Belinda Luscombe of Time magazine takes a look at the business journalism sector in the wake of the announcement this week that BusinessWeek was for sale.
“All of this is bad news for business magazines. But it doesn’t necessarily mean business journalism is in trouble, says Sylvia Nasar, an economist and former Fortune writer who teaches at Columbia University’s J-school. There’s more demand for it than ever, and more outlets providing it — also part of Business Week‘s problem. ‘This [economic crisis] is a great story,’ she notes. ‘There is — and will be — more great journalism on it.’
“Just before he found out that the folks who paid him were seeking someone else to do it, BusinessWeek.com’s editor in chief John A. Byrne wrote, ‘What newspapers and magazines are going through right now is a business-model problem, not a readership problem.’ For Business Week, actually, it’s a bit of both: the magazine’s total audience declined during the first six months of 2009, according to the latest MRI data, while Fortune‘s and Forbes‘ grew.
“Interestingly, in the same period, its website, with the much touted Business Exchange — a business-news aggregator cum social-networking site — increased its readership, usually drawing a little over 5 million unique visitors a month, according to Compete.com. That’s not a bad showing, but it’s no savior for a weekly magazine that is losing readers and hemorrhaging money.”
Read more here.
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Luscombe lacks historical memory. The fact is that Business Week built McGraw-Hill, accounting in some years for 30% or more of net, and funding numerous acquisitions and startups. It's profitability and enormous cash flow long preceded the acquisition of S&P and other information providers. It also paid for an awful lot of corporate mistakes. To call BW a stepchild is really dumb.