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Posts tagged: fly fishing media

Fly Fishing’s Magazines Are Feeling the Affects of Recession and Online Competition. Which of Them Will Survive?

February 1, 2010, by Tom Chandler 37 comments

Fly shops and manufacturers aren’t the only segments of the fly fishing universe experiencing unwelcome economic pressures.

Is online competition hurting fly fishing's magazines?

In fact, fly fishing’s traditional media outlets are facing growing competition from online media and a painful recession – and several may not survive the experience.

After all, new ezines are popping up like dandelions, and other online channels (like blogs, video sites, etc) are growing.

And don’t forget the handful of fly fishing-focused social media sites (think Facebook with fins) that are appearing (as well as Facebook itself).

Couple that kind of competition for readers with a zero-growth fly fishing industry, and you’ve got the makings of The Great Fly Fishing Magazine Shakeout.

Which may be starting now.

Trouble in Magazine Land

Last year, American Angler editor Phil Monahan lost his job to budget cuts. At the time, the cuts were blamed on the umbrella media company’s poorly performing newspaper properties, but those claims always seemed suspect – especially in light of recent news.

First, Fly Rod & Reel magazine – whose ad page counts have been looking thin for a couple years – announced it was going upscale with thicker issues, better paper and a reduced publishing schedule.

In other words, Fly Rod & Reel is pushing the hyperspace button. (It’s also interesting to note they announced it via press release a couple weeks before they managed to get it posted on their site.)

Now, Fly Fisherman magazine – the 800 pound gorilla in the mainstream fly fishing world – just announced staffing cuts. (Humorous aside: the headline in the press release said they were announcing “Changes to Staff” – a euphemism if we’ve ever heard one.)

The Caveats

It’s entirely possible to attribute all the above effects to the recession – and the magazines might be happy if you did exactly that – but I’d suggest multiple forces are at work here.

First, let’s be clear; I wouldn’t be surprised to see one or more of fly fishing’s print magazines fold in the next 18 months, but I’m certainly not expecting the whole crop to simply disappear.

It’s interesting to note that magazine subscription rates (among all magazines) were growing until the recession hit, so despite the struggles faced by newspapers, it’s not as if magazines are dead.

They’re still very much alive.

The problem isn’t one of readership as much as advertising revenue – a symptom of both the economy and increasing competition from the online world..

In other words, the constant flow of online content isn’t dragging readers away from magazines, but the growth in online spending does seem to be draining dollars away from hard-to-quantify print ad spends.

“Wait a minute” you say. “Don’t the success of The Drake and the launch of the Fly Fish Journal offer proof of print’s viability?”

If they do succeed, I’d suggest they represent more a fragmentation of the market than the salvation of it.

The Drake is clearly aimed at a different group of anglers – and it’s also not a big publication.

In a pair of emails, Tom Bie didn’t want to discuss circulation figures, but another magazine editor guessed its circulation at <strike>7.500</strike> [Ed: Tom Bie of the Drake now says his circulation is "between 21,000 and 23,000"] – which still largely amounts to a vanity publication, at least compared to the other mags.

Those numbers may or may not be accurate, but it’s still true The Drake’s appeal doesn’t lie primarily with the over-45 angling crowd, who represent the core of the market (e.g. the folks with disposable income) for fly fishing’s advertisers.

I don’t want to argue the merits of one generation over another, but let’s just say the impact of the “extreme generation” on fly fishing may be far greater online than it is in the marketplace.

The shiny new Fly Fish Journal (one issue only) remains an unknown quantity, but it’s suddenly facing competition from a going-upscale Fly Rod & Reel. Is there room for two in that space? And are advertisers – already facing a chaotic marketplace – really ready to support another magazine?

No matter who’s left standing once the economy improves and the dollars start flowing again, I think print magazines lacking a robust online presence will founder when trying to attract new subscribers – and won’t be able to offer online ad placements as a bonus.

That’s an important distinction to any ad salesperson trying to make their quota; if a competing publication serves a similar audience (and the fly fishing world just isn’t that big), but also offers an advertiser access to loads of online impressions, who gets the ad budget?

It’s the Internet, Stupid

It’s estimated that 74.2% of North America’s population accesses the Internet – a figure that represents 134% growth between 2000 and 2009.

In 2008, a Pew study said 40% of people received their national and international news from the Internet – up from 24% in 2007 (only 35% identified newspapers as their primary source of news).

In other words, the Internet is on its way to becoming the dominant distribution system for information.

Even in the somewhat moribund fly fishing media world, that seems to be the case.

