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Multiplatform Publishing Strategy

3 Multiplatform Publishing Business Models You Can Take Straight to the Bank

These multiplatform publishing business models can be incorporated into your business at little extra cost, but with huge revenue potential

At the beginning of the year we highlighted three resolutions multiplatform publishers should make in 2017. As we’ve watched the success of our clients grow by adding new platforms, my main recommendations for this year were to add three new website publishing business models into your mix. These were the three I recommended every magazine or newsletter publisher should incorporate into their multiplatform magazine mix:

  • Resolution #1: Add a directory website business model
  • Resolution #2: Add a calendar website business model
  • Resolution #3: Add bookstore website business model

Have you taken any steps to build one, two, or all three of these extensions of your website? If you have, I’d love to hear your experience in the comments section at the end of this article. 

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If you haven’t, let’s revisit these revenue-generating business models for publishers that you can incorporate into your overall ecosystem of publishing:

Profitable publishing business models #1: Directories

New England Network has a travel directory website called New England Traveler. Within the directory, users can select different states and select things to do within that state. To generate revenue, they accept paid listings in their directory.

The directory content business has some pretty unique benefits. If executed correctly, this model can be a win-win-win for any ambitious publisher. Not many content business models can say that. And in 2017 where most multiplatform publishers are looking to innovate and not spend a lot of money trying, you can instead rely on historical success of directories for most publishers.

Not only is a directory a revenue stream, it can also be an engagement device on your website – and driving traffic to your website is a powerful online publishing strategy. When you have a robust directory, users can flock to your site for information that’s more specific and relevant to their needs than any Google search could deliver. And finally, as the icing on the cake, Google loves a good directory: When it’s properly tagged and optimized, it will always appear near the top in Google search rankings because Google also knows its content is valuable to its users.

Listings in a directory can be either free or—for those who want more real estate to sell copy—they can be premium (paid). A truly robust directory can even be 100% premium; once you have enough listings to be the only game in town, you can dispense with the free listings. In either case, the more listings you have, the more credibility you have with your users and with Google. When it comes to the directory content business model, size definitely matters. Read more about directory websites.

Profitable publishing business models #2: Calendars

Bringing it back again to New England Network, they also have a calendar website business model as a part of their network that is called the New England Planner. Like the directory, it’s free for users to browse, and sponsors can pay to gain prominent visibility in their event listings.

Calendar websites are usually free to access and are usually free to list an event in as well, unless the calendar is managed solely by the publisher.

The content in each entry may have minimal SEO value, but they can be great generators of inbound links and referral traffic, which will certainly help search engine performance. Because of the fairly limited content, calendar website business models are best paired with another website business model that can drive traffic, of which a portal is clearly the best qualified.

The underlying revenue-generation system is therefore sponsorship. This sponsorship might be for the publisher’s products and events or for third-party products and events…and often takes the form of banners and other display advertising, either for the whole calendar or for sections of the calendar. For instance, a sponsor may wish to be visible whenever a user searches on events in a particular location or region, or for a category of events. Read more about the calendar website business model.

Profitable publishing business models #3: Bookstores (print and/or digital)

You might notice a trend here, so far these business model add-ons combine the benefits of website traffic and revenue, and the primary revenue model depends on sponsors willing to pay for placement. For the bookstore business model, revenue is user-generated. The best part is that content for books in your new bookstore can be created by recycling old magazine content, and that’s a great way to start.

New England Network has a bookstore where you can purchase almanacs and cookbooks. It works on a shopping cart system, so you can purchase multiple books at a time.

A bookstore website is built to sell a catalog of multiplatform books and reports. As a magazine publisher, you may not be focusing on books, but we have several clients who have such large subscriber lists that every time they promote a book to their promotional list, they can count on instant profits, sometimes in the thousands of dollars, because the books are delivered digitally.

Books are a one-time cost to create, and when delivered digitally, can generate revenue without any more added effort. The production of a book can be anywhere from a thousand dollars (smaller white papers) to thousands of dollars (full length handbooks), but we also have clients who sell $10 ebooks that are 25-50 pages. Because oh did I mention, these books don’t need to be print copies, and without print, profits are substantial. Read more about the bookstore website business model.

If you have tried to add any one of these new publishing business models to your multiplatform publishing objectives this year, I’d love to hear your experience—or even your fears and questions about launching them—in the comments below.

If you’d rather speak more privately, and to discuss how these and other publishing business models can help you grow your audience, revenue and profits, schedule a free introductory conversation with Don Nicholas, our Chairman & CEO.

 

By Don Nicholas

Founder & Executive Publisher

Don Nicholas serves as Executive Publisher for Food Gardening Network and GreenPrints. He is responsible for all creative, technical, and financial aspects of these multiplatform brands. As senior member of the editorial team, he provides structural guidance, sets standards, and coordinates activities with the technology and business teams. Don is an active gardener whose favorite crops include tomatoes, basil, blueberries, and corn. He and his wife Gail live and work in southern Massachusetts surrounded by forests, family farms, cranberry bogs, and nearby beaches. Don is also the Founder of Mequoda Systems, LLC, which operates and supports numerous online communities including I Like Crochet, I Like Knitting, and We Like Sewing.

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