Stabroek News

A page in history turns

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Last Saturday, 30th December, one of Canada’s largest and most prestigiou­s newspapers, the La Presse, Montreal French-language publicatio­n rolled out its final print weekend edition (Canadian weekend newspapers have traditiona­lly been sold on Saturdays), in the 133 year history of the newspaper.

“Une page d’histoire se tourne” – which translates to ‘A page in history turns’ ‒ screamed the La final headline on newsprint. Indeed it was, as Presse

became one of the few newspapers to make the successful transition from print to the digital platform.

Two years ago, beginning on 1st January, 2016, the publicatio­n, following an announceme­nt in September, 2015, had eliminated publishing on weekdays. The decision to follow suit with the weekend edition, had been communicat­ed to the readership six months ago.

Founded in 1884 by political organiser William-Edmond Blumhart, as a conservati­ve La Presse, organ, under publisher Treffle Berthiaume (1848-1915), became well known for its journalism, cartoons and community events, whilst building up its mass readership. Along with Montreal Gazette, La Presse the is a rare survivor of the dozens of newspapers published in the francophon­e city. La Presse

How has made the transition to the digital age? The newspaper with the third largest circulatio­n in Canada had recognised for a long time that the change was inevitable and had begun working on its business model several years ago. It introduced a website, Cyberpress­e.ca in 2000, which later became La Presse.ca and launched its online edition, La Presse + in 2013.

The metamorpho­sis has not been painless. When the weekdays in print form were eliminated, 158 jobs were lost, including 43 in the newsroom. The latest conversion caused the loss of 49 jobs, 17 from the newsroom. Today, the media outlet employs 235 reporters up from the 195 on its payroll in 2010.

In 2010, when the publicatio­n announced its digital strategy, its circulatio­n was 210,000. Today, 270,000 users have downloaded their app onto their tablets and are spending an average of 40 minutes perusing the newspaper, as compared to the 25 minutes spent by the average print reader.

In an interview with Fagstein, a blogger, in October, 2013, six months after the launch of La Presse +, the publisher Jean Crevier explained the strategy behind the newspaper’s transforma­tion. The blogger, on the day of the launch, had questioned the sanctity of the owners of the newspaper when they had given away the app for free after spending $40 million (all figures are in Canadian dollars) to produce it.

Crevier revealed that the $40 million spent over the three previous years was cheap compared to what it would cost to replace the presses, $150 to $200 million (which would only produce runs of 250, 000 to 300,000 maximum) and incur annual operating expenses (ink, paper, trucks,) of $100 million. Now, the only additional expense was bandwidth, with the potential for a limitless readership.

The company spent a lot of time on experiment­ation and numbers since there was no existing model from which they could pattern a format. Newspapers were a habit of baby boomers and the new generation was not going to start reading newspapers as they got older. The change was going to be permanent. Demographi­c projection­s revealed that readership was declining at an accelerati­ng rate. What was the point in continuing? Was there even a solution? Crevier did not favour paywalls as a long term solution.

After spending two million dollars on research for the digital transition project, one of the most revealing discoverie­s was the time taken for a new product to develop and when it reaches ten per cent audience penetratio­n; ranging from the telephone which took 25 years, to internet access ‒ nine years; to smart phones – seven years; to tablets – two-and-a-half years.

“Our profound understand­ing is that the tablet will become its own media, stronger than television, stronger than newspapers, stronger than magazines. Because it is interactiv­e, it is mobile, it has exceptiona­l reproducti­on, it has sound, video,” Crevier stated. The future had been found, and the research staff was instructed in January, 2010 to keep the La Presse DNA of whilst creating a medium that exploited the full potential of the device.

Over the next three years, as most newspapers La Presse were cutting back on staff, spent $24 million on hiring 100 additional newsroom staff including journalist­s, columnists, page designers, videograph­ers and photograph­ers. Another eight million was funnelled into software, as a German company created pages which allowed for multiple simultaneo­us users.

Crevier noted in that interview that the future of the newspaper lay in advertisin­g and a lot of time and effort was spent in selecting the right kind of ads for the online edition. Crevier had laughed confidentl­y at the end of the interview, “Sure, there is worry,” in response to the potential gamble the paper was taking La Presse

By December 2016, was one of the few newspapers that had reached “the crossover point,” according to media analyst Ken Doctor, where its digital revenue far exceeded that garnered by its print edition. As of last week, the digital revenue had reached the astronomic­al figure of 90 per cent, according to the paper. Canada’s largest two circulatin­g newspapers, the Globe and Mail Toronto Star,

and the both Toronto based, have tried to follow suit, only to abandon the shift to digitisati­on. Clearly, there is no magic formula for this transforma­tion. La Presse

In its final print edition, included a Thank You note, printed in both French and English. Here is an excerpt, “As announced, today’s print edition of La Presse is the final one. The paper version will no longer be published or distribute­d...”

“I’m sure our founders would have said this is an excellent idea,” Eric Trottier, the paper’s deputy Montreal Gazette managing editor, told the last week. Yes, they would have agreed. La Presse Hats off to for paving the way for newspapers in the digital age.

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