Several of fly fishing’s print magazines are clearly trying to make up for lost ground on the online front, but several are also clearly failing at it.

Meanwhile, online mags like the newly minted Catch offer an attractive alternative for advertising dollars – and will offer an even higher profile in the future. Why?

First, it’s possible we’re at the tail end of The Golden Age of Pointless Two-Page Brand Ads in magazines, and good riddance.

Instead, actionable marketing content – possibly with video or other media embedded – will likely become ascendant, and the online magazine format offers the perfect conduit.

That bodes well for the legions of videographers currently making fly fishing movies. There’s no way the market supports the video hordes via large “feature” efforts, but at least some could make a living powering out videos for destination lodges, gear manufacturers and others – most of which will be distributed online.

Then there are the “engagement” social media (like blogs and Facebook), which promise much to those willing to commit to them. So far, the fly fishing industry (and the fly fishing print magazines) have not done a stellar job leveraging things like blogs and social media, yet examples abound of successes in other industries.

Then again, the Return on Investment (ROI) of online channels like email have been well known for decades (email offers the highest ROI of any online media channel [with the possible exception of search marketing]), yet the fly fishing industry as a whole barely uses the medium.

How long can the industry keep its head firmly planted in the sand?

What’s Ahead?

At the Underground, we balk at forecasting the future, but we’re fine with guessing at it.

First, my earlier prediction for the future of print magazines (online/print hybrids – stuffing multiple media channels with content in order to drive readership and subscriptions) may yet come true.

In fact, Field & Stream is using traffic magnets (blogs, social media, etc) to drive subscriptions and offer different online advertising possibilities.

Done properly, a hybrid solution could easily prove more viable than an online-only magazine.

Of course, there’s no shortage of online magazines available for destruction testing of this hypothesis; they’re popping up like weeds.

I gather we’ll wait and see.

Keep in mind the following: the Internet tends to fracture audiences across many different media channels rather than unify them, so it’s quite possible that the future of online fly fishing media won’t see a dominant trio emerge like the Big Three print magazines.

Instead, readers will piece together their information sources via multiple media channels – a blog here, a twitter feed here, a magazine here.

That’s good for information consumers, but hard for advertisers, who will suddenly face a bazillion media channels, many of which will require their attention.

That, dear Undergrounders, will not be easy.

Then there’s the difficulty online magazines will suffer trying to maintain audiences for quarterly publications.

In a fast-moving Internet world, winning readers back on a quarterly basis represents the hard path to building a magazine’s readership, especially given that ad rates for online publications are traditionally lower than offline.

An online magazine suffers fewer costs, but lacking subscription fees, why wouldn’t want they want a steady (if smaller) source of revenue between issues – and a way to keep readers engaged?

The answer lies with other media channels, and that whole integration issue rears up once again.

The Commercial Angle

I’m at almost 1500 words, and I haven’t even addressed the rapid growth in the use of online channels (blogs, social media, video, etc) for commercial purposes.

At least one online magazine (it hasn’t yet made an appearance) appears to be published by a travel agency. I’ve also noted (with some distress) that the unsavory practice of running destination stories written by people with a financial interest in the lodge or travel agency appears to be migrating from print to the online world.

In other words, I’d expect the already-blurry line between advertorial and editorial to fuzz over pretty heavily, and despite my appreciation of online media channels in general, that’s not a prediction that fills me with joy.

In simplest terms, even if fly fishing’s media won’t stay current, some of the more progressive manufacturers, travel agencies and retailers will.

And the reader won’t always be the winner.

Illustrating this trend are the fast-increasing number of organizations contacting the Underground looking for paid reviews or advertorial placement on the site.

I’ve turned them down, but it’s likely that others won’t.

The FTC’s recent clarification of their new disclosure guidelines for bloggers and other online media seems timely given the groundswell in interest on the part of marketers.

The rules state that financial relationships with manufacturers should be disclosed if a post offers a positive review of a product, and while I applaud the idea in principle, in practice it gets a little dicey.

I already disclose the source of the product (bought it, provided by the manufacturer, etc), and the rules are really aimed at the despicable practice of stealth marketing, where bloggers are paid to post reviews, but don’t disclose that information.

Still, my reading of the rules suggests that bloggers may be forced to disclose the same financial relationships that writers in fly fishing magazines have traditionally ignored – including things like free junkets to pricey destination lodges in return for coverage (which unsurprisingly is always favorable).

We’ll see how that shakes out.

The Underground Ahead

I believe a few fly fishing organizations are waking up to the online world with something approaching panic.

