Let's not forget magazine publishing for our business; it used to be that we printed in-house newsletters and publications specifically for a product launch or a trade show.
The brand audience across platforms for magazine media continues to grow, up 6.6% in 2019 versus the prior year to 1.5 billion. The average audience of the top three magazine publishers is competitive with the average audience for Google, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple according to the MPA Factbook. It's just that these are moving from the newsstand to the dedicated reader App and Kindles.
What's also good is that according to the 2020 Edelman trust barometer - 61% trust in traditional print….due to editorial integrity.
So I share here tools that you can explore to publish your own e-magazines.
I used ISSUU for my publications to launch Morgan cars in China, and you can even charge for subscriptions.
You can also listen to services offered by Yunpu of Switzerland
The 3rd one I introduce is Uniflip
Read the article version of this episode - https://theunnoticed.cc/episode/its-free-to-publish-your-own-magazine-and-its-great-for-your-pr-sharing-3-platforms-for-e-publishing-you-can-use-today
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Jim James is the Founder and Managing Director of the EASTWEST Public Relations Group. He recently returned to the UK after 25 years in Asia where he was an entrepreneur. Whilst running EASTWEST PR, he was the Vice-Chairman of the British Chamber of Commerce in China, he also he introduced Morgan sports cars to China, WAKE Drinks, founded the British Business Awards, The British Motorsport Festival, EO Beijing, and was the interim CEO of Lotus cars in China. He kept a diary here.
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Hello, and welcome to this episode of speak PR the podcast for business owners who have value to unlocking their own businesses, and will do so with better communications. And my name is Jim James. And I'm here to share the experience that I've had from over 25 years of getting my own businesses noticed, and that have over 500 clients as I run my own PR firm around Asia in the UK. Now, I'd like to share some tactics that I have used, especially when I was launching Morton cars in China. And that was the use of digital print. Now, often we start to get excited about social media, but we're ignoring one of the largest categories of public relations and that is in print. And what has now happened to print which is to go online to digital printing. Now the audience across the media for magazines In America has continued to grow. And in 2019, it was up 6.6% to 1.5 billion in terms of readership. So the average readership of the top three magazine publishers in America is actually equal to that of Google and Facebook and Amazon, or Apple, for example, as a result of the sort of the growing loyalty for long form reading of publications. Not everybody is dashing to social media, and especially in business to business, were printing in the past of industry, magazines and even trade publications by companies was an established and very effective way of reaching a particular audience. So, in this day and age when we have long form content to share, press releases are good for getting into the media, but which actually possible to start to manage your own publications by using some of these tools. And today I'd like to share what some of those tools are. In the past, creating an in house newsletter as I did for Morgan, for example, in China, or I took the licence from a UK publisher who was making a 48 page, full colour a4 size magazine and distributing it to subscribers and in news agents. I took that into China and I would change some of the content to be relevant for my Chinese readers, and then take some of the long form technical articles in history articles, for example, and include those alongside my China customer stories. Now the the big cost in the old days was printing. And in China when I launched the mug, China magazine, I actually printed 5000 issue of these magazines as desire to have something tangible, incredible for this new brand. So printing a publication gives a sort of a sense of gravity and weight to the publication, we would give those out at a trade shows and when we displayed the cars, in stores, for example, or at events like the British motorsport festival, that I started in China. But the downside of printing magazines, of course, is the cost, both of printing and of distribution. And of course, as I found at the end of the term with Morgan, I had leftover copies I had printed for different issues of maga magazine, and I had leftovers that were ageing, to the beauty of E publishing, is that these publications can stay online at no cost whatsoever. To publish, and no cost whatsoever to distribute, and they also benefit from the long tail effect on issue.com. We still have our modern cars, China, issues of mogh magazine and you can even see them as you like now for free. I mentioned issue because this is a platform that I used for publishing in China because it wasn't blocked in any way at the time. Now issue, which is I double s. u u.com. is one of the leading platforms probably the top two or three depending on how you rate them. But they claimed to have over a billion page views with 50 million publications, and 100 million unique visitors and two and a half million brands represented. So you can do the math yourselves, other than for me, it just means that it's obviously a very well established player. Now the thing with issue is That they can take our PDFs and our images and our text and transform them using the issue templates. Now, the templates, then are a real nice solution if you haven't got a graphic designer, but you do have images and content text that you can embed into their template by clicking on publish, then you're getting a desktop ready mobile ready and their own issue app ready, magazine. And what's good about that is of course that then you can share that on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Pinterest, and other social media, either as an embedded link or as a link or in some cases as the magazine itself. So it means that if you've got a lot of content, let's say for example, you have a boutique, for your for your product, maybe for fashion items, or for food or for clothing, or even for your own health