there will be quite a few sessions where you can meet with experts in smaller groups and delve into practical Q&As.

And then there are the site critiques–one of the most revealing, humbling, and useful exercises of the course, according to past conference-goers. These are simulated usability tests of each participant’s site, conducted by fellow participants.

Did we mention the conference is held at the swanky Monterey Plaza Hotel & Spa, which sits right at the edge of gorgeous Monterey Bay? After a busy day of getting smart about Web publishing, you can fall asleep to the gentle sound of barking seals.

For a full preview of session topics, activities, and logistics, check the conference Web site.

Freelance Programming Help

Is there a cool tool you’ve been dying to add to your site? Do you need a database built, and quick? If you can’t afford an in-house programmer, check out Scriptlance and Elance.

They are auction sites: You submit a description of your project, and programmers bid on it. You can review a programmer’s rating and look at his or her previous jobs. Projects go for as little as $10, though most average a few hundred. Elance, which is more user-friendly than Scriptlance, also offers the services of designers, writers, accountants, and more.

On HighRankings.com, Web consultant Scottie Claiborne, who has used Scriptlance several times, offers good tips for making sure a project goes well  But take a look at the comments too; other folks have been less pleased.

Prevention Magazine Names Editor to Extend Brand

Rodale has named Leah McLaughlin, formerly of Fitness magazine, its “brand editor” for the healthy lifestyle magazine Prevention. This looks like a smart move. We always worry when the person or department in charge of spreading the brand isn’t close to the creative side of the magazine. McLaughlin, however, is an actual editor–meaning that she will be intimately familiar with the magazine’s readers, mission, and content.

We also worry about editors who don’t see publishing’s new reality: that a magazine can’t be an island unto itself anymore. But it sounds like they get that at Rodale. Here’s how McLaughlin’s boss, Prevention Editor in Chief Liz Vaccariello, put it:

“When [McLaughlin] thinks about a story idea, it’s not just a story in Prevention. It also might have legs on the website; it may be a book someday. It could be a tent at the walking marathon we put on. But it shows that we’re constantly thinking about how to reach out to consumers in a platform-agnostic way.”

Publication Sites That Transcend Print– Nature.com

The most important challenge facing publication-related Web sites—and still the most difficult one—is transcending their print roots.

We’re not talking about simply repackaging the static text and graphics from a magazine or newspaper into a Web-friendly form. Naturally, print-derived content should be presented so Web audiences can scan it, easily navigate through it, e-mail copies to friends, print it out, and flexibly search archives. But these days, that’s like saying a car really should include tires and a steering wheel.

Enter the Transcendent 10. This is the first in a series of postings in which we’ll feature 10 publishers who are extending the “brand DNA” of their publications onto the Web in impressive ways. These savvy folks have considered the special powers of the Web (interactivity, data bases, always-on accessibility, quick turnaround time, multimedia, social networking…) and answered this question creatively:

What information/activity/service/mode of communication or participation would the Web allow us to offer our readers–stuff they’d kill to get–that we could never offer them in a print medium?

Nature.com
Nature.com, the first of our Transcendent 10, is the online extension of the prestigious scientific journal Nature and its cousins in the London-based Nature Publishing Group. This is a huge effort. If we tried describing it all, there would barely be anything left for the remaining nine “Transcendents” to demonstrate. So here’s a rundown of some of Nature.com’s most interesting elements…

Continue reading “Publication Sites That Transcend Print– Nature.com”

How to Build an Audience for Your Blog

So you’ve talked a few staffers into blogging for your site, they’ve been cranking out their daily posts, and now you’re pondering that familiar question: What if we blogged, but nobody noticed?

Search optimization expert Rand Fishkin of SEOmoz offers 21 very smart tactics to increase traffic to your blog. His advice ranges from technical nuts and bolts (tagging your posts) to content (what to cover and how to write it).