Illustrating that fact is this:  I was contacted three times in 2009 about selling the Underground (or blogging as the Underground on another site), presumably because the Underground’s built-in readership and Google juice would prove attractive to someone looking to jump-start their online presence.

None of the contacts has amounted to anything, but their existence tends to support the idea that organizations are looking to quickly get ahead in a competitive online world.

Naturally, all the above is simply the speculation of a longtime writer and marketing consultant (albeit one with 24+ years in marketing), and the Undergrounders are encouraged to weigh in with their own take on the subject.

See you at the magazine rack, Tom Chandler.

Outdoor Media Takes Blow to Stomach on Wicked Outdoorsy Blog

June 8, 2009, by Tom Chandler 6 comments

This one’s been gathering dust in the Underground’s “Lost Article” catacombs for a while, but good industry snark is always better late than never.

And yes, with another “Fly Fishing Media” post teeing up on the Underground, I thought I’d prime the pump a little.

In response to an interesting Wicked Outdoorsy blog post about competition between print and PR people in the outdoor media world, someone sent Wicked a stunning missive about what’s gone wrong for much of the outdoor media:

Of course everyone in the outdoor/action sports industry is a competitor in some shape or form, and there is perhaps nothing stranger than the kind of sibling rivalry between pr and mags right now (especially how they work so well together to create editorial excitement for the same brands that they are both pushing for marketing dollars).

But I think the lack of transparency or in some cases even objectivity among some of the magazines in the market exacerbated the situation – I mean, seriously, when’s the last time you saw a bad review, or the kind of Consumer Reports copy that actually advises readers against buying certain products (Rolling Stone, Uncut and others that publish magazines focused solely on media are much more effective at this, while most of the magazines in our market mirror the everybody gets a medal mentality that is so dismaying in kids sports right now).

‘Gear Reviews,’ originally devised as a reader service, have expanded into the kind of multi-page catalog copy that you could easily find on any given brand’s website, and have done so at the cost of real journalism, and the tougher to get, harder to research, real features that were originally the staple of so many of our favorite magazines.

When Ski Magazine is writing extended ‘features’ on major advertisers like Deer Valley and Vail each and every year, outdoor pubs are celebrating Christmas with ‘Giant Holiday Gear Reviews’ and the best writers in our market are making most of their monthly check from swag stories, then it becomes pretty obvious how heavy a hand pr and marketers can have in creating a magazine’s editorial.

Like government, it’s possible we do get exactly the magazines we deserve, and while I find the idea of writing formulaic “Top 10″ list stories draining, it’s also clear that “Top 10″ articles and gear stories sells more magazines (and pull more readers) than ten thought-provoking pieces on backcountry fishing, the fly fishing life, or the environment.

Ditto the “hero” shots that adorn the covers of most mainstream fly fishing magazines.

We wouldn’t see them every month if they didn’t work.

The Undergrounders don’t need to weigh in with comments about the fly fishing rags and how they’re running the same stories over and over. Some are. Some aren’t.

And the commenter on Wicked Outdoorsy was clearly aiming himself at the larger outdoor media, which – if you’ve read the mags in question – might have more questions to answer than fly fishing’s top rags.

The bigger question is this: are we simply getting the publications we deserve?

After all, it’s hard to rage about the paid-for destination stories and “formulaic, enthusiastic gear reviews for major advertisers” stories evident in some of the top magazines – without noting that they’ve become the top magazines doing exactly that.

More to come. Until then, discuss amongst yourselves.

Another Online Magazine Appears: What’s Happening to Fly Fishing’s Media?

April 8, 2009, by Tom Chandler 51 comments

High-end online magazines are popping up like daffodils in spring, with Scanout the latest entry:

Another online magazine - this one called Scanout

Another online magazine - this one called Scanout

Scanout’s not exactly “just” a magazine; they appear to be a media company, and in fact, they’re producing Loop Tackle’s bi-annual “magazine” (Loop isn’t producing catalogs any more).

This could mean Scanout is an odd combination of marketing piece and vanity project, though no matter what the goal, the quality is impressive (and diversity is good). Their latest project plies the reader with fish porn, though in a move guaranteed to put a smile on the face of the Undergrounders, all the fish were left in the water.

A New Look for Fly Fishing’s Online Universe

As little as five years ago, the number of online media choices – at least in fly fishing – were limited.

Now, online magazines, blogs, message boards, videos, podcasts, fly fishing specific social media – plus a few others I neglected to mention – are creating a tsunami of content choices (and that’s ignoring Twitter, Facebook and the like for now).

