Premium Only Content
Are bookazines the future of the newsstand?
Bo Sacks distributed an article by his old friend and debating partner, “Mr. Magazine,” about new magazine titles on the newsstand.
Some people will see that as the equivalent of celebrating new albums on vinyl at the record store. That is, desperately hoping for a flicker of life in a dying medium.
I say that while the march to digital goes on, it’s a mistake to be too negative about print, which still makes up a sizeable part of publisher revenue.
But let’s leave the demise of print for another day and focus on the bookazine phenomena, which isn’t new, but may see revived interest.
Bookazines used to be called Special Editions, and they were typically associated with a regular magazine title. For example, Scientific American might notice a lot of interest in articles about the brain, so they’d do a special issue on that topic.
I bought one of those at the train station a little while ago.
Here are some advantages of the bookazine.
They have a higher list price and a longer shelf life.
They can serve as a marker of a significant social event – like a bookazine about Covid, or the new king.
They can be a reference on a particular topic.
You can give a bookazine as a gift with no strings attached. No publisher has the recipient’s mailing address.
They have the laid back, relaxed feel of a magazine, with colorful pages, nice art, and interesting stories.
You can publish a bookazine as a one-off with no promise of a second edition.
In short, as Chris La Greca says in a post on LinkedIn, they “combine the things that people love about magazines with the niche subject matter and permanence of books.”
But do they have sticking power when everything else is transitioning to digital?
First, let’s not fall into the “everything is going digital” trap. A lot of things are going digital, but not everything in all cases.
Second, perhaps bookazines help us to see an important dividing line in the ongoing print vs. digital debates. Maybe the bookazine is successful because it’s not expected to be up to the minute.
News magazines are generally things of the past, because by the time you get a magazine, the news is old.
Magazines that thrive in today’s market tend to be in niche topics that aren’t particularly time sensitive where the magazine experience is welcome – that is, it’s something you read in your easy chair, where you genuinely appreciate the ads. If I get a fishing magazine, for example, I want to see ads for the boats, where there’s hardly a website on the planet where I think of the ads as anything but an annoyance.
However, magazines have suffered from publishers going on a a relentless pursuit of the bottom shelf. People now expect to get an annual subscription to a magazine for $10, which doesn’t even cover printing and mailing.
Bookazines don’t (yet!!) have that relentless downward price spiral, so they seem like a great option for magazine publishers – who already have the infrastructure to create them.
Resources
The surprising success of the Bookazine and what it means for publishers
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/surprising-success-bookazine-what-means-publishers-chris-la-greca/
-
44:34
Kimberly Guilfoyle
6 hours agoCountdown to Inauguration Day, Plus California in Crisis, Live with Joel Pollack & Roger Stone | Ep. 189
91.7K39 -
1:32:41
Redacted News
5 hours agoBiden's 'SNEAKY' plot to slow down Trump REVEALED | Redacted w Clayton Morris
101K146 -
56:32
Candace Show Podcast
4 hours agoOH SNAP! Justin Baldoni Is Now Suing Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds PERSONALLY | Candace Ep 134
76.6K93 -
DVR
Havoc
1 hour agoHell on Earth | Stuck Off the Realness Ep. 24
1.77K -
11:32
Tundra Tactical
2 hours agoATF Violates Court Order to ATTACK Americans.
6.74K1 -
LIVE
Common Threads
2 hours agoLIVE DEBATE: Will Mainstream Media Survive a 2nd Trump Term?
122 watching -
LIVE
Quite Frankly
6 hours ago"Biden's Farewell, Dreams For Sale, Spy Hunting, and Open Lines" 1/16/25
1,264 watching -
54:59
Sarah Westall
2 hours agoCalifornia puts Children 2nd to Big Pharma Profits, Chemically Castrating Boy w/out Dad’s Consent
3.15K -
DVR
theDaily302
11 hours agoThe Daily 302- Craig "Sawman" Sawyer
2.07K -
11:45
Reforge Gaming
10 hours agoHalo on PS5 - Nothing is Sacred
9.63K1