A few months ago, I started a post titled What Radio Can Learn From Bezos. The Amazon founder bought the Washington Post last summer. Now, he's starting to remake the paper and the organization to fit the new media world. One of the first things he did was sell the old headquarters building. No need for a big massive building anymore. Now he's making changes in staffing. The changes were reported in today's USA Today:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money...things-looking-up-at-washington-post/8046347/
Some of the changes might sound familiar. He's not hiring more local reporters. He's hiring more bloggers and other writers that will create more content for the internet. He's repositioning the Post as a national and international news source, rather than strictly a DC or Metro area paper. What's familiar about this change for radio people is the replacement of local DJs with digital and social media staff. Big radio companies have been in the process of doing this for five years. Now it's happening at the Post.
So what does this mean for radio? It means that radio is on the right path, creating multi-platform media strategies that put radio content where the people are. That means mobile, laptop, iPad, or desktop. If it's all about content, it's also about putting that content where it can be consumed. Bezos knows this, and so do we.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money...things-looking-up-at-washington-post/8046347/
Some of the changes might sound familiar. He's not hiring more local reporters. He's hiring more bloggers and other writers that will create more content for the internet. He's repositioning the Post as a national and international news source, rather than strictly a DC or Metro area paper. What's familiar about this change for radio people is the replacement of local DJs with digital and social media staff. Big radio companies have been in the process of doing this for five years. Now it's happening at the Post.
So what does this mean for radio? It means that radio is on the right path, creating multi-platform media strategies that put radio content where the people are. That means mobile, laptop, iPad, or desktop. If it's all about content, it's also about putting that content where it can be consumed. Bezos knows this, and so do we.