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<![CDATA[ Earlier this week, I had the opportunity to take a „plant
tour“ at the Wall Street Journal's Palo Alto printing plant. It really was
fascinating to learn how the paper is printed. There is a lot of technology
involved – though, much of it is rather old. The process of getting photo
images of each page layout, etching them onto plates and then using those plates
to print the pages is really impressive. In touring through the operation, it
made me appreciate both how much effort goes into printing the newspaper each
day and how much capital costs newspapers have sunk into existing
printing processes which must make it difficult for them to adapt. They really
do have the process down to quite a science. The problem, though, is that the
science part means that the only changes they're making are really about making
the process itself cheaper or more efficient. For example, they're switching
over from sending the layouts via satellite to sending them over the internet
and the machines that develop the „negatives“ used for each plate have
become progressively more advanced and efficient over time (our tour guide noted
that the machines we saw were the „3rd generation“ since he'd started there
a long time ago, and the original machines took up half a room). Also, the Wall
Street Journal, like many newspapers, have shifted to a smaller format
that both saves newsprint costs and is much easier to use in the printing
process.
However, with all this focus on efficiency, will more creative ideas on how to
make a better product get left behind? We've talked about how newspapers
need to stop thinking of themselves as being newspapers and focus more on being
news
organizations who can provide both useful data and analysis that
people can use as they need it. For the most part, it seemed likely that
newsprint itself didn't fit all that well into that world. However, having just
seen how the printing process works, it was interesting to read this article
over at E-Media Tidbits that notes that there are new printing presses available
today that could print
totally custom newspapers. The technology would actually allow every
newspaper printed to be different, so you could customize the printed paper to
each subscriber's interests. It's a slightly different process than the
existing one, basically using very fast inkjet printers rather than the
traditional plate method, but it can still print about 30,000 papers an hour
(if I remember correctly – and I might not – the WSJ folks said they can
print 60,000 per hour). Of course, it would involve changing the current
printing process, and not for efficiency's sake, but to make the product itself
more appealing.
The question, though, is whether or not the newspaper industry is willing to go
in that direction, making a better product, rather than just a cheaper one? With
so much pressure on the industry from its investors to cut costs or to just
focus on digital distribution, it seems difficult to believe that investors will
be happy with plans to buy new printing press technology that isn't quite as
fast and uses more expensive ink. Of course, all of that leaves aside the
question of whether or not an individually customized newspaper really is
compelling enough to make that kind of investment worthwhile. The problem might
be that it's only interesting to people on the margin. Kids who have grown up
„net native“ see no reason to use a paper newspaper at all – no matter
how customized. Newspaper loyalists are still perfectly happy with their
non-customized papers anyway. So it's just those folks in-between – and it
might not be worth it to make all these changes just to satisfy that group.
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