The Mario Blog

02.16.2011—11am    Post #1096
Apple and subscriptions: the dialog continues

TAKEAWAY: Apple Tuesday announced that it now has cleared the way for media companies to begin selling subscriptions to their magazine, newspaper, music and video content on the iPad and its other devices. Some publishers are not smiling. It is a wait and see attitude as the industry faces the great popularity of Apple’s iPad with users, while trying to get more flexibility for how subscriptions are sold.

Updated, Wednesday, Feb. 16, 14:11, Tampa, Florida

TAKEAWAY: Apple Tuesday announced that it now has cleared the way for media companies to begin selling subscriptions to their magazine, newspaper, music and video content on the iPad and its other devices. Some publishers are not smiling. It is a wait and see attitude as the industry faces the great popularity of Apple’s iPad with users, while trying to get more flexibility for how subscriptions are sold.

Apple, publishers, subscriptions and the future

It is the question on the table everytime we conduct iPad-app creation workshops worldwide: When do you think Apple will be more flexible, or publisher-friendly about the way it manages its relationship with newspapers and magazines that wish to sell subscriptions through their products published on the iPad?

Well, maybe Tuesday’s announcement by Apple gets us a little closer to the goal, but not close enough, say many publishers I have talked to.

“Apple is not yielding much,” a European publisher who wishes to remain anonymous, wrote me yesterday. “There should be greater cooperation. Simply because the iPad is the most popular tablet, Apple should not be calling the shots they way it is right now. We hope to be able to sell subscriptions through other tablet vendors very soon, not that we don’t like Apple, or recognize the popularity of their iPad, but we simply wish to have a piece of the pie as well. It is our products, after all.”

In a nutshell: Apple on Tuesday announced that it now has cleared the way for media companies to begin selling subscriptions to their magazine, newspaper, music and video content on the iPad and its other devices. It will take 30% of all subscriptions sold through its store, as well as getting ownership of all the subscriber data gathered in the process. Publishing companies can receive customer data only if an iTunes customer who buys a digital subscription agrees to share his name and email address with the publisher. Some publishers are saying they will pull their app out of the iTunes store. Others are contemplating options, knowing that it may cost them customers if their apps are not there.

In the balance: Now it is a wait and see as for how publishers will react the Apple announcement, especially those who have their special arrangements to sell subscriptions to their customers.The Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times and the Economist are among the publishers that use their own billing systems to sell bundled subscriptions across print, online and digital devices

Read more: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704409004576146062283349464.html#ixzz1E7dbw9UT

Read more about the issue:

– What Apple’s new subscription policy means for news: new rules, new incentives, new complaints
http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/02/what-apples-new-subscription-policy-means-for-news-new-rules-new-incentives-new-complaints/

– Updated: Apple’s Subs Rules Could Suck $1 Million From Financial Times
http://paidcontent.org/article/419-apples-subs-rules-would-suck-1-million-from-financial-times/

Concerned Publishers Group Says ‘Apple Is Not The Only Offer On The Table’
http://paidcontent.org/article/419-concerned-publishers-group-says-apple-is-not-the-only-offer-on-the-tabl/

– EB: Should pubs work with or against Apple?
http://www.newsandtech.com/whats_new/article_5a0f4bf6-392f-11e0-b254-001cc4c03286.html

– iTunes was not built for publishers
http://panpa.org.au/2011/02/14/itunes-was-not-built-for-publishers/

http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2011/02/16/tablet-market-heading-for-a-shakeout/?source=yahoo_quote

http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/02/15/apple-offers-subscriptions-for-all-ipad-publications/?partner=yahoofinance

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704409004576146062283349464.html?ru=yahoo&mod=yahoo_hs

http://blogs.forbes.com/jeffbercovici/2011/02/15/why-publishers-dont-like-apples-new-subscription-plan/?partner=yahootix

http://blogs.forbes.com/jeffbercovici/2011/02/15/why-publishers-dont-like-apples-new-subscription-plan/?partner=yahootix

And for the ecologically minded:

http://digitaldaily.allthingsd.com/20110216/hed-tk/?reflink=ATD_yahoo_ticker

Today’s pop ups

blog post image

Want to rent an iPad for your flight?
http://dvice.com/archives/2011/02/australian-airl.php

Want to know all about Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s getaway home? It is bigger than Buckingham’s Palace, says Bild

Here is a funny pop up on a not so funny subject: Spanish cyclist Alberto Contador whose provisional one-year ban for doping was lifted last week, has said that he tested positive due to a meat-induced indigestion prior to the test. Bild takes it from there. Alert: watch the piece of meat fall!

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