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MEDIA ECONOMICS J201 Mass Media & Society November 22, 2013

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Media Economics. J201 Mass Media & Society November 22, 2013. Economics: A Standard Definition. The study of how societies use scarce resources to produce valuable commodities and distribute them among various groups (allocation of resources) . Media Economics defined:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Media Economics

MEDIA ECONOMICS

J201 Mass Media & SocietyNovember 22, 2013

Page 2: Media Economics

ECONOMICS:A STANDARD DEFINITION

The study of how societies use scarce resources to produce valuable commodities and distribute them among various groups (allocation of resources).

Page 3: Media Economics

MEDIA ECONOMICS DEFINED:

“The study of how media industries use scarce resources to produce content that is distributed among consumers in a society to satisfy various wants and needs” (Albarran).

“A term employed to refer to business operations and financial activities of firms producing and selling output into various media industries” (Owers et al).

Page 4: Media Economics

ECONOMICS CAN ALSO INFLUENCE:

Decisions about:…What? (Production)

…For Whom? (Allocation)

…How? (Capital, control, organization)

…And WHY?

Page 5: Media Economics

MAJOR MEDIA CORPORATIONS

Page 6: Media Economics

32,000 employees worldwide

TV, film, publishing, websites

Revenues from:Content (43% of

revenues)Subscriptions (33%)Advertising (21%)Other (3%)

TIME WARNER

Page 7: Media Economics

Theme Parks and Resorts;

28%

Media Networks;

45%

Studio Enter-tainment; 18%

Consumer Products; 7% Interactive; 2%

WALT DISNEY COMPANYBreakdown of Revenue Sources,

FY2010

Source: Standard & Poor’s

149,000 employees

Some key recent acquisitions:• 2006 = Pixar• 2007 = Club

Penguin• 2009 = Marvel

Entertainment• 2010 = Playdom

Page 8: Media Economics

Segments: Media networks (62% of FY 2010 revenues) Entertainment (38%)

Ad sales, feature films, affiliate fees, TV licensing, ancillary sources (incl. merchandise)

More than 2,000 websites Distribution partnerships with Hulu, Netflix,

Microsoft, Yahoo, Bebo, Veoh, etc. 159 channels in 159 countries in 30

languages

Page 9: Media Economics

Comcast; 51%

General Electric;

49%

Ownership of NBC Universal

NBC/UNIVERSAL

GE =aircraft engines, power generation, water processing, medical imaging, NBC Universal

Comcast = video, high speed Internet and phone services

Page 10: Media Economics

51,000 employeesNEWS CORPORATION

Cable Network Programming

Book Publishing

Other(advertising,

digital)

Integrated Marketing Services

Direct Broadcast

Satellite TV

Newspapers and Information

Services

Television

Filmed Entertainment

Page 11: Media Economics

29 TV stations 130 radio stations Book publishing: Simon &

Schuster, Scribner, etc. CBS Films CBS Outdoors CBS Records (TV show

soundtracks)

Page 12: Media Economics

Principal business segments:Consumer & Professional DevicesNetworked Products & ServicesPictures (movies, TV, etc.)MusicFinancial ServicesSony EricssonOther (Blu-Ray, DVD, CD manufacturing, plus

other) 168,200 employees

SONY CORPORATION

Page 13: Media Economics

SOME OTHER MAJOR MEDIA CORPORATIONS Publishing: Tribune, Gannett, Hearst,

Bertelsmann

Telecom: Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, Charter Communications

Tech: Apple, Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!

Radio: Clear Channel (owned by Bain Capital/Thomas H. Lee Partners)

Page 14: Media Economics

http://www.businessinsider.com/these-6-corporations-control-90-of-the-media-in-america-2012-6

Page 15: Media Economics

VIDEO: “THE IMPACT OF MEDIA OWNERSHIP”

Page 16: Media Economics

STRUCTURAL TRENDS IN THE MEDIA INDUSTRIES

Page 17: Media Economics

STRUCTURAL TRENDS 3 goals

Economies of scale Synergy (development and promotion) Branding Segmentation/specialization Diversification Globalization Joint ventures

Page 18: Media Economics

PURPOSE OF MEDIA?

Page 19: Media Economics

PURPOSE OF MEDIA?

InformationEntertainmentPublic serviceMake money

CommunicationInfluence

Other purposes?

Page 20: Media Economics

BALANCE PURPOSES WITH NEEDS OF STAKEHOLDERS

What are stakeholders?

Who are media’s stakeholders?

What do these stakeholders need/want?

Page 21: Media Economics

WHERE DOES THE PUBLIC INTEREST FIT IN? AND WHY DOES IT MATTER?

History of mediaPrint, broadcastingFCC, Radio Act of 1927: “serve the public

interest, necessity and convenience”

What about the introduction of newer media?

Page 22: Media Economics

MEDIA & THE PUBLIC INTEREST Information should circulate freely

Ownership should be broad and diversified (Some) media should be publicly

accessible

“Serve” vs. “Target”

“Citizens” vs. “Consumers”

“Consumer control” vs. “consumer choice”