Thursday, November 11, 2010

Are NY Times Print Subscribers Stupid?

Editor on the ‘Beauty’ of Readers’ Ignorance

The New York Times cultivates an image as the preferred read of the intellectual elite, but at least one of the paper’s higher-ups seems to think its customers aren’t all that bright.

According to media writer Jeff Bercovico at forbes.com, during a panel discussion at the Digital Hollywood New York conference, Gerald Marzorati, the Times’s assistant managing editor for new media and strategic initiatives, explained why the paper’s print business is still robust. “We have north of 800,000 subscribers paying north of $700 a year for home delivery,” Marzorati said. “Of course, they don’t seem to know that.”

As evidence that Times subscribers don’t realize how much a subscription costs, he pointed to what happened when the paper raised its home-delivery price by 5 percent during the recession: Only 0.01 percent of subscribers canceled. “I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that they’re literally not understanding what they’re paying,” he said. “That’s the beauty of the credit card.”

The panel’s moderator, former MySpace CMO Shawn Gold, seemed taken aback by Marzorati’s remarks. “This is the last panel your company will let you on,” he predicted.

Read more here.

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