practice, and you've got pictures and text and even video now can be embedded with links to Vimeo and YouTube. You could use issue COMM And by issuing the publication's out as they are, the search engines automatically will be searching the content inside of your issue magazines, which is great for your SEO. So what you could do is create an issue magazine was in obviously, multiples of four because it's still the old traditional front page, back page and two inside pages. You can create your own title and you can create your own masthead and then you can publish it either unlisted if you want it to be, for example, just for your own internal community. Let's say it's an in house newsletter. data, for example, you could make it public. And you could also make it schedule. So this makes it really nice because in the old days, for example, when I worked for companies like Philips, they would have their own staff newsletter. Now, it's getting harder and harder to do that and people relying on the, onto the social media. But because those social media formats are all dedicated, really to very short snippets, it's very hard to communicate anything of length, or sophistication in those articles. The long form in house newsletter by print isn't a good is not a good idea. And especially now that we have, you know, remote working would be even more expensive and, frankly, probably impossible to distribute by post to everybody. So e publishing represents a very good opportunity now, issue has an entry level publishing offer at no dollars per month. Casey you can issue out a certain number of pages per month. And that is funded through advertising for other publications and other other advertisers and brands that will go alongside your content. If you want to make it an undistracted experience for your readers, it'll cost you $19 a month. But if you'd like to monetize the content that you've got, which is a great opportunity, of course, it's only $40 per month to sell subscriptions. So if you do that at $40 a month, and then you start to sell some advertising, you've got content where people will willingly pay for that it could complement for example, a video channel or a membership organisation that you might host on a platform like mighty networks, for example. Now, there are a couple of other alternatives to issue.com issue.com I think was probably one of the first ones. A new one is called Yun poo. Which sounds Chinese why you npu.com But that's actually from Switzerland. And this is offering a lifetime free, 100%. Free editor. Now, they claim to have some 897,000 companies using their union pu platform. When you sign up, you get to add in content, or videos, audio slideshows from SlideShare, for example, for free, and you can embed those graphics into your website. And they also claim to have some 75 extra powerful features, including social media sharing tools, and they're claiming 50 million or sorry, 12 million readers. So also a very powerful platform. I haven't subscribed to that platform yet. It looks very interesting, but I'm just wondering how they're making their money. It must be through for example, online advertising. a freemium model in some way. But certainly to start with is coming very highly rated and some big brands are using it. A third one is called a unit flip. Unit flip says on its website that it is an IT company and frankly that's what it looks like. It converts documents and reports and catalogues into a multi page PDF. With terrible pages so much like you might get for example on your Kindle or in your iBooks it's looking a fairly difficult platform, the interface is not that nice as he comes from Denmark, of all places. So functional, also has a really complicated pricing structure, which frankly I I lost. track of and also interested in because Yun poo and issue both make it incredibly easy to understand the offer. They obviously have a great deal of existing customers. And they also make it very easy to sign up. So when I created the magazines for Morgan cars in China, I found that creating an E publication was a really great way of sharing information to people that I didn't want to commit to sending print to because geography was difficult to cast for example, like for students, it was a great thing to send them free publications. And the market has moved on and plainly, as I put in at the top of the, of the report here, publishing long form publishing is still a major part of the of the marketing mix and public relations mix. In America, periodical publishing still employs some 83,000 people. Okay, so, printing in terms of traditional going to the news agents and picking up a magazine may or may not have a long future there are still some unknowns. local stores and people still like to buy those. So in the same way that newspapers have gone online, publishers of long form magazines have started to also go online. Obviously, news is all about speed and publications, magazines of 4856 pages or so on. I not about speed. They're about user experience and about engagement and long form, reading and articles. But as we have tablets now that enable us to scroll, and we have things like Kindle, for example, or the iPad for reading, people are getting used to reading long form content in this kind of way, which is all digital. So as we're looking at public relations activities for our own businesses, where we used to publish newsletters, we still can, if you've got the content, what's beautiful now is that we can embed video slides or audio files. and links to home pages or to social media in a way that we never could have dreamt off before. So I for one, I'm going to be looking at creating a publishing, for magazines for the kind of content we're creating for our speak PR programme. Currently, that's all listed on our website at East West pr.com and also shared through this podcast. So e publishing is part of the A for amplification. And as we look around us, I can recommend issue and Yun poo as two options for you to consider if you've got long form content that you could share with a subscriber base that goes beyond a newsletter and beyond eight to 900 words. So with that, I thank you very much for listening to this episode of speak PR. And I hope that you have great health, that you are enjoying a bounce back in terms of your business, and that you keep on communicating and quietly Possibly the publishing

