Fairfax is broke and dying before our eyes – it needs Gina

In this piece originally posted on The Conversation Sinclair Davidson of RMIT University argues that Fairfax Media desperately needs a patron.

Every business needs paying customers. Who those paying customers are varies from business to business. The single largest paying customer for Australian universities, for example, is the federal government. Similarly the ABC’s only paying customer is the federal government. The point being that the single largest customer might also own the organisation.

Fairfax used to have lots of advertisers as paying customers – but no longer. Bottom line is Fairfax is broke and dying before our very eyes. They need a viable business model quickly. The old model of selling eyeballs to advertisers isn’t going to sustain Fairfax much longer.

Fairfax has announced that their metro papers will move from broadsheet format to tabloid size next year. It isn’t clear to me, however, that the size of the paper is the problem. The product itself is the issue – not enough people want to read The Age or Sydney Morning Herald. True – this is a problem all media organisations face and the industry as a whole will be radically restructured over the next decade.

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