Specialized Information Publishers
Association
Specialized
Information Publishers Association:
SIPA Annual Conference and
Exhibition
The day
features keynote speeches from top industry figures.
You'll
have the opportunity to attend practical round table discussions on topics
of your choice, ranging from e-marketing, search, paywalls and social media to
subscription retention, NPD and site licences.
The
afternoon is split into breakout sessions, on marketing, content and
publishing issues, and a panel discussion will sum up the key points raised
during the day.
Time for
a refreshing drink from the complimentary bar, and then join us for the evening
presentation of the Annual SIPA UK Awards. Find out which publishers are
making waves this year - could it be you?
Exhibition and sponsors - you'll also have the chance to browse an exhibition
of relevant products and services from a range of affiliated companies and
industry suppliers.
More
information will be coming very soon, so register below for updates and
some great examples of the kind of marketing insider tips you can
expect.
Peter Hobday
Subscriptions Strategy
Look at these money-making marketing tips from the SIPA conference:
At SIPA conferences and workshops, top marketers and publishers share
successful, practical money-making techniques with other members. Some of these are real, current money-makers and alone are well worth the attendance fee.
Judge
the quality of the information for yourself -- click here for my selection of
valuable top tips, free of charge.
More about specialized information publishing
‘Specialized
information publishing’ applies to both the information being published and the
audience for which it is being published for.
The business
model of the specialized information publisher is to find a special niche of
people who, for whatever reason, have an intense interest in a certain narrow
field of information. Sometimes this niche is a group of consumers who have a
particular hobby on interest in their personal lives - knitting, for instance.
In such cases, this specialty market may be willing to pay (but not much) for
highly specialized information about knitting.
Who and what is SIPA?
Most
members of SIPA, the Specialized Information Publishing Association publish
content for a different kind of niche - those in what is known as the
"business-to-business" market.
This
market consists of companies or individuals within companies who need specialized
information about their industries that may not be available or is extremely
difficult to find without the efforts of a specialized-information publisher
and are willing to pay high prices for that information.
How is
the information conveyed? SIPA started as an association of newsletter
publishers and newsletters and other paid-subscription based products (either
in paper form or online) are the mainstays of most members' operations. But,
especially with the advent of the Internet, members find themselves offering
their content in a much wider range of products - from books to audio
conferences and webinars to subscription Websites and online databases.
The
recent advent of Web 2.0 and online social media has given
specialized-information publishers yet another channel for providing and, in
some cases, supervising content through such outlets as blogging, Twitter and
others.
Specialised
information publishers and SIPA members have traditionally relied on the sale
of their content (i.e.: paid subscriptions) as their revenue model, eschewing
the advertising-supported publishing model. However, again influenced by the
Internet, advertising-supported content has become much more prevalent among
specialized-information publishing companies in recent years.
There are
two types of information markets. The first is the consumer market. A consumer
newsletter is usually priced less than $100 - more often in the $25-$45 range.
The subject of a consumer information product is more general in nature, such
as investments, health and travel, or is aimed at a consumer special-interest
group (as in the knitting example above) and is paid for by an individual. An
example of a consumer newsletter that you might recognize is The Kiplinger
Washington Letter, which was first published in 1923, and is thought to be the
longest continually running newsletter.
The
second specialized information publishing market is the business-to-business
market. Products in this market generally contain very specific, niche
information for a small audience, and are usually paid for by a business.
Examples of business-to-business subject matter would be telecommunications,
business management, energy, defense and healthcare, to name a few.
As was
mentioned in the last paragraph, the Kiplinger Organization began publishing in
1923, and was one of the first organizations, if not the first, to publish a
newsletter. The industry has been dominated by small entrepreneurs, but over
the years some of those small companies have become large companies and other
large companies have entered the specialized information publishing business by
purchasing existing publishing companies.
Who gets into the specialized information
publishing business?
Who gets
into the specialized information publishing business? There are typically two
types of individuals that decide to start a specialized-information product.
The first is an expert in a particular field, such as a doctor or lawyer. They
already have the subject knowledge, they just need to learn how to write and
market specialized content, or find someone else who can do that for them.
The
second is a journalist. Journalists believe they know how to gather and write
information and therefore can write about any subject; they find the subject
and are in business. To a lesser degree, there is a third type of individual in
the business nowadays - the venture capitalist or the business person who sees
the profit possibilities of the specialized-information publishing business and
buys a specialized-information publishing company.
Who's who
in the specialized-information publishing business? During his life, the late
Howard Penn Hudson, founder of the Newsletter Clearinghouse, publisher of The
Newsletter on Newsletters from 1968 until 2005, wrote about the developments in
the industry. He was the publisher of Publishing Newsletters. Howard was
instrumental in the establishment of SIPA, and, in honor of his contributions,
received the one-time only distinguished service award in 1977.
Bruce
Levenson and EdPeskowitz founded United
Communications Group in the mid-1970s in a small office atop a liquor
store. Through inventive launches from within and smart acquisitions of outside
firms, the company has grown to be one of the largest specialized-information
publishers in the U.S. The UCG of today is a perfect
example of how the niche nature of specialized-information publishing can be
successful over a number of niches as the company has publications in a wide
variety of industries, including health care, telecommunications, financial
services, oil and energy and more.
In 1993,
when the Internet was just on the cusp of being one of the most, if not the
most, dramatic media development of the 20th Century, brothers David and Tom
Gardner were smart enough to recognize the potential in the new medium. They
launched The Motley Fool as an online-only
investment information service. In the ensuing years it has grown to be
multimedia financial-services company dedicated to building what the founders
expect to be the world's greatest investment community. The Motley Fool now
attracts about 4.5 million unique visitors each month to its Websites and
produces 11 subscription-based services.
Careers in specialized-information
publishing
There are
good career opportunities in the specialized information publishing field. A
publisher can publish one or two newsletters and make a very comfortable
living. As their companies grow, they hire editors, writers, accountants,
marketing experts and customer service and fulfillment folks. And, as the
company gets to the next level, those editors become managing editors,
marketers become marketing managers, etc.
As a specialized
information publishing company grows even larger, the marketing and editorial
directors may become group publishers. As the industry grows, so do the job
opportunities.
A recent
development in the industry is a move to using direct sales as an adjunct to,
or in some cases, in place of direct marketing. This is especially true with
the growth of high-priced site licenses and electronic products that require a
more individual sales effort than single newsletter subscriptions in the
hundreds of dollars.
While
most SIPA members started their businesses as subscription-newsletter
publishers, today they have become experts in their fields. They now produce
specialized-information products, including newsletters, conferences, audio
conferences, books, reports, directories, loose leaf books, research,
consulting and more.
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