I linked to Erick Schonfeld in the post below and now just see on
Anne Thompson's blog this link to a new piece of his,
"5 Ways to Fix Time Warner." It's a very interesting piece with ideas that should be considered by anyone distributing media today. For example, Schonfeld advocates a move away from the blockbuster to the "nichebuster":
Once the businesses are organized around audience niches, creating blockbusters becomes less necessary. Instead, media businesses that are focused on narrow audiences will naturally give rise to the more cost-effective "nichebuster." A nichebuster is any kind of content that becomes a breakout hit with people in a target audience. In fact, within that group, it's a blockbuster, while outsiders might take little notice of it because it doesn't appeal to them or because its immediate sales are modest.
For instance, Sports Illustrated might produce a low-budget documentary about street basketball with no big-name stars; it could even solicit video footage from the audience itself. The key to keeping costs low is to know the audience -- in this case, street kids, street kid wannabes, and hard-core fans -- and give it exactly what it wants: gritty hoop action that feels real.
# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 3/23/2006 12:15:00 PM
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