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Web options for college publications, 2012 edition

April 16, 2012 in College Media, Content Management Systems, Tech Talk, Websites

UPDATE JULY 2012: Detroit Softworks is no longer in business.

It’s been two years since I did a round-up of hosting options for college news sites. In the wake of the recent discussion of the Online Pacemaker Finalists, I figured it was time to take another trip around the field to see what’s out there.

And, a disclaimer: This is not a “critical review” of the different options. Each option has its pros and cons, and every college media outlet has different needs and resources. If you want to know more about a particular option, contact the companies listed. I’d also encourage you to ask around at other college media outlets who are using these options.


I want to start off with the hosted options. All of these will cost money, usually a set-up fee (for training, design and database transfer) and then a monthly subscription fee (for maintenance, tech support and other costs of maintaining a server). The content management system (CMS)  is hosted on server space provided by the company. The other side of that coin is that they do not necessarily exercise any control over the ad spaces on the site, or the ad revenue.

Hosted Options

College Publisher: College Publisher just announced a new version of CP5 called CollegePublisher Pro. Since the last round-up, College Media Network changed ownership and updated its revenue sharing model for advertising. They will charge if you don’t have a certain amount of traffic to your web site. And they also offer a server option where you can park your WordPress install.

Detroit Softworks: Detroit Softworks hosts the Gryphon CMS, and has 15 client newspapers, according to a list on their website. There is a monthly subscription and a set-up fee for the service. It is a hosted solution, meaning the content is stored on DS servers. SEE THIS POST FOR UPDATED INFORMATION ABOUT GRYPHON CMS.

TownNews: TownNews  is the content management system company that runs the online sites for newspapers in the Lee Enterprises newspaper chain. The CMS itself is called Blox. It is a hosted solution. There is a one-time setup fee, and a monthly subscription. The subscription fee varies based on the size of the news outlet.

School Newspapers Online: SNO started out as a solution for scholastic (aka high school) newspaper sites, and has expanded into the college market rapidly since last I wrote about this topic. They now list 58 college newspapers as clients. They offer a hosted WordPress solution. The costs are spelled out on their site: $600 for first year (including set-up) and $300/year after that.

Ellington CMS: The Ellington CMS, originally created for the Lawrence Journal-World’s web offerings, is another hosted service. Its college media penetration is not sizable. The system is built on top of the Django web framework.

Uncertain:

 When I wrote about this topic in 2010, Alloy, an advertising and marketing company that aims at the college market, had started providing a hosting solution similar to what CoPress provided. The set-up was much like what you would find on any commercial hosting service, except they hoped to offer some added benefits to college media in the future (like an ad network, for instance). The basic cost was $250/mo. plus a set-up fee. I am not certain that they are still providing this service, and my e-mail asking for further information has received no response yet. I will update as information is available.

That about covers the hosted solutions that are out there in the college media market. I know of a few college media outlets that have partnered with a local professional newspaper to host their sites. But that situation varies so widely that it’s probably not an option for the majority of news sites.

Host Your Own

The other option is to host your own content management system, whether using an off-campus server host, or an on-campus server. There are literally hundreds of hosting services out there, so I won’t even pretend to make a recommendation in that area. Most of them have a one-click install system for installing a variety of open-source software, for the less technically inclined.

The most commonly used open-source (i.e., free) CMS’s are:

 WordPress: This seems to be the most popular open source platform for college media outlets. It’s highly extendable, relatively easy to use admin area with lots of options, and a number of premium themes which break the traditional blog-style format. It’s based in php and (normally) MySQL database. There is an extensive community of developers to help out if you need technical support.

 Drupal: My impression is that Drupal has more popularity among professional news outlets. It’s also based in PHP and an SQL database, but has a steeper learning curve than WordPress. One of the things that makes this system popular is its emphasis on community site engagement, which it had long before WordPress incorporated those features. It also has a very active development community. The site has a list of case studies of web sites built on the platform.

Joomla!: Joomla! is a robust CMS that comes at site management from a different perspective than WordPress or Drupal, and it seems to have heavier adoption in other commercial arenas. At one time, the CMA web site ran on Mambo, the previous version of Joomla! and it was relatively easy to run the basic admin templates.

Other

Finally, there is Django, which is a web framework and not specifically a CMS. Repeat, it’s not a CMS. It’s built on the Python programming language, and it is the framework that undergirds the Ellington CMS, for one. The framework is used to power a pretty impressive list of database-driven sites. It’s open source, but you’ll need a server space to host it

 

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WordPress leads pack of Pacemaker finalists picked

April 10, 2012 in Content Management Systems, contests, Websites

The Associated Collegiate Press announced their list of 2012 online Pacemaker finalists yesterday. There are 55 finalists, and lots of familiar names. Congratulations to all the nominees.

