Brides Goes Back to Bi-Monthly. Why are We Surprised?
It was big news when Conde Nast shuttered Gourmet, Cookie, Modern Bride and Elegant Bride Magazines. Conde is one of our premiere magazine publishers. As someone who never had the opportunity to work for one of the bigger New York based publishers, I can only imagine what it would be like to work for a publisher with that kind of editorial strength and industry clout. So when the recession struck with brute force, it was a little shocking to see a premium publisher respond by closing some property.
Back to the 6X frequency!
Brides Magazine, the remaining bridal magazine in the Conde portfolio then went to a monthly frequency. And that strategy lasted until this week's announcement.
Of course, the trade press immediately jumped on the news:
Conde Nast Taking Brides Bimonthly Boosts Mobile Interaction
The gist of each article is that the publisher is ramping up it's digital strategy after being disappointed with single copy sales results and advertising revenue.
Yes, and....
No doubt, the bridal market is a tough one. On the newsstand alone, I've seen more than thirty titles with some sort of national content. In the bookstore market, the competition heats up with some excellent imports from the U.K. If you're working in the regional market, something Conde also abandoned in the past year, I've counted at least one hundred or more regional titles all across the country.
I can only imagine how hard an bridal advertising rep has to work to make a sale. That seems like an impossible job.
If we add the competitive print market to the wireless way many brides to be live today....
Well, then the strategy makes some sense. That's some shocking news, eh?
But I also can't help wonder if it may also have something to do with the publisher finally fulfilling the subscription liabilities they took on when Modern Bride and Elegant Bride were folded. After all, at one time Modern Brides had more than 200,000 subscribers.
No one mentioned that.
Brides is also on the checkout. It often shared pockets with it's sister title. If you paid a lot for your pocket, and you were a bimonthly, and you don't want to leave copies sitting in a pocket that long...
Care to share?
Go monthly, right?
So, yes, declining advertising revenue, declining newsstand sales, brides being more mobile. We get it. Been there, heard it all before.
But I can't help wondering if it you combine that trend with major national retailers starting to re-do their front ends, subscription liabilities coming to a close. You know, circulation stuff...