The day of the written word will never go, the day of the printed word most certainly will never recover. To deny this and think you can change it is to attempt to push back the tide like King Canute, it is not happening. The demand for immediate reports, results, gossip, stories, news coverage of any event cannot be altered. It is a dwindling sentimental figure that still wants to hold the paper in their hand days after the event. In reality, for the majority, they have already emotionally moved on from that event to something else as we are bombarded with sources of information has caused our attention span and interest in any subject to pass a lot quicker than ever before.dalcumly wrote: I personally don't believe that the days of people wanting to read the written word has gone.
Boxing for example, who really wants to read two or three days later (or even a lot later) a plain boxing report of a fight that was written that night by a reporter when it is totally out of date and offers news that has already been superseded a dozen times and you have watched backstage interviews on IFL TV, the post fight presser, read the the news of the combatants next fight on twitter the following morning or news of a hand injury or that a jaw was confirmed broken etc etc
Eg (and total fictional example) the Boxing News report may say Fury could be lined up to fight Wlad next spring as that was the news on the night. So you read that on Friday when the paper comes out but on Sunday you had seen on Twitter that Fury could be fighting an interim fight, then Tuesday you see an interview with Fury saying he has decided to go the WBC route and Thursday Wlad signs to fight Wilder or Stiverne and so by the time of print, you know Fury gets no shot next as it is all tied up. Thus the BN news report is totally irrelevant
All out of date. This is the reality. How to survive? You won't so need to diversify and find out how to become a different platform to appeal to the new world.