Beyond that, I’m always interested in what’s going on under the hood, in the “CMS Wars!” So, I went through the entire list, looked at lots of source code and page footers to find clues, and identified all but four of the sites’ CMS’s. Previously, we looked at these numbers from 2008 and 2009. In 2010, I commented on the CMS’s used by the winners.

The results for the finalists this year are below, and somewhat astounding:

By CMS

WordPress 29 53%
College Publisher 2 4%
TownNews (Blox) 3 5%
Detroit Softworks 4 7%
dotnetnuke 1 2%
Surreal 1 2%
Ellington 3 5%
HTML (handcoded) 2 4%
Django/Custom 5 9%
Unknown 4 7%

WordPress powers 53 percent of the finalists, far more than any other CMS. Meanwhile, College Media Network, once the largest player in college media site hosting, is only powering two of the finalists.

There are obvious qualifiers in this data: it’s highly selective, non-representative of the broader college media web environment, and, as I’ve said before, the best CMS won’t put lipstick on bad journalism.

Also, WordPress is an open-source CMS that you host on your own server location, as is Joomla and dotnetnuke. TownNews (Blox) and Detroit SoftWorks (Gryphon) have hosted, proprietary CMS’s and cost significantly more. Ellington is also a pricey system. Surreal CMS is a hybrid, cloud-based CMS that costs a small amount per month. And django is a web framework, not a CMS.

This is not a knock on any of the systems, either. I’m from the “whatever works best for you” CMS school. They all have pros and cons.

BUT, here’s an interesting bit I did discern from this small sample of college journalism outlets’ web sites.

Smaller outlets are more invested in WordPress.

Since the CMS is “free” (you still have to pay for or arrange hosting and tech support), it’s more financially feasible for small sites. As you can see from the chart below, the larger the enrollment, the more likely the outlet was to have another system beside WordPress.

 Larger sites are more likely to spend on a hosted solution or a custom framework.

Notice how the penetration of WordPress goes down at the larger newpapers? Detroit Softworks shows up only among schools with over 20,000 enrollment, TownNews only above 10,000. (Disclaimer: The Daily Eastern News online site runs on TownNews’ system). These schools are more likely to attract programmer/journalists, and also more likely to have the funds to invest in one of the hosted suppliers.

Now, this is little more than a thing of interest, and something to peek at a population to see what’s going on. It would be good to have a look at all the CMS’s of the news outlets that submitted entries. I’ve reached out to Logan Aimone at ACP, and although I can’t look at which schools entered, he’s going to see about getting me the data on CMS use. I’ll keep you posted about that.

And one final note about this: Whether you are a Pacemaker finalist or not, how about giving your site visitors a way to find out what system you’re using? Even just a note in the meta of the source code. It is frustrating to have to peck through playing Sherlock Homepage when your coders rename the wp-content folders, or you take out the metadata that indicates you’re using a CMS (the hosted systems are more easy to detect). The best site for this was the Maneater at the University of Missouri, which had an actual colophon! If you’ve done your own system, maybe put it on the “About” page, with the name of the developers who worked on it.

Here’s a spreadsheet of all the finalists and the CMS they use, where available.

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Q&A: CMN’s Rusty Lewis and Jon Beck about new advertising options for College Publisher

January 19, 2011 in College Media, College Media News, College Publisher

collegepublisherEditor’s Note: As I mentioned last week, I asked Rusty Lewis at College Media Network to answer some questions related to the company’s announced new advertising option for college newspapers. These responses were supplied by Lewis and Jon Beck, who recently joined CMN on the business side.

When will these new options take effect?

It is a rolling process that took effect January 1, 2011.  We are honoring the contracts we have in place with our newspaper partners.  That said, beginning this month we are giving the requisite 90-day advance notice that we will not be renewing the contract in place with current terms.  We are making one-on-one phone calls with each newspaper outlining our new options, how they would specifically impact each newspaper and outlining the next steps.

The new advertising options are available right now – it is a matter of a few settings changes.

Is the “AdGear” platform currently in use, or is this a new technology that will be used for this new system?

AdGear is currently serving all the ads (both national across the network and local campaigns on CP5) – we made the switch from mish-mash of Atlas and Doubleclick we had under MTV.  We are almost complete with the newspaper access portal to upload ads in AdGear and will begin training newspapers on that system shortly.  AdGear is a huge step forward from both a traffic and flexibility perspective.

