Category: Media

Has media become nothing more than marketing?

“Media and publishing is now just another form of marketing for those who can afford it.

“And those who create good content? Get close to nothing — or nothing.”

So says my friend, Zakaria Zainal, an independent photojournalist.

It’s hard to disagree, going by what I’ve been seeing in the media market both in Singapore and the world. A couple of months ago, I wrote about how new publishers of media here today are not purely media companies anymore, but graphic design studios or companies that essentially do not earn from media at all.

Underscore, published by design studio Hjgher, is a classic case. At The Design Society’s Sessions last night on the phenomenon of self-publishing, I got to ask publisher Justin Long how the magazine earned its revenue. His answer? It barely breaks even. But Underscore is not about making money, he said. Instead, it earns its “value” through the network of friends it has gained, and how it has helped to market the studio to the world. According to Long, only a 1000 copies are sold in Singapore, and the rest, some 4000, are distributed overseas. The other two speakers that evening also had similar models. Basheer distributes and sells books, when it does publish books, it makes sure the market is big enough. Yanda, the man behind THEARTISTANDHISMODEL keeps his blog going purely out of passion, and also makes a living from elsewhere.

What surprised me the most was that none of the contributors to Underscore magazine get paid, according to Long. For someone who earns his keep from producing media, it only proves that I cannot earn from creating media I like. Instead, I have to “sponsor” work that I like by taking on jobs that actually pay — essentially Underscore‘s business model. Although I still continue contributing to magazines and websites that pay very little, because I believe in the magazine and the content that it puts out, you always question how sustainable is this. Will the contributor/magazine who doesn’t get paid or gets paid miserly eventually die out? Highly likely.

A conversation that happened after Sessions also proved Zakaria’s point. A designer told me about a client who wanted to create media online to attract eyeballs to his brand. It shows that people do demand good content, but at the same time, they are not willing to pay for it directly. So, businesses have benefitted the most from the boom in self-publishing. They can easily fund and create media that will eventually attract attention their brands. On the other hand, media not meant for marketing or commercial gains find it easy to start, but hard to sustain.

But this problem is nothing new, traditional media’s approach has been to sleep with advertisers. But now that readers are immune to the advertisement and content distinction, media owners are forced to blur the lines, producing advertorials to keep this age-old funding model alive. Look at Monocle and how it partners with governments and corporations to produce content, events and even products. While a Monocle x Porter bag shows how strong the media brand is, you also question, what difference does Monocle make to the Porter bag? It’s a fine line between meaningful collaborations and selling out.

So where does all this leave media producers like me? Are we cheapening ourselves by sleeping so readily with companies and organisations just for a platform to say our piece? Can we demand media owners pay bigger share, especially if they are profiting from it? Should consumers pay us more and directly?

I haven’t figured it out. But as Zakaria says: “Exciting times nonetheless.”

Platform Ten: Ivan Tan

I was recently invited by Platform to nominate one emerging photographer in Singapore for its annual list of Platform Ten 2011. The final list of 10 was unveiled last night at their monthly session in Sinema.

My choice went to Ivan Tan, who is currently an undergraduate at where I came from, the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information. His name came about after I tweeted for suggestions. Not only did people from the art/design world recommend him, my photojournalist friend did too. It turns out he has been practising photography for five years now. While learning the ropes of documentary work, he has also been photographing weddings for a living. His photos — including wedding ones — had a certain sensitivity to it, whether it was the colour or framing.

It was after a meeting with him that I felt he deserved the nomination. Talking to him and going through his older blog, I saw the trajectory Ivan has been trying to hurl himself towards for a few years now. It’s this hunger that most impressed me, because I’ve seen how difficult it is to keep that alive here, so I hope this little nomination will go some way in pushing him to last a little longer.

This is what I wrote for his nomination:

“An emerging photographer shouldn’t be measured by what he has achieved, but what he can achieve. Ivan Tan can, because he is hungry. Since picking up photography five years ago, he has sought to master it, shooting with film and self-developing prints. He worked hard to find his voice, shooting fashion, portraits, weddings, and most recently, trying out photojournalism. These 10 photographs taken in the last two years show what drives Ivan’s photography today: a desire to make sense of his world, and to express how he feels about it — because Ivan is not just a photographer, but a person too.”

Check out his images on his website. I particularly liked fade, bedtime stories, wish and waiting. He put up some recent work too.

Fivefootway: Everyone Please Join Us!

You may have heard by now, I’m currently involved in the revamp of Fivefootway, an online journal about asian architecture that was founded in 2007 by architectural students Adib Jalal and Yeo Jia-Jun. This year, Adib decided to develop Fivefootway into a full-fledge online magazine about asian cities and roped me in to help him out. We hope to bring the discussion of architecture and urbanism in Asia beyond just architects, and include everyone else whose daily lives make up the city.

The inaugural issue is set to launch 09/10/11 where we bring you a bumper two-month long issue that looks at EVERYONE and the idea of the inclusive asian city. We’ll still on the lookout for contributors — writers, illustrators, videographers, etc — to explore this topic. So do drop Adib or I a line to talk!

As for now, we’ve started a daily Fivefootway Broadcast and you can also follow us on Twitter at @fivefootway.

Welcome!