The NY Times’ Leaked Innovation Report, Time Inc.’s Cover Ads, The Year’s Best Journalism, A Conversation With Nat Geo’s Susan Goldberg, Women in Media Hiring News, Making Effective Choices in Content Systems and Technologies, DPS Tip: Avoid an Account Creation Glitch, May’s Pinterest Roundup, TFP’s Infographic Pick of the Week
Welcome to TFP’s weekly roundup of news and tips for media industry pros! This Week in Publishing will be on hiatus next week, but we have an abundance of great content to share with you this week, including an article on making smart technology choices, an interview with National Geographic‘s new Editor in Chief, and much more.
- Last week’s change in management at The New York Times was accompanied by the leak of an internal report on the newspaper’s digital innovation strategy. Vox examined the challenges involved in actually implementing the recommendations made in the report—which was described by Nieman Journalism Lab as “one of the key documents of this media age.”
- Time Inc. is allowing ads on the covers of its magazines for the first time, starting with small lines of text below the mailing label area on Sports Illustrated and Time. Advertising Age sees this as a major break from tradition, but Talking New Media regards it as business as usual. What do you think?
- The Atlantic‘s Conor Friedersdorf shared his annual list of the best pieces of journalism from the past year. The compilation includes more than 100 nonfiction works, from personal essays to investigative reporting. Notable among them is the number of digital-native publications that made the cut.
- TFP’s Margot Knorr Mancini interviewed Susan Goldberg, the new Editor in Chief of National Geographic magazine earlier this week. Find out what Susan had to say about her career path, how women are faring in the media industry today, and the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead, on TFP’s Women in Media blog.
- Also on the Women in Media blog, we have a recap of recent role changes in the publishing industry, including news from The Hollywood Reporter, Dr. Oz The Good Life, Self, People StyleWatch, the Financial Times, and The New York Times.
- In the latest article in our Effective Content Backbone series, we share our recommended approach to the process of identifying which systems and technologies can best support your content needs.
- In this week’s DPS Tip, we tell you how to avoid running into a glitch when you create and configure an application account for Adobe’s Digital Publishing Suite.
- Our May Pinterest Roundup offers a digest of Pinterest coverage that’s relevant to the publishing and media industries, including stories on new features like paid ads and guided search, user stats, and more.
- Our Infographic Pick of the Week provides stats that spell out just how much today’s students rely on technology for learning, whether they’re taking notes on a laptop or using electronic textbooks.
This Week in Publishing will be back on Friday, June 6. In the meantime, enjoy your weekend!
This Week in Publishing appears every Friday on the TFP blog. Every week we compile interesting and noteworthy stories from the publishing world and put together a wrap-up to help our readers stay up-to-date. Think we missed something great? Leave a comment below and let us know! The usage of fake ids among American teenagers has increased drastically in 2022. These fake ids are used for buying binge drinks & alcoholic products. One of the best fake id websites reports that the teenagers ask for security features and reviews before buying a fake id.
Posted by: Gina Barrett