This system can be used with any publishing platform.  It comes off-the-shelf with College Publisher and we have ready-made plugins for the most popular open-source CMSs.  Obviously, the advantage of this system is the support and the year-over-year continuity that comes along with the tools.

How do these options differ from the way things were done in the past?

We view this change as a reboot, a chance to make things easier and more equitable for everyone.

Ten years ago, we created a CMS in exchange for advertising rights.  Later, we responded to feedback and developed an ad-deployment tool in the CMS so that a few newspapers with good ad sales teams could deploy local online ad campaigns.

When launching CP5, we contracted a leading vendor to manage the ad system and recreated the two-tiered system in the image of CP4.  As site designs evolved, ad sizes got bigger, and CPMs got smaller it became difficult to keep all parties happy.

This entire change is about making the management of the inventory easier.  The three options break down to:
- CMN sells the inventory (and cuts rev share checks)
- The newspaper sells the inventory (and cuts rev share checks)
- CMN and the newspaper share the inventory and keep their respective revenue

These options address the variety of needs and strengths that exist in the college media sphere.  Regardless of size, we found some newspapers small and large had very good local sales teams and could sell out the inventory.  Conversely (and more commonly), we found that the newspaper focused on content and had little interest or desire for advertising (which is a missed opportunity for everyone).  Obviously, there is a great number of papers in between.  These options address those different scenarios without over-complicating the issue.

Do these options apply equally to all of the CP standard plan participants, i.e. those who are paying the fee and those who are having the fee waived?

Yes.  They are also the same for any newspaper outside CMN that want to participate in our ad network or want access to these tools.

I am not exactly certain that I understand the logistics of the 70/30 plan. Could you explain it in a little more detail, especially as it relates to the higher ad positions on the page, and the way the percentages would work in selling local ads?

The inventory split is really quite simple.  Within AdGear we can set thresholds (by percentage) of available inventory.  We will apply a threshold for newspapers who select this option such that they only have access to 30 percent of the inventory on each ad position.

For simplicity’s sake, let’s say a newspaper gets 100k page views per month on average.  That means in the old model, they had basically 300k impressions (3 ad units X 100k page views) to sell below the fold – which we were told were hard to sell.  Now, with this option, that same newspaper has 150k impressions to sell, but 60k of those can – and should – be sold at a much higher premium (because they are the top spots).

The real critical piece to this plan is that newspapers are committing to sell on a CPM basis when selecting to share the inventory.  This is a tough transition for some newspapers who have found success with the flat rate sponsorship method of online display advertising.  That said, we can share strategies we have seen work at other college newspapers.

One additional layer to this plan is that CMN will back fill any unsold impressions with remnant ad campaigns.  The newspaper will receive 20 percent of the revenue originating from these ads.

Does this preclude the plan participants from selling ads outside of those five positions?

The short answer is no.

The five ad positions are five different sets of ad tags deployed on the page.  The AdGear tools allow newspapers to use a variety of targeting methodologies and strategies to help advertisers get the most out of their placements.

If a newspaper is selling ads on a flat rate basis and their advertisers want full exposure on all pages served, well that is really a sponsorship opportunity and not advertisement.  We fully expect newspapers to offer these advertisers creative ways to have a presence on the site without using up ad impressions through the ad manager.

As to option C, is $7.50/cpm what the cpm is if CP sold the ads, or a percentage of that? if so, what percentage?

CMN underwrites the operation, support and training on the AdGear system with advertising revenue.  Option C, where newspapers pay a CPM to CMN, was designed to enable newspapers to take full control over their inventory.  The $7.50 figure represents the value of each page view if all the advertising positions were filled with ad network campaigns – which pay very modest CPMs.

In this option, the newspaper is essentially purchasing the inventory for a $7.50 CPM – which, when divided out between 5 ad units, is $1.50 CPM per unit.  We felt this was sufficiently low enough where newspapers had the opportunity to markup the CPMs as they sold the inventory.  They are then able to recoup their costs and create net profits.

Could you provide an example of how option C might work?

Using the example above, the newspaper with 100k monthly page views essentially would remit a payment to CMN of $750 per month and keep whatever they made over that.  Obviously, since this is a CPM, the payment would fluctuate with traffic.

If the newspaper is successful and has a sophisticated staff, they can command CPMs in the neighborhood of $5-10 across each individual ad position which more than covers the cost of the inventory.

