The future of my newspaper

Many newspapers are struggling. They see their number of readers and advertisement income diminish every year.  Everybody under 30 uses the internet as main news source and only few of the youngsters subscribe to or buy a daily newspaper. Frank Kalshoven wrote three colums on this in De Volkskrant, the paper I am reading every day since the 1970s. The paper version is part of my life, if it has not landed on my doorstep around 06:45 on working days at the start of my breakfast I feel annoyed.

Kalshoven on 3 January 2009 suggested a combination of three measures newspapers should take to survive: closer ties with existing readers, a link with a public television network and a new economic milk cow. “Newspapers must reward loalty of their readers and create closer ties with them,” he wrote. “Publishers should use this loalty through charching higher prices from printing ink addicts like me,” he continued. This should lead to more income from readership. I e-mailed him that I can’t follow this logic, but I did not get a reply yet.

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