While that represents a fundamental shift in how fly fishermen access fly fishing information, it’s also clear that no single formula seems to have emerged as a prohibitive favorite.

In an earlier post, I suggested a multi-channel approach represented the surest path to online success (blogs, online mags, social media – all rolled into one big presence). I still believe that’s the case.

What’s it all going to look like in five more years? Any guesses from the Undergrounders?

See you online, Tom Chandler.

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Fly Fishing Industry Reeling from Recession, So-So Marketing, Shift to Online Media?

January 18, 2009, by Tom Chandler 10 comments

Some of the sharper Undergrounders may have noticed a slight downturn in the economy, and the Underground’s award-winning team of economists suggests the fly fishing industry’s noticed too.

Early in 2008 Scott Rods suffered some layoffs (though that had more to do with management issues than the economy). Then Winston laid off some rod builders, and recently, more bad news arrived on the horizon in the form of layoffs at Orvis (more on that below).

It seems as if I receive weekly notice of another independent fly shop going under, and yes, even the formerly flush pro BASS circuit is losing sponsors faster than I can LDR a skin-hooked 18″ rainbow.

Then the Baltimore Sun reported on the fading fortunes of consumer outdoor shows, and while everyone’s crossing themselves and hoping for a quick recovery, it’s clear that consumer spending in the “luxury” market (and fly fishing largely falls under that shadow) is in the dumpster.

Clearly, luxury boat sales are more affected than Chuck Furimsky’s Fly Fishing Show, which does offer cash-strapped members of the fly fishing community access to bargains, which may be the source of so much of AFFTA’s discontent with Furimsky’s shows.  (Following quote from the Baltimore Sun story, which is worth a read):

Timonium’s Fishing Expo and Boat Show, which began its silver anniversary run Thursday and ends today, is a shell of its former self. Walking the floor of a show that used to be nearly three times as big and attract celebrities such as Ray Scott, founder of BASS, is as depressing as the news from Wall Street.

“Everybody’s looking for value for the dollar,” says Chuck Furimsky, owner of The Fly Fishing Show, which still appears in eight cities across the country. “Instead of a $700 rod, they’re buying two $150 rods. … There’s still a light at the end of the tunnel for us; it’s just not as bright as it once was.”

The Retail Connection

Then news arrived of layoffs at retailing heavyweight Orvis:

According to Hathaway, 27 employees, mostly salaried, have been laid off from the Orvis offices in Sunderland. He said 12 hourly workers were let go from manufacturing positions in Manchester.

“We’re facing a historic downturn in our economy in this country and the world and Orvis is not immune to any of that. We have to make difficult, painful decisions that will ensure the health of the company,” Hathaway said.

Orvis employs about 220 people locally, and has about 2,000 employees worldwide, according to Hathaway. No retail store employees were affected by the job cuts.

In an interesting blogger death feud sidenote, brownliner Singlebarbed suggests Orvis is more susceptible to the downturn than other manufacturers, and I find I wholly disagree.

From my online marketing perspective, Orvis is pretty much cooking the rest of the fly fishing industry on the marketing front (especially in the online world), and it seems as if most of their competitors don’t even realize Orvis has turned up the heat.

The organizations that survive downturns do so because they got their manufacturing and marketing ducks in a row during the good times – something the historically backwards fly fishing industry hasn’t (by and large) done.

Rather, it’s likely there are layoffs occuring at other fly fishing manufacturers, but they’re simply going unreported.

The Media Hurt

Naturally, the fly fishing magazine world isn’t immune; Ad pages at consumer magazines are down 11% overall, and fly fishing mags aren’t likely any different. (Bored? Count the number of ad pages in your favorite fly fishing magazine, and be prepared to use far fewer fingers than before.)

In fact – as I’m noting in an almost-finished opinion piece about the future of fly fishing media – fly fishing’s print magazines are facing the double-whammy of a bad economy and an accelerating reader shift to online media.

In other words, things are pretty much as you’d expect them to be in a “luxury” market facing the worst recession in our lifetimes, and with news that all our bailout money is being viewed by most banks as a “no-strings-attached windfall” (hint: lending hasn’t loosened, and bank execs are basically sniggering all the way to… well, the bank), don’t expect it to get a lot better anytime soon.

Still, here at the largely recession-proof Trout Underground, ad revenues haven’t declined at all, but that’s mostly because we haven’t talked anyone into advertising.

As for the rest of the fly fishing and sporting world, I’d like to point out that the cost of enjoying the outdoors hasn’t increased all that much (gas perhaps), so my prescription is to take two fly fishing trips and call the Underground in the morning.