For the opportunity to have free run of the ad inventory, we are asking the newspaper to assume the risk of selling it out.

How will the ad prices be set for the various ad placements? and will CP be sharing information re: advertising rates with CP5 customers?

The ad prices are set as high as the advertisers will bear.  I cannot publicly disclose specifics around this as it would jeopardize active negotiations with Access Network partners and potential advertisers.  Obviously, when sales close I can privately discuss figures with those newspapers with which we share revenue.

Would a college that opted to go with the WordPress option have the option to join this ad network plan?

The AdGear solution is compulsory with the CMN WordPress package.

Please keep in mind that we are offering the WP solution as an alternative to College Publisher CMS.  Similarly to CP5, we are providing a service to manage the environment and provide a full-service solution for a newspaper’s digital publishing needs.  The ad systems, email newsletter systems, traffic reporting systems, and other core services for content distribution remain the same between the WP and CP5.

To that end, the three ad options remain the same for CMN WordPress package.

What about the hosting option?

The hosting option is literally just a hosting option.  A newspaper has free reign to use whatever set of solutions/plugins/ad tags they prefer.  This hosting option is simply out there so newspapers know they have an option with CMN if they do not want CP5 and are priced out of our WP managed solution.

As a benefit of using this service for hosting (be them WP, Drupal, etc), the access to CMN plugins such as AdGear exists.  In those situations where a newspaper wanted to use AdGear while maintaining their own site, a setup fee would be assessed.  Again, all three options exist and come with training and support.

And, per Daniel Bachhuber’s comment the other day: Are those advertising options the same as what’s available to the lower-end Polopoly users or different? If different, what are they?

AdGear is the same 5 ad spots no matter what content management solution is used.

To be clear, these changes we are making to the CMN business separate the content management solution and the advertising system completely.  CMN is providing them as a package for CP5, but the ad software solution can be licensed as an a la carte option for any newspaper using any hosting facility on any CMS.

On a related note: How do these options affect advertising on mobile?

We have the capability to schedule and deploy mobile ads through AdGear.  This is part and parcel of the AdGear service.

Anything else you would like to add at this point?

Banner advertising is still a useful way to drive revenue for publishers, but its best days are in the rear view mirror.  Banner ads will never have the value they once did.

The vision for revenue at CMN looks for opportunities beyond traditional display advertising.  CMN, in sort of a newspaper holding company capacity, can enable sponsorship opportunities with major brands across the entire network that can be lucrative enough to share revenue with every network member.

We will be looking for beta testers for these revenue sharing programs.  When we have seen some success, we will share the data and begin applying these measures across the network at large.

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CICM Interview: Rusty Lewis on new CP5 advertising options

January 13, 2011 in College Media News, College Publisher

collegepublisherIn the wake of College Media Network‘s announcement in late December that they were changing their business model, most of my attention focused initially on the fee structure that would exist for current and new clients. See interview here. Now, I turn attention to the second part of the announcement, the change to the College Media Network ad revenue sharing structure. Here’s the part that deals with the advertising revenue splits.

Newspapers will have more choice with managing online ad inventory by selecting one of the following on an annual basis:

A. CMN and the newspaper will share the inventory among all 5 ad units with a 70/30 breakdown.  The newspaper will be able to utilize each ad placement up to 30% of the page impressions.  Each party will retain 100% of the revenue made off the campaigns placed on the site, but any unused inventory on the newspaper-side will be filled with remnant ads (of which the newspaper will receive 20% of the revenue).

B.
CMN will sell all 5 spots and remit a payment of 20% of the total revenue to the newspaper.

C. The newspaper can buy the entire inventory from CMN at a rate of $7.50 per 1,000 page views.  Naturally, the newspaper would retain all the revenue from the advertisements placed on site.

While license fees are billed up front on an annual basis, revenue sharing provides an opportunity to offset that cost acreoss the year.

I have an e-mail in to Lewis with a number of questions related to the new revenue sharing options, and will post it as soon as he responds. In the meantime, any thoughts on the new structure?

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College Publisher changes business model

January 3, 2011 in College Media News, College Publisher

UPDATE: Interview with Rusty Lewis is now up here.

collegepublisher

Well, during my self-imposed exile from all things journalism related over the holidays, College Media Network dropped a bombshell.

Most notably, newspapers using CP5 under an Access Network affilate agreement will be invoiced  an annual payment* of $1,995 for the services rendered by CMN.  …

This cost is most attributable to user support and training.  There is an option to reduce this cost and be invoiced for training and design services as needed – click the pdf for details.

