Channel News and Analysis - Channel Insider
Empowering the next generation Channel
 

Sponsored Links
  • Get up and running in as quickly as 30 days with BI. Learn how today.
  • FREE Securing Smartphones & Tablets for Dummies Book from Sophos
  • 5 New Technologies That Will Change Enterprise ITAdvertisement
  • Build an IT Infrastructure That Delivers the Future

  •  

    The Publishers Vs. Google

    in Channel News and Analysis



    Article Rating:starstarstarstarstar / 0
    Article Views: 1041

    Opinion: It seems that retailers either shine offline or online, but rarely both.

    Rate This Article:
    Add This Article To:
    The best evidence of the great online-offline divide can be traced to the earliest days of the Web. As the Web was just creeping into prominence, if you had asked any hotshot market observer who would likely run the biggest online bookstore in the new medium, the answer would have been Barnes & Noble or Borders, not Amazon.com.

    Had the question been about online auctions, Sotheby's or Christie's would have been the choice, not eBay. What will be the dominant business news site? Time-Warner's Pathfinder had the titles, the deep pockets, the name recognition and the content. And yet, the leaders in the offline world have barely made a dent today.

    This comes to mind as the industry is seriously trying to figure out social networking. Having already embraced user-generated content and customer-written reviews, many e-commerce sites are trying to truly build communities, giving their customers a place to talk, exchange ideas and feel like a part of the community.

    The retail world has a wonderful model for such retail community building: Starbucks and Barnes & Noble stores. Both have done wonderful jobs of making themselves truly desirable destinations for meetings, dates and simply being a fun place to hang out.

    Therein lies the huge irony: Starbucks and Barnes & Noble have mastered social networking on a huge national scale and yet their Web sites have gone meaningfully nowhere with social networking.

    Is it a biological issue? Are retailers simply predisposed to one or the other? Starbucks can have a great Web site, but if they do social networking well in-store, they can't do it well online?

    Think about that as you ponder the news that three major newspaper groups—Gannett, the Tribune company and McClatchy—want to challenge Google and Yahoo for national online ads. Wall Street traders beat up the stocks of both Google and Yahoo when the news broke on Jan. 10.

    These traders—who were the same ones to put $2 on Sotheby's to win, Borders to place and Pathfinder to show—need to study history a little more. Then again, for many Wall Street traders, their idea of institutional memory is remembering the name of their supervisor from two months ago.

    The same portfolio logic that had Barnes & Noble being the hottest bookstore site has Gannett overtaking Google: They have the assets, the business relationships, the brand recognition and an understanding of advertising. What they consistently fail to factor into the equation is a company's stubborn insistence to continue its processes and procedures until it's too late. Once sales have dried up to the point where management is willing to shift strategy, there's not enough left to build on.

    The online world is about interactivity and the Web way of thinking. I have serious doubts about how well Google will do with many of the 19 decillion initiatives it's launching or piloting, but not with online advertising.

    Another coalition of newspaper publishers—lead by Hearst and MediaNews Group—has already put its lot in with Yahoo. That makes a lot more sense. Giving their market clout to an established Web player like Yahoo is a much more effective strategy. Will it topple or seriously damage Google? I doubt it, but it's possible. It's certainly a lot more possible than Gannett's approach.

    Retail Center Editor Evan Schuman has tracked high-tech issues since 1987, has been opinionated long before that and doesn't plan to stop any time soon. He can be reached at Evan_Schuman@ziffdavis.com.

    To read earlier retail technology opinion columns from Evan Schuman, please click here.

    Check out eWEEK.com's for the latest news, views and analysis on technology's impact on retail.




    comments dic


     
     
    >>> More Channel News and Analysis Articles          >>> More By Evan Schuman
     


     



    channel chatter


    HTML PLAIN TEXT

    Keep on top of news for VARs and Resellers with CI's Weekly Newsletter and Alerts.


    [ci] feeds
    XML
    Add Channel News, Product Reviews, Trends and Analysis to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo!


     


    CHANNEL SPONSORED RESOURCE CENTER
     
     
     
    Start the New Year with business intelligence—it’s a smart move
    Join us on February 1 for an encore rebroadcast at either 5 am or 12 noon EST and discover how business intelligence (BI) supports companies in uncertain business and economic climates. Get expert advice on how to create a strategy that fits your organization's needs and budget and see how quickly it can pay for itself.
    Click Here
     
    Security and Availability Essentials for Running Your Business in the Cloud
    Are you moving to the cloud? Find out what every IT professional should know about security and availability before moving to the cloud. Hear what a security provider’s own CSO has to say.
    Watch Video
    A new algorithm automatically identifies relationships between variables to help reduce researcher prejudice.
    Click HereAdvertisement