In other words, though credit has largely ceased to flow, that’s not true of our major rivers.

See you on the river, Tom Chandler.

Patrick McManus Out of Outdoor Life at 28 Years For Budget Reasons?

December 4, 2008, by Tom Chandler 12 comments

Via Ted Williams’ blog we discovered this news item; longtime outdoor humor writer Patrick McManus is ending his 28 year run at Outdoor Life magazine, a noteworthy occasion – though perhaps not for the reasons you might think.

McManus wrote Outdoor Life’s humor column for nearly three decades, but the magazine terminated his contract, and according to McManus, it did so for budget reasons:

Being among the most highly paid contributors apparently factored into the editor’s decision to terminate McManus, a top name in outdoor humor across the country. The top-selling writer has more than two million of his 18 books in print.

“The magazines are just running out of cash,” he said last week. “We parted on good terms.”

Our question is this; is this a signe the outdoor magazines are really feeling the pinch of a bad economy and an ongoing shift to Internet properties, or was McManus simply past his expiration date?

We’ll keep our eyes peeled for signs of the Outdoor Magazine Apocalypse, but in the meantime, I’ll say this: McManus’ humor has been labeled by some as hokey, but I got a kick out of it, and will probably never forget McManu’s gold-plated image of an unconscious deer waking up and pedaling his youthful character’s bicycle down a mountain.

That’s priceless shit.

The larger picture? Outdoor media and fly fishing are reaching a crossroads – many high-profile fly fishing “celebrities” and other leading names are aging towards some kind of retirement (ahem).

Because nature hates a vacuum, new faces will likely take their place, though it’s unclear who those new faces might be (though I have a few ideas, and not all of them make me happy).

Agree? Disagree?

See you in philosophical media discussions, Tom Chandler.

fly fishing, fishing, patrick mcmanus, fly fishing media

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The Drake Magazine Turns Ten: The Underground Offers a Few Reasons Why You Should Care

March 18, 2008, by Tom Chandler 21 comments

The Drake’s 10th anniversary issue just hit the stands, and while I’m normally pretty droll on the subject of anniversaries, I’d say this one matters. Why?

An editor of a mainstream fly fishing magazine – responding to online criticism that his magazine ran the same stories over and over – said a large pool of new fly fishing writers capable of stringing simple sentences together didn’t exist.

That’s a hard statement to swallow given the existence of The Drake, This is Fly, AEG and a laundry list of literate, relevant fly fishing blogs.

Clearly, there’s no shortage of new voices in fly fishing demanding to be heard.

Yes, they can write. And yes, many them have a lot to say about the sport and the environmental/access/lifestyle issues facing it — issues largely ignored by fly fishing’s print media.

Speaking to us via blogs, video, online magazines, podcasts and other digital publishing platforms, these voices continue to multiply and capture an audience — despite the inattention of a largely hidebound fly fishing industry.

The Drake’s importance in this fragmenting media landscape is clear; while a lot of us are succeeding via digital media channels, The Drake is currently kicking butt in the exact same sandbox as the industry’s traditional media players.

Ten years? Hot damn.

Time For a Change

For years — convinced their audience was interested only in fin & grins, teak-and-butler destination stories, and gear ads masquerading as editorial content — the leading magazines and weekend video producers fed readers & viewers a steady diet of the stuff, wholly overlooking the sport’s younger practitioners and and ignoring those who wanted more.

In fact, these younger readers were the subject of much hand wringing, and a common industry position was they didn’t exist at all.

In other words, if you didn’t buy into the existing program, you weren’t on the radar.

The problem wasn’t with the “market segment” in question; it was the radar that was broken.

Of course, new media’s audience isn’t limited to younger participants; plenty of “seasoned” fly fishers are on board with the Drake and what I’ll simply call “alternative fly fishing outlets” (hint: you’re reading one).

In fact, it’s likely the “new wave” is composed of as many geezers as youngsters, and the cumulative effect on the media side of fly fishing is one of rapid, wholesale evolution.

Meet the New Boss?

It’s fair to ask if we’re witnessing the democratization of fly fishing media, or simply the emergence of a new fly fishing elite happy to make the same mistakes as those they replaced.

And once the marketing dollars start flowing to new media, will the too-chummy relationship between industry and media be repeated?

Being largely trapped in the present, I have no answers.

For now, the Drake represents an alternative voice in a fly fishing industry that desperately needed one, and its long-term success benefits all of us interested in perspectives beyond the typical.

Happy 10th Anniversary to the Drake. It wouldn’t be the same without you.

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