Any support or training would be billed at $150 per hour.  Support hours billed would relate to issues that resulted in user error and would be communicated in advance of invoicing.

*If a college publication averages over 25,000 page views per month, all of these fees are waived

They are also going to start hosting WordPress installations, and additional open-source CMS’s. There are additional details related to advertising splits at the link above. I have an e-mail in to Rusty Lewis at CMN to ask some followup questions, and I’ll be examining the pricing structure more in the next few days.

For now, it should be obvious that this is a game-changing move by College Publisher.

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College Publisher and ad content filtering

October 13, 2010 in College Media News, College Publisher, Media Companies - College Related

collegepublisher

Unless there is major news forthcoming, this will be the last I will post about the recent sale of College Media Network by Viacom/MTVu (see below for links to our previous coverage). However, the issue that was raised in the comments to my interview with Rusty Lewis is worthy of front page treatment.

As background, the College Publisher content management system is used by a number of private school student media outlets (we used it when I worked at North Greenville College/University). Some of these private universities have more stringent standards regarding what they consider acceptable advertising content on their sites.

This has been something that College Publisher has been sensitive to, filtering ads to specific student media outlets that might have a problem with particularly racy content, for example. In my time at NGU, I was tasked with asking CMN to remove a couple of ads from our student newspaper site, and they had no qualms in doing so.

So, reader Yada123 asked in the comments:

I’m concerned about the “guides” Access Network keeps referring to in its press releases and your podcast interview with CP5 staff.  Blackbook, one of Access Network’s guides, has some racy content about sleazy clubs such as Voyeur, and the stories and links blend content with boosterism, including for Voyeur.  Will these racy guides be forced upon college newspapers?  Will college newspapers’ existing advertising screens be maintained now that CP5 is with Access Network?

I asked Rusty Lewis of College Media Network to respond to the comment, which he did, and I’m reprinting his response in full here for wider dissemination.

Our contracts are not going to change.  The advertising policy that governs those agreements will be honored and continue with The Access Network’s representation of the national ad units across CMN.

The guides we have discussed are going to be a separate product that the newspapers will power.  We don’t have definite product details that will outline the functionalities of the tools yet, but [should the newspapers contract this service] the newspapers will have full control over what to feature in the city guides.

If there is an appetite to feature content from Black Book, it will be made available.  As a software solution, the City Guide Publisher will be a tool for the newspapers to feature listings of businesses and restaurants in the area with reviews.  The tool could be re-purposed for housing guides or any type of guides that are relevant to the college audience.  What you see in the blackbook guides speaks to their audience.  We don’t assume to know better than you on what your audience is looking for – that is why we are putting the tools in your hands.

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CICM Interview: Ari Horowitz, CEO of Access Network

October 12, 2010 in College Media News, College Publisher, Interviews, Media Companies - College Related

Friday, Oct. 8, I interviewed Access Network CEO Ari Horowitz about the sale of College Media Network to a private investment firm (previous coverage here and here). During the interview, Horowitz discussed what the Access Network does currently, how CMN fits into their business strategy, and some of the technical and advertising challenges the network will be working on in the future.

The interview was conducted via Skype, and the edited version is about 13 minutes long.

For those who can’t see the Flash player, here’s a link to download the mp3.

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College Media Network sold, under new management

October 1, 2010 in College Media News, College Publisher

accesslogo

UPDATE (Monday, 10-4-10): I spoke with Rusty Lewis from CMN this weekend, and will have audio of the interview up later today.

College Media Network, which provides an online content management system (College Publisher) to around 600 college news media outlets around the nation, has been sold by MTVu/MTV Networks.

In a blog post, CMN’s Rusty Lewis announced the sale:

College Media Network is trading hands from MTV Networks to The Access Network Company. While our ownership is changing, our staff is not. You can still count on the same names and faces you’ve relied on for more than five years. Our commitment and service to you remains unwavering.

However, the ownership situation is not quite so clear from the partner publication letter (PDF) sent out by MTVu’s Carlo DiMarco:

Starting today, Access Network Company, the leading online city guide content management software platform for premium brands, publishers, and local merchants, and the owner of BlackBook Media, will take over operations of College Media Network, which has been acquired by a private investment firm from mtvU.

I have e-mailed CMN to find out more information about the private investment firm, and hope to find out more about this deal in the coming days.

Here’s the official Access Network press release via PRNewsWire. Here’s the partner publication letter from Access Network CEO Ari Horowitz.

(via Vince Filak on CMA Listserv)

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