Stop the presses. From this morning, there's a new player in
Australia's cut throat news media industry.
But as traditional hard copy newspapers struggle to survive in the
digital world, there's not a media magnate in sight.
Instead, The New Daily will be bankrolled by three Australian industry superannuation funds - Australian
Super, Cbus and Industry Super Holdings.
And unlike the online mastheads from Fairfax and News Corporation such
as The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian, The New Daily won't
have a pay wall.
Like The Guardian and The Global Mail, the new online entrant is
offering a quality product at a time when hard copy newspapers are hurting from
dwindling sales and advertising revenue.
Bruce Guthrie, a former editor of The Age and the Herald Sun, is The
New Daily's managing editor and witness to the dramatic decline of traditional
news outlets.
He's confident that The New Daily can make a point of difference by
being an unashamed online offering in the business of providing hard news that
is also free of charge.
" I think first and foremost, it's a true digital-only product. It
hasn't been a newspaper in the past that was dragged kicking and screaming into
the digital age. It wasn't a TV station. We've created this from the ground up
to be digital and only digital," Mr Guthrie told AM.
"In a sense we're not realty competing with those players. To me,
they put a lot of material up there every day. It's almost journalism by the
yard, as I call it. They throw a lot of stories up there in the hope that some
get traction and if they don't they take them down and they'll put up another
story and just kind of an endless search for clicks.
"But significantly, and I think it is becoming even more
significant, it's free and it always will be free."
The New Daily will be headquartered in Melbourne and will have a staff
of eleven journalists plus a network of contributors. The site will also use
content from the Australian Associated Press and the ABC.
While the three super fund backers are providing two million dollars
each, the strategy is to have The New Daily self funded through advertising
revenue.
"I think their expectations are realistic. Garry Weaven, who is
the chairman of The New Daily Propriety Limited, has said that eventually in
the medium term, and we're probably talking somewhere between three and five
years, this should pay for itself at least and then move into profit."
Mr Guthrie says the commitment from the industry superannuation
backers is "open-ended" and designed to engage the five million
Australians who have their retirement saving in industry superannuation.
But Mr Guthrie says the backers will not have a say in the editorial
direction of The New Daily and have agreed to a charter of editorial
independence.
"That sets out how we will cover stories and it's made clear that
whether it's superannuation, politics, industrial relations, we'll cover it
without fear or favour, we'll give everyone their side, their side of the
story, but we won't be slanting stories."
Bruce Guthrie says The New Daily has been set "eminently
achievable targets" based on attracting unique browsers over the next
three to five years.
And he is confident the site will still be alive in a year's time.
"Well I'd like to think so. And look, the audience
ultimately will decide that and the traffic is already beginning to come to the
site and they ultimately will decide whether we stand or fall, but we're very,
very confident that we can deliver a daily package that's going to be
compelling."
The launch of the New Daily comes after News Corporation reported a
revenue decline of 22 percent for the most recent quarter.
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