Kurrawong_Kid
Well-Known Member
Don't forget the increasing cost of postage for subscription customers. Size and weight may be a factor driving format.
I can't recall the sale figures of mags I ran many years ago, but I think we were 10k+ in a much smaller country with a bare-bones operation. I have been pointing to cycling magazines as evidence that you can still make it in print, but the last copy of one of my favourite magazines includes as announcement that it is about to end printed mags.The hot-off-the-press ABC (circulation) figures for a variety of UK boating magazines make sobering reading.
Below is a sample of titles, with 2016-17 circulation and year-on-year comparisons:
PBO 21,386 -11.2%
YM 20,252 -8.8%
YW 13,973 -13.5%
MB&Y 11,177 -15.7%
These are truly tiny numbers. 25 years ago, when I was editing magazines, only the smallest shoestring operations would have been able to sustain them. In those days EMAP (now Bauer), a company not dissimilar to the publishing arm of Time, had a rule of thumb that anything with a circulation under 30,000 was not worth its place. The digital revolution changed that a little, but in no way compensates for the rise of digital media.
It won't be very long before people look back with a tear in their eye at the days when they belly-ached about shrinking titles.
One thing I've noticed is the paucity of boat adverts in the back
Do you have the latest figures for the Chelsea Magazines trio of Sailing Today, Yachts & Yachting and Classic Boat?
Fewer adverts, smaller and thinner pages, poorer print quality, but they claimed that the word count of the articles/columns remains the same.
While the %age of typos seems to me to increase... (Wot no spelling-checker?)
Mike.
When was the last time you picked up a sailing mag and read something that surprised or shocked? Every boat review puffs its wonderfulness; every new device is practically perfect. Every anchorage is delightful, every marina is superb. How about a series on the 10 worst popular anchorages, the five worst new boats, the 20 most pointless gadgets? Nope, everything is yummy in yachting mag land. Except the circulation figures.
Perhaps that is because it is a very nature market and the boats tested are now well honed consumer products much the same as cars - so difficult to fault, unlike much of the substandard stuff from the past. Compare with car reviews where most of the popular models also get 4 stars.
Not so sure about the gadgets though but there seems to be little appetite for testing much of it in real life.
I suspect the legal department has a finger in this, careful reading of the text usually highlights issues by more subtle means.When was the last time you picked up a sailing mag and read something that surprised or shocked? Every boat review puffs its wonderfulness; every new device is practically perfect. Every anchorage is delightful, every marina is superb. How about a series on the 10 worst popular anchorages, the five worst new boats, the 20 most pointless gadgets? Nope, everything is yummy in yachting mag land. Except the circulation figures.
I'm not sure the car world is the best analogy, Tranona. To most owners, cars are no more interesting than their white goods. Functioning more-or-less as they're supposed to is the main thing asked of both of them, and how many people buy a fridge mag?
I suspect the legal department has a finger in this, careful reading of the text usually highlights issues by more subtle means.
........and how many people buy a fridge mag? .
Fair reviews are exempt from libel claims. Bad reviews are not exempt from pissing off advertisers, so more likely to be management than legal department.
One of the highest libel awards ever in England was against Yachting Monthly for a review (of the Walker Wingsail) and even though that was 25 years ago they may still be twitchy about it.
I'm not sure the car world is the best analogy, Tranona. To most owners, cars are no more interesting than their white goods. Functioning more-or-less as they're supposed to is the main thing asked of both of them, and how many people buy a fridge mag? This has historically been reflected in magazine sales, with all car owners (numbers in the tens of millions) buying scarcely more magazines than motorcycle owners (numbers rarely touching even one million).
Perhaps bikes are the better comparison (but then I'm biased). Like boats, there's something of the freedom thing, however illusory, about them, too. It probably hasn't escaped your attention that quite a lot of contributors on here have motorcycling as another interest.
But bike mags are going down the toilet, too -- although since at least the 70s, many have shown a great deal more imagination and vitality than you see in the boat press.
Your 'difficult to fault' point, has some merit (although there's always a way...) It brings to mind a treasured final par on a test of something two-wheeled and eastern European many years ago, which concluded with: "This bike is so awful, I hope to god no-one actually buys one." There must have been some joy in writing that, and I know there was in reading it.
I noticed last month that YM was bundled with YW for £6.50p, the two together made a reasonable read; so that may be the future?
.
There is a difference in approach from different testers. Snooks does make more of an attempt to review from the point of view of the target market so most of the boats he writes about have few "faults" although he does seem to find the odd bit of poor design (sww this month for examples). David Harding in PBO finds it hard to get out of his gung ho performance mode so does often seem biased against particular types of boats.